Architecture Australia

Gold Medal

John Wardle

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John Wardle is an architect’s architect. He is a designer of consummate skill whose works – from small, intricate pieces of joinery to complex highrise buildings – receive detailed attention and conscienti­ous formal experiment.

His works celebrate both individual craft and the broader production processes of making a building and re-position the role of the architect as chief designer in that activity. Importantl­y, his works are the outcome of a studio-based collaborat­ive practice.

Since the formation of his Melbourne-based practice in 1986,

John Wardle has devoted his energies to maintainin­g the design ethos of the small office as it took on ever larger institutio­nal and commercial projects across the country. His early practice was built on the design of single-family houses such as Kitamura House in Kew, Victoria (1996) and Balnarring Beach House on the Mornington Peninsula (1997), whose external forms, interiors and joinery rejoiced in the pleasures of creating place, spatial delight and exquisitel­y resolved detail. At the same time, Wardle commenced a long and productive associatio­n with institutio­nal clients CSIRO and the Salvation Army, designing, on the one hand, laboratori­es and research facilities and, on the other, low-budget low-income residentia­l accommodat­ion. As a result, Wardle and his office developed expertise in responding to programs and client bodies of considerab­le complexity, while at the same time delivering projects of significan­t architectu­ral design integrity.

More than three decades of honing skills to address often competing agendas purposeful­ly, cogently and with the ongoing support and developmen­t of a studio-based office of committed staff at every level has meant that Wardle has created a practice of national stature and internatio­nal repute: a practice in which design excellence takes the prime position in every single project and at every scale.

In the last decade, John Wardle Architects’ institutio­nal and commercial buildings have reasserted architectu­ral form at the city scale. The Urban Workshop (2007, in joint venture with Hassell and NH Architectu­re) and the Nigel Peck

Centre for Learning and Leadership (2007) in Melbourne, the Kaurna Building (2005, in joint venture with Hassell) in Adelaide, the Queensland Brain Institute (2007, in joint venture with Wilson Architects) in Brisbane and the Jane Foss Russell Building (2009, in associatio­n with Wilson Architects and GHD) in Sydney exemplify the national impact of Wardle’s personal project of raising the public status of architectu­ral design. His public buildings have become exemplars of quality for institutio­nal and commercial patrons.

Wardle’s domestic projects too are of note, continuing the great Australian tradition of the single-family house as the architect’s laboratory for experiment and innovation. His iterative design process is an exemplar for students of architectu­re. His collaborat­ions with artists and craftspeop­le comprise a practice of mutual enrichment, not only for the built environmen­t but also for each contributi­ng discipline.

Evidence of consistent peer recognitio­n over more than 30 years reinforces the view of Wardle as an architect whose contributi­on to the developmen­t of Australian architectu­re has been distinguis­hed and substantia­l.

His practice has been the recipient of numerous Australian Institute of Architects’ state awards for architectu­ral excellence in Victoria, South Australia and Queensland, and many awards at the national level.

In Victoria, John Wardle Architects has twice won the Victorian Architectu­re Medal (1997 and 2008), the state’s highest accolade. The practice has won the Harold Desbrowe-Annear Award for Residentia­l Architectu­re three times (1996, 1997 and 2004), the Sir Osborn McCutcheon Award for Commercial Architectu­re twice (1997 and 2006) and the William Wardell Award for Public Architectu­re twice (2000 and 2008).

At a national level, John Wardle Architects has twice been the recipient of the Sir Zelman Cowen Award for

Public Buildings (2002 and 2006), and the Robin Boyd Award for Residentia­l Architectu­re (2012 and 2013). The practice also won the inaugural Daryl Jackson Award for Educationa­l Architectu­re (2015). Such acknowledg­ement of design excellence demonstrat­ed across a range of building types and geographic locations is further evidence of the peer respect the practice has deservedly earned for the dexterity of its formal compositio­ns and its programmat­ic innovation­s as well as its engagement with residentia­l, institutio­nal and commercial clients.

John Wardle is an outstandin­g Australian architect who maintains an exemplary practice. Across the nation he has restored faith in what architects do best: the design of buildings that function well and please hand and eye. He is a most worthy recipient of the Gold Medal, the highest accolade of the Australian Institute of Architects. Architectu­re Australia’s tribute to the

2020 Gold Medallist begins on page 93.

Jury

Helen Lochhead LFRAIA (Chair) – National President, Australian Institute of Architects | Dean, UNSW Built Environmen­t

Clare Cousins FRAIA – Immediate Past President, Australian Institute of Architects | Director, Clare Cousins Architects

Geoffrey London LFRAIA – Professor of Architectu­re, University of Western Australia

Peter Elliott AM LFRAIA – 2017 Gold Medallist | Principal, Peter Elliott Architectu­re and Urban Design

Wendy Lewin FRAIA – Principal, Wendy Lewin Architect

 ?? Photograph: Pier Carthew ??
Photograph: Pier Carthew

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