NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 2007
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 GALLERY OF MODERN ART, QUEENSLAND ARCHITECTUS
JOHN CURTIN SCHOOL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, STAGE 1 REDEVELOPMENT LYONS

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NATIONAL AWARD FOR PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE
GALLERY OF MODERN ART, QUEENSLAND
ARCHITECTUS




 

JURY CITATION
GoMA differs from most other galleries of art, both traditional and contemporary, in its unusual porosity and openness to its surroundings. It connects its contemporary art to its contemporary city. This is a significant achievement, particularly in the intense daylight of southern Queensland.
     Galleries at all latitudes tend to be fully enclosed “black boxes”, or else employ complex light-filtering devices over windows, which admit a hint of daylight but rarely any views. At GoMA, this dilemma is resolved, deftly, in the plan. The fully light-controlled galleries are wrapped by an I-shaped, naturally lit circulation armature, which directs views out to the city through vast glazed walls, and into which soft daylight falls through louvres in the building’s over-sailing, shadowing roof.
     With this plan arrangement, and by activating the building’s edges with observation decks, cafe, restaurant and reception spaces, the architects have carefully balanced conflicting requirements. It had to be a building of distinctly iconic form – a symbol of the cultural ambitions of its region – but also a focus of the informal, everyday social life of its city.
     The building is a refined, freestanding pavilion on a civic scale. It is entered from the distinctly different public open spaces that surround it on three sides. One of these, Kurilpa Park, has been enlarged and given new presence by the architects’ placement of the gallery well inside the footprint permitted by the master plan. The fabric of the city consequently benefits significantly from both the exuberance of this landmark building and its restraint.




Gallery of Modern Art, Queensland
Architect
Architectus—design architects Lindsay Clare, Kerry Clare, James Jones; project architect John Norman; project team John Grealy, John Jeffrey, Mark Curzon, Felix Winter, Blair Johnson.
Structural consultant
Bornhorst TTW.
Services
Lincolne Scott.
Environmental consultant
Advanced Environmental Concepts.
Acoustics
Bassett Consulting Engineers.
Landscape
Stutchbury Pape/EDAW Gillespies.
Cost consultant
Rider Hunt.
Project manager
Project Services – Queensland Government.
Construction manager
Bovis Lend Lease.
Client
Arts Queensland.
Photographer
John Gollings (above), Peter Hyatt (below).

For further coverage see Architecture Australia vol 96 no 2, March/April 2007.




JOHN CURTIN SCHOOL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH, STAGE 1 REDEVELOPMENT
LYONS




 

JURY CITATION
Research buildings typically contribute little to the civic realm of the university campus. Their inverted programme focus and the need for security usually prevents an open engagement with the university plan and precludes an active role in exciting student activity. By contrast, the John Curtin School of Medical Research embraces opportunities for engagement, and in doing so enhances the ANU campus, providing a model for the expansion of research space within this precinct.
     The project employs a series of strategic manoeuvres to generate these credentials. A grand stretched staircase exaggerates the sense of entry and creates a substantial forecourt from which to observe the open edge of the interior and to survey the surrounding campus. This creates a new ground level that separates public activity from the vast network of service space, which demands on-grade access.
     Complex research functions are integrated with a concern for the amenity of those working within. Three strands – laboratories, support spaces and 0ffice areas – are crossed by a series of links that allow views and daylight to be experienced from within the deep plan. The main collaborative zones are pressed to the outer edge, while the exhibition spaces that unfold around the foyer expand the building’s public profile. Externally, the complex faceted facades of concrete, aluminium and glass provide an engaging exposition of the creative processes of scientific endeavour.




John Curtin School of Medical Research
Stage 1 Redevelopment
Architect
Lyons.
Structural and civil consultant
Connell Wagner.
Services
Umow Lai and Associates.
Hydraulics
Rimmington and Associates.
Acoustics
Bassetts.
Building surveyor
Philip Chun and Associates.
Quality surveyor
Davis Langton.
Landscape
EDAW.
Builder and project manager
Hindmarsh Group.
Client
Australian National University.
Photographer
John Gollings.

For further coverage see Architecture Australia vol 95 no 5, September/October 2006.




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