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 Welcome to 2011 and to the January edition of the Emerging Architects and Graduates Network monthly newsletter.
EmAGN has again in 2010 successfully achieved a number of initiatives in an effort to benefit members in our demographic. EmAGN members will have received a copy of the 2011 Desk Diary which I hope is a useful member of your desktop. The Dulux Study Tour winners for this year have been decided, and the inaugural National Emerging Architect Prize has also been judged and awaiting presentation early this year. We are in the process of establishing a national series of registration seminars and our Website and Monthly Newsletters will continue to provide relevant information to you. Our National Competition has made progress over the last half of 2011 and is shaping up to be one of the major EmAGN initiatives this year. We will continue to provide correspondence from and collaboration with the International Area Committee and with SONA throughout the year to bring you a wider perspective of the profession.
Locally your State EmAGN Representatives will continue to provide presentations by local and emerging architects, tours of local architecture and other state level initiatives. Thank you to our Corporate Sponsors and Institute staff who continue to support EmAGN and its initiatives on a state and national level.
You would have received an email last week from Institute CEO David Parken regarding Queensland flood relief initiatives. I would like to encourage all of you to visit www.institutefloodrelief.com to offer messages of support and help or to contribute in any way you can.
Anthony Balsamo
chair
EmAGN |
EmAGN Contacts
Chair
Anthony Balsamo(SA)
Australian Capital TerritoryErin Hinton
New South Wales
Jacqueline Connor
Northern TerritoryEdward Farinha
QueenslandLuke Pendergast
South Australia Mark Berlangieri
TasmaniaHugh Maguire
Victoria
Jacqui Alexander
Western Australia
Dean Adams
January 2011
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NSW
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Name of state group: DARCH Name of representative: Jacqueline Connor
DARCH was pleased to be featured in the current edition of the NSW Architecture Bulletin. As well as looking at the history of DARCH and everything we did in 2010, a number of emerging architects wrote about the issues we face: Gerard Reinmuth, Abbie Galvin, James Stockwell, John Choi and Tamara Donnellan. We plan to continue our presence in the Bulletin throughout the year.
We held our first DARCH Small Bar Tour on December 14 to end the year. We visited three new places around Crown Street: The Commons, Pocket Bar and Yullis and the owners and designers were generous enough to share their passion for their project as well as the planning and approval issues they have had to deal with along the way. A second tour is planned for February so let us know if you have any suggestions.
The first event for the year will be another Regi(fru)stration seminar on January 31 to provide insights into the registration process before the PALS course starts the following week. There will be presenters from the Board of Architects and the Institute as well as those who have recently made it through and plenty of time for questions.
DARCH would love to have new members and new input. We have regular meetings every second Tuesday morning. Please contact us for information or to join our mailing list: darch@raia.com.au |
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Qld
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Name of state group:YAQ
Name of representative: Luke Pendergast
Another year has begun, and a lot is planned.
Next Friday 28 January, the Inaugural ‘Seven With Another’ kicks off at the Substation No.4 at 22 Petrie Terrace. This is a great event where different creative disciplines have been teamed up to make an installation. The show opens at 7pm and runs for a week. Also, Pechakucha night Vol 21 is set for Wednesday 13 April 2011, put it in your diary.
Next month YAQ is teaming up with the Board of Architects Queensland to hold an information evening about the registration process. Keep an ear out for details.
YAQ would love to have new members and new input for 2011. We have monthly meetings, the first Tuesday evening of each month, commencing Tuesday 1 February. Please contact us for information or to join our new mailing list: youngarchitectsqld@gmail.com. YAQ is on Facebook! Look us up for more information on our events. |
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VIC
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Name of state group: V-YAG (Victorian Young Architects & Graduates)
Name of representative: Jacqui Alexander
In December, Process took the form of a debate - the traditional annual finale for the series.
