NZ Institute of Landscape Architects Awards
Media release March 14, 2006
Auckland s artwork plan and New Plymouth foreshore award winning projects helping shape the face of NZ
Auckland s artwork plan and New Plymouth foreshore Pride of Place Award winning landscape architecture projects were helping shape the face of New Zealand, a leading expert said today.
The plan to establish major artworks in downtown Auckland and the development of New Plymouth s foreshore and promenade clinched the supreme trophies at the New Zealand Institute of Landscape Architects (NZILA) awards in Wellington last night.
NZILA president Renee Lambert said today the biennial Pride of Place Awards highlighted the importance of establishing and honouring a national design direction that ensured the creation of places with a distinctive NZ landscape character.
``The emergence of a strong sense of place is due to a better understanding of ourselves as a nation and, as a profession, having the confidence and ability to express that understanding.
Contemporary landscape architecture in New Zealand has over the last decades slowly established a voice that is now clearly recognising our uniqueness in the world.
``We have reinforced the need to undertake collaboration within our projects and integrate other professional knowledge. We have a better understanding of our social history and how that influences strongly our design responses.
``We have begun to respect local knowledge and its contribution to our work. Above all, we have asserted a pride in our profession, as exhibited through the awards, that acknowledges our own local constraints and the intimate involvement we, as landscape architects have within the landscape and all its elements .
The supreme awards are not presented every year because of a high standard set, but one of the judges Simon Smale said the Auckland artworks plan and Taranaki foreshore projects merited honours this year.
Twenty six winners were announced at the gala awards dinner at Te Papa in Wellington last night.
The supreme landscape architecture winners were Richard Reid, for the Auckland City artwork plan, and the Isthmus Group, Richard Bain and the New Plymouth District Council for the New Plymouth foreshore project.
Landscape architecture is a difficult profession to describe as it ranges in scale from regional planning down to the private back yard, with purposes that range from the individual client to community groups and city residents.
The awards demonstrate variety in the New Zealand profession with entries in categories from residential, urban, industrial and park design to planning documents and cutting edge research papers.
Winning projects this year came from a range of regions including Auckland, Queenstown, Christchurch, Wellington, New Plymouth, Otago, Wanganui, Porirua, Northland, Blenheim, Cambridge and the Waikato.
The major winners last night will be submitted to the International Federation of Landscape Architects Awards, which recognises excellence in landscape architecture from IFLA member countries.
ENDS
Award winners:
Isthmus Group in association with Richard Bain
Landscape Architect and New Plymouth District Council
New Plymouth Foreshore Stages 3 And 4: Woolcombe
Terrace And Puke Ariki Landing
GEORGE MALCOLM SUPREME
AWARD and GOLD in Urban Design
The project s primary objective was to connect the CBD with the sea. Its success in achieving that objective has exceeded all expectations. At all times of the day, and in all weathers, the walkway is alive with promenaders - walkers, joggers, cyclists, skaters, people walking dogs. New Plymouth now is a city that defines itself very much by its association with its coast. The walkway features in postcards of New Plymouth, and residents are inordinately proud of their seaside city.
The concept was always sound, but its remarkable success is due in large part to design excellence in its realization. The project has established a New Plymouth design vernacular that is now finding its way into the design of adjacent buildings and spaces. It has literally and figuratively turned a provincial city around, demonstrating the power of good design to connect people and place.
Richard Reid
Architect & Landscape Architect
AucklandCity CBD Public
Artwork Development Plan
CHARLIE CHALLENGER SUPREME
AWARD and GOLD in Landscape Research
This is a
comprehensive and accessible policy document which
confronts issues such as biculturalism. It is a timely,
relevant and sophisticated handling of the topic, with
careful and rigorous research, and accessible language.
This work is an important contribution to the future of
Auckland and its location in the Pacific. The work
expands the idea of art in public space.
