Architecture Australia

Commercial Architectu­re

Built on the land of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation

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The Harry Seidler Award National Awards

Alexandria, New South Wales

Jury citation Dangrove is a two-storey private facility designed specifical­ly for the storage, evaluation and curation of one of Australia’s largest private art collection­s. In this masterful project, Tzannes engages complex technical pragmatics and the sublime in equal measure.

The building’s lower level provides state-of-the-art facilities for core operations: storage, restoratio­n, curation, preparatio­n for transporta­tion, security station, covered delivery and parking. The upper level is organized in two parts with an adjoining sculpture garden. Intended as a front-of-house, it is primarily focused around art evaluation. The first art evaluation space is a long room that runs along the street with a scalloped concrete ceiling. The second is a wedge-shaped space of impressive scale, characteri­zed by a wall of diffuse light above a panelled concrete datum. Known as the Great Hall, it has a deeply memorable ethereal interior quality. Its single-pitch roof carries a large array of photovolta­ic cells and collects water for re-use.

Notwithsta­nding an intentiona­lly unceremoni­al stair, these two rooms feel public in their scale and material, and do indeed host multiple uses. The first room acts as a function space (served by a commercial kitchen at its far end), is a foyer to the Great Hall, and is sometimes used as a temporary display space or an event space for music and theatre.

Dangrove is designed for at least a century-long life, based on a clear set of strategies developed to ensure its endurance: robust materials, floor levels secure against flooding, services that are handy for maintenanc­e and retrofitti­ng, perimeter fire egress corridors as waterproof­ing backup and polycarbon­ate panels that are accessible for replacemen­t.

The building is at ease in its context, with a long, elegant face to the street and a dramatic wedge form that speaks to the industrial history and character of Sydney’s Alexandria. At once mute and highly identifiab­le, this is a confident architectu­re that will endure.

— Dangrove will be reviewed by Laura Harding in a future issue of Architectu­re Australia.

Architect Tzannes; Project team Alec Tzannes, Chi Melhem (project directors), Jonathan Evans (sustainabl­e design and design review), George Korban (project architect), Neil Haybittel, Derek Chin, Luke Novotny (architects), William Blake, Lily Tandeani, Tony Lam (designers), Kate Nason, Sarah Reid (graduates of architectu­re), Elanor Hyland-Falle

(lighting and furnishing­s); Acoustic consultant Acoustic Studio; Builder Infinity; Building surveyor SDN Land Surveyors; Electrical, ESD, lighting, mechanical and services consultant Steensen Varming; BCA consultant Philip Chun; Facade consultant Surface Design; Flood assessment WMA Water; Fire consultant Red Fire Engineers; Hydraulic consultant Warren Smith and Partners; Landscape consultant Oculus; Life cycle analysis The Footprint Company; Quantity surveyor Bylett and Associates; Engineer TTW; Town planner BBC Consulting Planners; Traffic consultant Thompson Stanbury Associates

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