This year's topic "Utopia: A Waste of Time" was met with robust, whimsical and irreverent responses from both teams. Speakers included Tom Morgan (co-host of Process), Aaron Roberts (Room 11), Christine Phillips (Triple R's "The Architects", Open Haus), James Juricevich (Monash University), James Staughton (Workshop Architecture) and Gretchen Wilkins (RMIT.) After some great MCing from Michael Roper (former Process Host) the negative team proved themselves to be more popular on the applause-o-meter and claimed the inaugural and rather kitsch Arch^Up debate trophy.
We look forward to another great year of Process in 2011. |
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ARC Linkage grant project 'Equity and Diversity in the Australian Architecture Profession: Women, Work and Leadership' - Request for Assistance
Ever thought about doing a PhD? Want to travel Australia and network with dynamic and inspiring women architects and policy-makers? Do you have an excellent academic record? Want to work with leading academics in architecture, political science, and business on a stimulating project to make a difference to women architects in Australia? This could be your chance.
The School of Architecture at the University of Queensland is pleased to offer a PhD scholarship, inviting expressions of interest from local and national candidates for study in 2011-2013, as part of the Australian
Research Council funded Linkage project "Equity and Diversity in the Australian Architecture
Profession: Women, Work and Leadership".
About the project:
Women have been an active part of the architecture profession in Australia for more than a hundred years, yet they remain dramatically under-represented at senior management level. The project will seek to understand this phenomenon, building upon previous research (notably Whitman 2005) to produce the most comprehensive picture yet of women and architectural work in Australia, through a combination of historical and scholarly research, detailed ethnographic and visual research on specific workplaces, and comparative study of local and international policy environments. It will seek to understand women architects' relative scarcity in leadership roles in Australia, and define policy initiatives and practical ways in which female (and male) architects can better balance their professional and personal lives.
In pursuing these aims, the research team (and the PhD candidate) will work closely with the project's industry partners: the Australian Institute of Architects (national chapter), BVN Architecture, PTW Architects, BatesSmart, and ArchitectureMedia.
About the research team:
The team comprises academics from five Australian Universities, including Dr Naomi Stead (UQ), A/Prof Julie
Willis (University of Melbourne), Prof Sandra Kaji-O'Grady (University of Sydney), Prof Gillian Whitehouse(UQ), Prof Susan Savage (QUT), Dr Karen Burns (Monash), and Dr Amanda Roan (UQ). Ms Justine Clark joins us as Partner Investigator from Industry Partner ArchitectureMedia.
This exciting opportunity provides:
- a tax-free stipend to cover living expenses for three years
- coverage of all university fees
- the option to undertake a limited amount of paid work in addition to the PhD
- funding for project-specific travel in Australia and overseas
- a fully-resolved and feasible research project already set up and ready to start
- the chance to work in the established and highly-respected scholarly environment of the ATCH (Architecture Theory Criticism History) Research
Centre in the School of Architecture at the University of Queensland, surrounded by leading national and international scholars
Criteria:
The successful applicant will hold an academic qualification equivalent to a Bachelor's degree with Honours
Class I or IIA in architecture, sociology, industrial relations, political science or a related field (or equivalent qualifications and experience).
Deadline:
Expressions of interest are welcome at any time. The position will remain open until filled.
Contacts:
You are encouraged to contact the Chief Investigator for more information on the project:
Dr Naomi Stead, email n.stead@uq.edu.au, phone 07 3365 3848.
For information about the ATCH Research Centre see: www.uq.edu.au/atch/
For information about APAI scholarships see: www.uq.edu.au/grad-school/apai
For information about admission to UQ PhDs see: www.uq.edu.au/grad-school/our-research-degrees
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International speakers announced for 2011 National Architecture Conference
Japan's most venerable architect and Pritzker Prize Laureate Fumihiko Maki will headline an international 'who's who' of top architects from five continents and three generations announced as speakers at the 'Natural Artifice' 2011 National Architecture Conference.
The 82-year-old architectural legend and head of Tokyo's Maki and Associates is renowned for his sensitive manipulation of light, his prolific work as an educator and his projects, including World Trade Center Tower 4 and the Kaze-no-Oka crematorium.