Rod
Barnett
LumleyTowerPlaza - Auckland
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - GOLD
Despite the
site s presenting the severe constraints that are
associated with roof gardens, the brief was responded to
with an elegant, beautifully-proportioned and -detailed
space of massive boulders, cycads and water that is
deceptive in its apparent simplicity. With the arrangement
of elements informed by an ordering system based on the
Japanese tatami mat, the garden achieves a seamless
indoor-outdoor transition, so that it is experienced from
within the building also as part of the minimalist foyer
space. A brilliant balance is struck in achieving just
the right amount of patterning in the detail, using an
integrated palette of subtle colours. It is very hard to do
a ZenGarden well, particularly to complement the scale of
corporate architecture, but this project achieves it with
confidence and style.
Isthmus Group in association
with Tina Dyer
Barry Curtis Park Regional
Playground
Visionary Landscapes - GOLD
Isthmus Group
s plan for Barry Curtis Park takes an obvious theme for an
Auckland site volcanism and develops it in a highly
imaginative way to transform a largely featureless site
into an intensive landscape offering a multiplicity of
play and educational experiences. Integrated within a
framework of wilderness parkland vegetation, a series of
volcanic features is detailed -The Plug, Hot Spot, Net,
Flow Cone, Steam Chamber and Tuff Ring, Tremor Stack,
Wilderness Dome and Fracture Cone. Each feature is
designed and detailed to cater for its own distinct
package of active or passive recreational and educational
experiences, with the overall park complex deriving its
unique Auckland identity from the volcano theme. It is
expected that the same design-led approach to detailing of
the individual spaces and features that is evident in the
masterplan will see Barry Curtis Park develop in time as
an enduring legacy of public open space for the new
millennium.
Urban Team, Ministry for the
Environment
Urban Design Protocol Programme
2005
Landscape Planning - GOLD
The Urban Design
Protocol is a highly significant initiative. Four
publications were included in this entry. They are all
very readable documents, clear and strong on advocacy and
memorability of the 7 C s of good urban design. These
documents are very timely providing strong leadership to
ensure something does happen and continues to happen, in
this sense, an excellent project.
Morgan Pollard &
Associates Queenstown
Ltd
KelvinHeightsGarden
Landscape Design - Residential
- GOLD
Success with a scheme that is so strongly based
in mass-planting obviously requires excellent plant
establishment and growth. Ralph Kruger achieved this
firstly through meticulous attention to site preparation,
secondly through a sound knowledge of local plants and
conditions, and thirdly through a rigorous early
maintenance regime. 18 months after establishment the
house is superbly integrated with its mountain setting,
and local admiration for the garden is seeing its style
being replicated in the surrounding neighbourhood.
Isthmus Group
Manukau Square
Landscape
Design/Urban Design - GOLD
There is a sureness and
lightness of design touch that sets this project apart.
The design team s objective of creating a space that is
civic in nature, yet sufficiently informal to invite the
casual, everyday use that will occupy it for most of the
time, appears to have been met effortlessly. This project
achieves design excellence that lifts it into the realm of
the extra-ordinary by sophistication in design thinking
that takes the notion of Aotearoan identity and vernacular
to a new level. Navigation, weaving, rafts, drums,
fishing, mats, plants and birds are all represented.
Almost none of the symbolism is overt, however, so that
the experience of the space as Aotearoan/South Pacific
works largely at a subliminal level. A finely-matched
suite of construction detailing is complemented by a
subtle
palette of warm volcanic colours, and a
carefully-chosen plant menu that reinforces weaving
references with its use of mass-planted harakeke.
John Clemens
Critique of the Northwest
Arch
Landscape Research GOLD
This is a very
relevant critique concerning suburban Christchurch sculpture
at or near the entry of a subdivision. It is a work that
is lyrically written, original, tactful and direct. This
work is a useful contribution to critique in NZ. Skilled
articulation of the principles of critique and a
light-hearted and delightful but rigorous work.
