Deputy Premier John
Rau announced the major prize winners for the Royal Adelaide Hospital Design
Competition. “Once the hospital moves in 2016, the current RAH site opens up
huge potential for a wide range of possible uses. The open ideas competition
has been about exploring the possibilities for the site” he said.
First Prize -Slash (Victoria) with Phillips/Pilkington Architects: “We seek to reintegrate the surrounding city and parklands. In removing
accreted parts of building that have clogged the site, we open up the buildings
to be part of an urban system, with their own identity and program.
The proposal makes a proposition of retention
and therefore reduces energy that would be required in new building
construction. The primacy of adaptive re-use is supported by several key
initiatives including on-site waste treatment, water retention and on-site
power generation that can be extended to service beyond the site” says
architects.
“This submission provides a generous extension
of the Park Lands into the site, moving across the site from east to west,
finally arriving as a major park presence on Frome Road. In so doing, this strategy
significantly enhances the site’s relationship to the university campus to the
west” Jury comment.
Second Prize -Bondhag & De Rosa with Taylor Cullity Lethlean: “The site is declared an urban forum, moulded
by the given built fabric and new interventions, and made permeable by covered
and outdoor public places. The site will remain over a given timeframe, in a
state of ‘incompleteness’. The notion that the site, with its built forms,
can be moulded or adapted at any stage during the redevelopment timeframe. Initiative
and curiosity is to be stimulated by making knowledge and resources available”
says architects.
“The jury was impressed by the considered reuse
of existing built fabric within this submission. A simple strategy of editing,
reordering and augmenting the site’s current built form provides multiple
adaptable possibilities for the site. The submission does not locate cultural
uses in the high-visibility areas of the site’s periphery, but rather proposes
to shift the cultural program “in-board” to the centre of the site. This
promotes movement through and across the site. Frome Road and North Terrace buildings
are assigned commercial and institutional functions” Jury comment.
Second Prize –Nice Architects with Mulloway Studios:
“ADELAIDE ROCKS is
a new urban quarter. It is an engaging, unexpected, fun, active and
multi-layered place. A hill formed from the debris of demolished
buildings that turns waste into a positive, exciting, and unique urban space. The
proposed building is seen as an iconic entry element into the city. It provides
a bookend to the development along North Terrace and contributes to the broader
city development patterns” says architects.
“The submission proposes to retain and restore
buildings along both Frome Road
and North Terrace, while demolishing the buildings within the site’s centre. The
waste from this demolition is proposed to be formed into a hillscape, with the
site becoming both an “eco city landmark” and creating a unique vantage point
from which visitors may experience a new set of views over the city” Jury
comment.








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