Announcing speakers for the Australian Institute of Architects' national conference in Melbourne next April, Creative Directors Angelo Candalepas, Andrew Scott and David Neustein said fellow speakers will include:
- Finnish architect and author Juhani Pallasmaa of Juhani Pallasmaa Architects – an advocate for sensory encounters which 'surpass the merely ocular and visual'. www.pallasmaa.fi
- Spanish architect Luis Mansilla of Mansilla+Tuñón Arquitectos – creators of mainly public projects demonstrating a 'constant tension between rational deduction and wilful inspiration'. www.mansilla-tunon.com
(website not in English)
- French architect Francois Roche of R&Sie(n) – whose work 'wilfully blurs disciplinary boundaries between architecture, art, biology and cybernetics'. www.new-territories.com
- Colombian architects and landscape architects Luis Callejas and Sebastian Mejia of Paisajes Emergentes – whose architecture and landscapes conceal the lines between buildings and their environments. www.paisajesemergentes.com
- US architect Lisa Iwamoto of Iwamoto Scott - whose practice harnesses contemporary forms and digital processes to emulate natural systems. www.iwamotoscott.com
- Portuguese architect Manuel Aires Mateus of Aires Mateus & Associates - masters of manipulating figure and ground to create spatial tension. www.airesmateus.com

Above: Luis Mansilla’s ‘wilful inspiration’. |

Above: Juhani Pallasmaa's Cranbrook Academy arrival plaza and astronomical structure, Michigan (in collaboration with Dan Hoffman and the Cranbrook Architecture Studio). Photo: Balthazar Korab. |
Joining the line-up of international speakers at the Melbourne Convention Centre from 14-16 April will be prominent Australian architects and thought leaders.
The 2011 Creative Directors said all speakers will address themes which explore the ‘natural’ and the 'artificial'.
They said: "While humankind is as reliant as ever on nature, our experience of what is 'natural' is mediated by technology. From birth, this artifice is intrinsic in all encounters with nature"
"There are amazing results now evident in a world where designers are apprehending the powerful relationship between that which is natural and that which is artificial in a contemporary and meaningful way for our time".
"Next year’s conference brings together speakers representing different regions, ages and ideologies, each of whom has a potent vision for how we might locate nature in an artificial world".

Above: waterflux by R&Sie(n); |

Above: Juhani Pallasmaa |
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Above: Luis Mansilla of Mansilla-Tunon Architects. Left: Lisa Iwamoto of Iwamoto Scott. |
For more information on Natural Artifice, log on to www.architecture.com.au or www.naturalartifice.com
Australian Institute of Architects | Media Contact
Ms Trish Croaker, National Media/PR Advisor
0408 756 789 or trish.croaker@raia.com.au
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An innovative Australian exhibition attracting record crowds at the 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale is set to tour Australia– starting on the Gold Coast and Sydney from March 2011.
Announcing the tour, the Australian Institute of Architects said the NOW and WHEN: Australian Urbanism exhibition would be launched in Australia at the Gold Coast City Gallery, before moving to the Object: Australian Centre for Craft and Design in Sydney. Additional dates and venues will be added over coming months.
The exhibition, which closed in Venice in 2010 after a three month run, attracted a record 93,000-plus visitors to the Australian Pavilion – up 60 per cent from 2008. In total, more than 170,000 people attended the Biennale, the most respected architectural event in the world.
NOW and WHEN: Australian Urbanism has been hailed as a spectacular visual experience by prominent commentators and international architects. The Institute said Australian audiences will be able to enjoy a completely new form of 3D stereoscopic technology, which goes beyond the latest cinematic releases. Visitors to the Australian showings of the exhibition will be able to move around these urban scenes and experience the urbanised worlds from different perspectives.
The NOW component by Australia’s pre-eminent photographer and Co-Creative Director John Gollings will feature a six minute sequence of visually unsurpassed 3D aerial images of three Australian Cities – Melbourne, Sydney and Surfers Paradise, contrasted with the giant mining pits at Kalgoorlie and Newman.