Shelley Egoz -
It isn t a village
anymore
Landscape Research SILVER
This is an
example of research contributing to the understanding of
landscape issues. This work contributes to more informed
choices and decisions in the future. It is a very
accessible work while maintaining rigour and demonstrates
sensitivity to the cultural, historical, physical and
natural context. It is a work which is about community
values and this is integral to its
findings.
Chow:Hill - Bridgit Diprose, Dave
Little
Manukau City Council 2004 Ellerslie Flower Show
Relocatable exhibit "Marble Play"
Landscape Design -
Rural/Park/Recreational - SILVER
This tiny park is a
delightfully self-contained space that artfully integrates
children s play and education within the context of a very
tight and coherent circular marble design. Despite a
tight budget, the design works at all levels. As a land
art piece set on a slightly raised mound in the middle of
a lawn area it presents an intriguing aesthetic swirls
of massed groundcover and winding timber paths reflect the
patterning of one of the traditional types of marble, with
the nicely proportioned vertical elements of interpretation
panel mountings, three cabbage trees, and several symbolic
and playful large steel marble spheres completing the
third dimension and drawing the eye.
EdawJasmax
VodafonePlaza
Landscape Design/Urban
Design - SILVER
The plaza is designed on a formal grid
that is slightly offset from the alignment of the enclosing
buildings, with an organic oval volcano form dropped
onto the grid acting as a counterpoint to the formality of
the space overall, and creating an inviting people space
within the square. The project achieves a smart downtown
urban character that integrates corporate entry
statement with creation of inviting human-scale spaces
for workers and customers. There is a nice counterpoint of
formal and informal. A limited and well-integrated package
of paving and structure details is skillfully used, all in
corporate grey except for several well-placed highlights in
Vodafone red . The predominantly grey hard landscape
provides a good foil for a well-chosen palette of native
plant species that has superb ttoki specimens as its key
signature.
Boffa Miskell Ltd
St
John'sCollegeCemetery Area - Auckland
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - SILVER
The best
reference for the skill with which this brief has been met
is probably to say that it is one of those sites where it
is not immediately obvious that a landscape professional has
been involved. Here the new structures of gate house and
niche wall, and the bollards defining the boundary of the
burial area, have been designed and constructed with such
absolute consistency with the proportion and detail of
those of the historic chapel that they look as though they
have always been there. A great detail of respectful
thinking and attention has been accorded to the
development of this site, and it shows in the
result.
Isthmus Group
Matakana Farmers
Market
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - SILVER
A tight
corner site in MatakanaVillage with significant contour
from road edge to river, and adversely affected by former
industrial use, has been skillfully redeveloped as a
farmers market. Competent site design is complemented by
a palette of hard and soft landscape materials, and a
construction details package, that pay homage to the site s
industrial history, to the rural character of its location,
and to its new use as an outlet for produce from the
surrounding countryside. The whole site has a folksy feel
that brings it to vibrant life on Saturday mornings when
locals converge to meet as much as to buy, and increasing
numbers of city dwellers make the trip up from Auckland
for the farmers market experience that has quite suddenly
become remarkably popular up and down the country. Little
over a year old, the Matakana Farmers Market is already
making a major contribution to revitalization of the
district and community.
Wraight & Associates
Ltd
SpyValley Wines
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - SILVER
A
contemporary design approach that acknowledges the site s
rural location, and use of a limited palette of hard and
soft landscape materials, have created a simple but
striking entry statement to Spy valley Winery s tasting
room and sales area. The project takes an imaginative
approach with the pond and drainage lines, uses materials
competently in a highly appropriate landscape response, and
has a distinctly contemporary feel and vitality well
matched to the growing status of the local wine
industry.
