All Winner articles – Page 2
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CompetitionsHousing Architect of the Year (over 25 units) - Riches Hawley Mikhail
Affordable housing is a sector sorely in need of innovation. In Riches Hawley Mikhail it has at last found an architect capable of taking on that challenge
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CompetitionsHousing Architect of the Year (1-25 units) - Stephen Taylor Architects
Stephen Taylor’s architecture has an understated quality
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CompetitionsInterior Architect of the Year - Project Orange
Project Orange says it is as interested in the inside of a building as the outside. This enthusiasm, as well as the skill with which it delivers projects, comes across loud and clear
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CompetitionsYoung Architect of the Year 2009: David Kohn Architects
David Kohn opened his presentation to the Young Architect of the Year jury with reference to Isaiah Berlin’s essay The Hedgehog and the Fox.
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CompetitionsOffices: ShedKM
In this highly competitive category, ShedKM has demonstrated not only a great understanding of the office environment but how inventive working spaces can be created from seemingly redundant buildings.
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CompetitionsTransport: Grimshaw
Despite being a new category this year, transport was highly competitive, with very good contenders battling it out for the main prize.
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CompetitionsEducation: Penoyre & Prasad
Despite the troubled Building Schools for the Future programme, which is still to produce an award-winning building, education is a sector where some of the most talented architects are working today — reflected in the strong shortlist, which made it the most difficult category to judge.
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CompetitionsClient of the year: Nigel Hugill
It is as a champion of quality architecture that Nigel Hugill was the unanimous choice for Client of the Year.
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CompetitionsHealthcare: Buschow Henley
In a sector dominated by huge PFI hospital projects and specialist architects, the judges were impressed by the growing number of practices ready to tackle health buildings.
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CompetitionsMasterplanning: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
A successful masterplan is the key to creating great places and, as a category, is one where the standard of entries has risen as both the public and private sectors address the need to create whole new city quarters combining large numbers of housing units with public space.
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CompetitionsSport & Leisure: Hopkins Architects
In a sector that’s dominated by a few big practices, Hopkins’ portfolio of projects, from the commission for one of the Olympics’ legacy buildings to a small pavilion in the grounds of a stately home, made it the unanimous winner.
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CompetitionsPublic Building: Keith Williams Architects
This was a strong category and while the judges were not unanimous, they agreed that the winner had a broad range of complex and completed work, including an opera house and a library, both in Ireland.
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CompetitionsRetail: Foreign Office Architects
A fresh and radical approach is how one judge described FOA, which had yet to complete a building in Britain let alone a department store, when it was picked to design a flagship John Lewis store in Leicester.
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CompetitionsWorld Architect of the year: Grimshaw
There are a number of different models of how to run a successful global practice but the judges thought Grimshaw had got it about right.
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CompetitionsInteriors: David Archer Architects
In a sector prone to the vagaries of fashion, David Archer Architects has a restrained aesthetic that the judges really enjoyed.
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CompetitionsRichard Feilden Award: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
Affordable housing is just one of the sectors where the winner of the Richard Feilden Architect of the Year Award has made a mark alongside public buildings, education and offices. This makes AHMM a hard office to ignore. Not only does it win awards, it delivers projects on time and ...
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CompetitionsAffordable Housing: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
This year's winner AHMM has demonstrated it is possible to deliver affordable housing that has the same attention to detail and built quality as the private sector.
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CompetitionsPrivate Housing (under 14 units): Julian Cowie Architects
The quest for high-density living coupled with soaring land prices has done few favours to this sector.
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CompetitionsPrivate Housing (over 14 units): Maccreanor Lavington
There were strong contenders in this category, but the winner stood out for dealing intelligently and creatively with the once very noble art of housing ordinary lives.
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