The WHEN component, overseen by Co-Creative Director Ivan Rijavec, will feature a 9 minute sequence of ‘propositions’ or ‘ideas’ for what Australian urbanism could be in 50 years time. Seventeen different architectural collaborations from across Australia, and their images of possible future urban spaces from Adelaide to Brisbane, will be displayed. These include floating cities, submerged cities, and new desert spaces.
Exhibition Details:
Gold Coast City Gallery, 135 Bundall Road, Surfers Paradise: 26 March-1 May 2011.
Object: Centre for Craft and Design, 415 Bourke Street, Surry Hills: 2 July to 25 Sept 2011.
NOW and WHEN: Australian Urbanism is a major project of the Australian Institute of Architects.
For NOW and WHEN media kits: www.architecture.com.au/nowandwhen/mediakit
For further exhibition details contact:
Trish Croaker, National Media/PR Advisor
0408 756 789 or trish.croaker@raia.com.au
To discover more about the Institute, log on to www.architecture.com.au
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The Architectural Review (AR) : Introduction to the Emerging Architecture Awards
www.architectural-review.com/home/ar-emerging-architecture/introduction-to-the-emerging-architecture-awards/8608490.article
24 November 2010 | By Catherine Slessor
This issue celebrates the winners of the annual AR Awards for Emerging Architecture. Edging into the wider architectural firmament, the designers shown in these pages are the stars of tomorrow.
Since 1999, the AR Awards have nurtured the talents of an emerging generation of architects from all over the world and are now firmly on the radar of those striving to make their mark. Only built work is eligible for submission as our view has always been that architecture is not confined to paper or computerised theorising, but is a compact with society to build well and to build responsibly.
From the heady era of the Noughties, conditions have changed for architects and their clients, and the going is tougher than it used to be. Yet this does not seem to have diminished the wellspring of creativity running through the Awards. This year, just over 300 submissions were received from 48 countries, and winning schemes are spread over a remarkable range of locales, from Canada to Indonesia.
The jury also reflected a diverse international outlook. Chaired by AR Editor Catherine Slessor, it included Daniel Bonilla from Colombia, Nigel Coates from the UK, Florence Lipsky of French practice Lipsky + Rollet, Gurjit Singh Matharoo from India (who was also winner of AR House), and Jennifer Dixon of London-based firm Austin-Smith:Lord, one of two sponsors of the Awards. The other is Triflow Concepts, manufacturer of beautifully designed taps and accessories. We're grateful for their generosity which makes possible not only the Awards programme, but also an associated exhibition of winning entries and a series of lectures at the RIBA in London. Such activities help to disseminate the debate begun in these pages. The exhibition opens on 25 November and full details of the lecture series can be found in the forthcoming January issue.
The ebb and flow of the jury's discussions owed much to different experiences and world views, but all were agreed on the importance of certain key assessment criteria: connectedness to place, appropriate use of materials and technology, the cultivation of environmental and social responsibility, and some sense of architectural authenticity (as opposed to novelty), which is perhaps increasingly difficult to define in these cut-and-paste times.
The three first prize winners interpret these concerns in very different ways. Ryo Abe's austerely beautiful canopy of charred shingles on a remote Japanese island is a meditation on nature, simplicity and place. Carmody Groarke's delightful pop-up restaurant celebrates an intuitive, vagabond spirit. And NHDRO's remodelling of an existing building in Shanghai's docklands into a new boutique hotel is an intelligent paradigm for the creative reuse of historic structures, which has a wider and hopefully instructive resonance in China's current expansionist milieu.
Though the Awards are now in their 12th year, we continue to be amazed by the depth and ingenuity of the architectural thinking demonstrated in the submissions. And despite the current turbulent climate, we hope that this issue will be a powerful incentive for others to go out and do even better.