Boffa Miskell Ltd
BushCity - Te
Papa
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - SILVER
The
successful establishment of a bush ecosystem that
provides visitors with a remarkably authentic experience of
New Zealand native forest on a 32-metre-wide site of just
4500 square metres is a triumph of meticulous planning and
design. Careful replication of seven different substrates
to create a range of habitats, manipulation of levels and
vertical separation to exaggerate scale and density of
vegetation, skilled construction of artificial rock
outcrops, and sheltering of establishing vegetation with a
large wind mesh canopy in early years, are just some of the
measures that were implemented to ensure that the sceptics
were confounded.
Isthmus Group
Sylvia
Park
Visionary Landscapes - SILVER
SeartPark is the
space located beneath the expressway, and it is clear from
the submission that the design for this space is a more
metaphorical expression of volcanic and bush origins. The
designers have explored options using a variety of forms
and patterns to articulate the idea of ancient portage
paths, streams, volcanic cones and the forest However some
of these themes have been discarded and the final is
apparently based on the forest theme with an underlying
volcanic influence. The result has lively vertical
expression created by multi-coloured poles of different
sizes (the whimsical forest) located in an abstract pattern
throughout. Discarding the movement lines through the site
and introducing the strong static circular patterns
(Volcanic cones ) on the ground floor plane reduces the
liveliness and movement of the space.
Boffa Miskell
Ltd
Porirua Suburban Character Study
Landscape
Planning - SILVER
The brief and process for this study
is clear, relevant and timely, it sets out recommendations
very clearly and outlines how they should be implemented.
This is a well structured study; rigorous and professional.
DJ Scott Associates
Mangawhai Structure
Plan
Landscape Planning - SILVER
This structure plan
details a quality approach to an important NZ issue and
looks at longer term planning through catchment management
approaches. The plan is beautifully presented and a lot
of emphasis has been placed a on the integrated team
approach and identification of the team and how they worked
together; this has set a benchmark that should be adopted
by others undertaking these sorts of projects.
Mansergh Graham Landscape Architects
Ltd
Tuwharetoa Street Upgrade
Landscape Design/Urban
Design - BRONZE
Mansergh Graham s Tuwharetoa Street
upgrade for Taupo District Council has transformed a
run-down, problem area of town into a smart urban
precinct that expresses strong local character. Sense of
place is emphasized in the ground plane by pumice-coloured
pavers, with blue glass chips in the pavers and sinuous
blue bands along the pavement paying homage to the lake
that is the town s key asset. Plinths of local stone built
around light, cycle stand and shelter bases reveal the
local geology. Cleverly-designed street lighting evokes
images of leaping trout at night, and large shelters and
even seating details incorporate arcs and angles that lift
the streetscape beyond the merely
pedestrian.
Mansergh Graham Landscape Architects
Ltd
Cambridge Civic Renewal
Landscape Design/Urban
Design - BRONZE
Redevelopment of the space between the
neoclassical CambridgeTown Hall and its facing War Memorial
was the first stage of a wider Cambridge Civic Renewal
project. Mansergh Graham s redesign establishes a formal
plaza in honed concrete, neoclassically patterned to
address the refurbished Town Hall building. The patterning
centres the space, which extends through to encompass the
War Memorial. The plaza, the Town Hall and the memorial
are all anchored and provide some low enclosure by formal
planting beds. Paths around the hall itself are detailed
in similar style to the plaza. The plaza is now several
years old, and is standing up well to intensive use that
includes heavy vehicles, including the occasional
tank!
Wraight & Associates Ltd
Whitireia
Polytechnic: Library Learning Centre
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - BRONZE
The
masterplan for Whitireia reverses the previous landscaping
approach on the site using plants to screen nondescript
buildings in different styles by re-exposing the
buildings and instead developing strong axes and
re-establishing a sort of wetland metaphor on the site.
Buildings and associated boardwalk accessways now sit
alongside sunken plantings of massed wetland species that
echo site history. A pond, around a new Library Learning
Centre collects roof and parking area runoff before
discharging into a sunken wetland of indigenous native
planting that treats stormwater before discharging into the
harbour.
