Hugh Broughton Architects wins more work on continent following job at British base

©HBA-Davis Station Utility Building for AAD

The team’s designs for the new utility building at Davis Station

Hugh Broughton Architects has been appointed to upgrade an Australian research base in Antarctica. 

The renewal program for Davis Station is part of a wider initiative by the Australian government to modernise its research sites on the remote continent over the next decade.

The Australian Antarctic Division’s (AAD) project team for the scheme at Davis Station also includes Mott MacDonald, Bouygues Construction and Stantec.

Set to start next year, the work will include construction of a new utility building containing a main powerhouse, trades workshops, engineering offices, stores and associated plant.

The base’s water production systems will also be replaced, outdated infrastructure will be decommissioned and its site-wide services will be overhauled.

The scheme aims to enable the station to continue operating at full capacity while improving staff safety and the efficiency of scientific missions in one of the most extreme environments on the planet.

Davis Station is the southernmost of Australia’s three Antarctic stations, located on a part of the continent which can experience wind speed in excess of 200km.h and winter temperature below -40 degrees.

> Also read: Antarctica: Designing for the planet’s most hostile continent

It is also the only Australian station without a natural freshwater source, relying on reverse osmosis and shipped water, which limits supply during winter and the station’s number of residents.

The utility building has been designed with an aerodynamic profile to withstand the region’s wind speed, with the scheme using a kit-of-parts approach to design to enable future buildings on the site to use similar components.

Bouygues chair and chief executive Pascal Minault said: “This project represents an extraordinary technical challenge for our teams, who will bring all their engineering expertise and innovative spirit to bear. 

“Building for life also means contributing to scientific research in the polar regions to better understand climate change in our world.” 

Construction work at the base will be limited to the summer months between October and February, a programme similar to that used by Hugh Broughton Architects, Bam, Ramboll and Sweco at the British Antarctic Survey’s Rothera Station.

The project is scheduled to start at the end of 2026 and complete in 2032.