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2010 National Architecture Awards announced - ‘community spirit' marks winning projects
Public architectural projects across Australia demonstrating a winning mix of ‘community spirit, intensity, humility, beauty and hope for the future' have dominated the nation's top architecture awards.
From urban design to public, commercial, heritage, interior and sustainable architecture, projects skilfully blending these elements took top honours presented at the Australian Institute of Architects' National Architecture Awards, the country's most prestigious annual architecture prizes. 2010 marks the 30th birthday for the national awards, introduced in 1961.
The 2010 awards were presented to the nation's most inspiring recent architectural projects and architects, at a special ceremony (Thursday 28 October) in Canberra. A total 33 awards and commendations across 12 categories were awarded to projects in Queensland, NSW, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, and offshore in Singapore, Thailand, Japan, Tanzania, Indonesia and India.
Presenting the awards, Jury Chair Melinda Dodson said: "It's a contradictory time for architecture – we've had economic buoyancy followed by economic downturn. As architects we're part of a carbon emitting industry, so it's natural that the jury reflected on the future, applied the 'enduring architecture' test, and the essential test of sustainability. We were heartened by the many instances of architects demonstrating leadership, advocacy and innovation. Projects where a positive transformative act had occurred, resulting in new ideas for the profession and for the community about architecture; architects doing ordinary things in extraordinary ways. Often leadership and perseverance was matched by the client." |
The 2010 Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture was a clear demonstration of this – being awarded this year to the Epping to Chatswood Rail Link, Intermediate Stations in Sydney by national practice HASSELL. In a triple win for the firm, HASSELL also received the Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture for the ANZ Centre in Melbourne, and a National Commendation for Urban Design for the Adelaide Zoo Entrance Precinct in Adelaide.
Ms Dodson said the Intermediate Stations represented "a genuine evolutionary and visionary approach to station management and work environments. This all contributes to a project of unique competence and beauty that derives its architecture through common sense with sensitive design decisions". Access elements "appear as sculptures within a space which is free of ornamentation, beautifully ordered and reliant only on light and people to colour the architecture".
Ms Dodson said "while the 2009 jury worried about a lack of expenditure on public urban design projects, in 2010 the opposite was true". "Most notably, Mayor Clover Moore and the City of Sydney have demonstrated a commitment to the public realm with the Pirrama Park and Paddington Reservoir Gardens projects".
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As a result, the City of Sydney and Australian public emerged as this year's big winners, with five projects commissioned by the council picking up major awards. Surry Hills Library and Community Centre in Sydney by Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp (fjmt) received a National Award for Public Architecture and a National Award for Sustainable Architecture.
The much used and enjoyed Pirrama Park at Pyrmont Hill by Thalis Architecture + Urban Projects/Aspect Studios/CAB received the Walter Burley Griffin Award for Urban Design, while the equally well-frequented Paddington Reservoir Gardens by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer with JMD Design and the City of Sydney received a National Award for Urban Design and National Award for Heritage. |
The jury noted that in "a city a city enamoured with its harbour image Sydney has surprisingly few places where you can dangle your feet in the water", with Pirrama Park now being one of those".
They said: "This is a great public place because it respects the past without treating it as a museum artefact; it has spatial, material and planting variety; and it offers a model for the future redevelopment of the harbour foreshore. That industrial heritage is a useful part of the urban realm is a point of some contention in cities across the globe. In the context of this debate Pirrama Park is a provocation – articulating the way the less picturesque, gritty aspects of the past can make a powerful contribution to the life of our cities." |

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Top Right: Surry Hills Library and Community Centre by fjmt. Photography: John Gollings.
Right: Paddington Reservoir Gardens by Tonkin Zulaikha Greer with JMD Design and the City of Sydney. |

Photography: Brett Boardman
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Australia's top award for international architecture, the Jørn Utzøn Award for International Architecture, was awarded to a revolutionary, naturally ventilated 66-storey apartment building in Bangkok, The Met, by Singapore-based practice WOHA. While the jury noted the particular strength of this year's International Award entrants from around the world, they said The Met represented "major advances towards a possible future vision of ecologically responsible highly dense urban housing". In total six projects received Awards and Commendations, including an orphanage in Tanzania, and "extraordinary" house for one of the world's top designers in Japan.
The prestigious Lachlan Macquarie Award for Heritage was this year awarded to a regional project of national significance described by the jury as this year's "most powerful story of collaboration, leadership and perseverance between client and architect" - the Barcaldine Tree of Knowledge Memorial by Brian Hooper Architect and m3architecture - Architects in Association. The now-dead and memorialised ghost gum in the main street of Barcaldine is of national importance as the shelter under which striking shearers met 120 years ago, giving rise to the formation of the ALP. |

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Far Left: The Barcaldine Tree of Knowledge by Brian Hooper Architect and m3architecture - Architects in Association. Photography: Jon Linkins.
Left: A new model for high density living - The Met in Bangkok, by WOHA. Photography: Tim Griffith |
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The jury said: "This remarkable structure may not have existed and the tree lost if not for the compelling architectural vision, the intelligence and tenacity of the architects and the great collaborative relationship with Barcaldine Mayor Rob Chandler who supported, promoted, and carried this project through many difficulties."
An exemplary new commercial building in the heart of Kings Cross described by the jury as both a "placemaker" for the public and workplace communities - 5-9 Roslyn Street in Kings Cross by Durbach Block Architects – was awarded this year's top Harry Seidler Award for Commercial Architecture. The jury said the building has "a particularly human quality" and they had "a strong sense that this building would adapt and change gracefully to changes in commercial use over time – a mark of an exemplar commercial building".
For the first time in the history of the national awards, Australia's most prestigious residential award – the Robin Boyd Award for Residential Architecture - Houses, was presented to a Tasmanian practice and house - the Trial Bay House by Hobart practice HBV Architects. The jury said: "An exceptional house may be one with such calmness and serenity that it is hard to leave. The remodelling and additions to the Trial Bay House have created such a house."
The Frederick Romberg Award for Residential Architecture - Multiple Housing was presented to Brisbane-based practice Donovan Hill for the Seaspray Resort and Spa at Zilzie in Queensland. The practice also picked up a National Award for Residential Architecture – Houses for their Z House in Brisbane. |

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Left: 5-9 Roslyn St by Durbach Block Architects. Photography: Anthony Browell. Above: ANZ Centre by HASSELL. Photo: Earl Carter
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A little known treasure, the Supreme Court Complex in Hobart by the Department of Public Works/Peter Partridge is this year's recipient of the 25 Year Award for Enduring Architecture. The jury said: "This building is an exemplary, enduring piece of public architecture that makes a poised, urban contribution to the city of Hobart. The complex is in remarkably original order because of the skill with which it was designed. Here is a reminder that investment in public architecture has a lasting effect on the city."
In a third win for Tasmania, a National Award for Small Project Architecture was presented to the Strangio House by Maria Gigney Architects, with the jury saying: "The creative and sensitive conversion of a 170 year old stone barn into a compact but exciting contemporary residence is a superb example of how to reuse old building stock".
The Colorbond® Award for Steel Architecture was presented to Wood/Marsh Pty Ltd for the Australian Expo Pavilion in China, with the jury saying "this is a building that is about and from Australia". They added: "It is like a great big piece of the Australian landscape transplanted in the fairgrounds."
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The National Architecture Awards would not be possible without the support of our Principal Corporate Partner - BlueScope Steel; Supporting Corporate Partners - Lockwood, Dulux, Autodesk, Virgin Atlantic, AWS, Kingspan and Diversified Exhibitions; and is significantly enhanced by our media partnership with the Australian Financial Review AFR Magazine and Architecture Australia (Aa).
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For embargoed media kits, incl. jury citations, a full list of winners, images and interviews:
Trish Croaker, National Media/PR Advisor Mobile 0408 756 163 or trish.croaker@raia.com.au
To discover more about the Institute, log on to www.architecture.com.au
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Personal Details:
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