LA4 Landscape Architects Ltd
Kohimarama
Esplanade Reserve Redevelopment
Landscape Design -
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional - BRONZE
A robust
functional design approach to addressing protection and
use issues along the beachfront is lifted into the realm of
seriously good design by some nice touches in the detail
design such as seats that look slightly wind-blown in
response to the prevailing onshore breeze and by an
approach strongly informed by sustainable principles such
use of sustainably grown Solomon Islands Vitex hardwood
for the fine boardwalk, low-energy LED site lighting, and
easy-care massed planting of hardy native coastal
groundcover species.
project scores highly assessed against criteria of responsiveness to site character and challenges, functionality, and sustainability.
Marion Read
The Construction of Landcape: A
case study of the OtagoPeninsula, Aotearoa, New
Zealand
Lanscape Research - BRONZE
This thesis is
interesting, thorough and provocative. Marion takes the
stance of landscape as social construct, to be understood
by application of ethnography and discourse analysis.
Having identified points of conflict in the discourses
identified in her selected study area, OtagoPeninsula, she
then makes recommendations for the landscape profession,
particularly for landscape assessment and the role of the
landscape architect. This is a thesis which should be
made available to all members of the profession and which
highlights the benefit of research in the progression of
new ideas within the profession.
Wendy
Hoddinott
Passing Time: A Phenomenological approach to
heritage design
Landscape Research BRONZE
Excellent
research essay taking the difficult topic of heritage
design and interpretation of design to create an
inspirational outcome easily read and understood. It
recognises contemporary work as well as the views of New
Zealand landscape architects. It poses an experiential
design intervention as the research outcome. The site in
Akaroa instead of buying into a native vs exotic approach
or community response approach is undertaken as an
intervention for the research.
Shannon Davis
Wings
of Peace
Landscape Research - MERIT
This is a well
researched, evocative and effectively communicated article
about the fire-fighters reserve in Christchurch. The article
considers the significance of what is a memorial and what
it is memorialising - globalisation or peace? The work
recognised the designers? purpose and was well
illustrated.
Wendy Hoddinott
Critique of the
Christchurch Cathedral Collumbarium
Landscape Research -
MERIT
A very readable critique explaining why the
columbarium was built, the design concepts, materials
selection and a critique of the design is an example of
well illustrated, sympathetic and informative
writing.
Student Awards
Nathan Young
HOMELAND AND
SEA
GOLD.
This project explores the notion of
extending the landscape beyond the edge and under the sea.
The site is the Wellington waterfront and the designer
explores the physical and natural, historical and cultural
past of the edge, concluding that the edge between the
land and the sea is a temporal and ephemeral space, a place
of change.
The project process is clearly set out, logically worked through, beautifully illustrated and is original and innovative.
Chris Punt
TAHUNANUI
ECOLOGICAL PARK
GOLD
This foreshore site is in need
of a makeover. The design objective is to redevelop it as
an integrated park demonstrating the range of ecological
systems that characterises the Nelson Region. The result is
a matrix of environments wedged between the sea and the
urban area and dissected by water, connecting paths and a
road, and anchored by a commercial area to attract the
visitor. Superb graphics and illustration.
Lynette
Wilson
LANDSCAPES OF INCARCERATION.
SILVER
This
project appears to be extensively researched and it
responds sympathetically to both the cultural and physical
constraints of the site - Wanganui prison. Client needs -
prisoners, guards and society - are combined with cues
from the surrounding landscape to reveal a creative and
innovative landscape intervention. This could form the
basis for redevelopment of the entire prison landscape.
Well
Charlotte Grant
SHIRLEY
RENEWAL
SILVER
The designer has a good grasp of the
multicultural nature of this lower socio-economic area and
the problems inherent in the neighbourhood. Her solution
is wide-ranging, and includes opening the park to the
street, focusing neighbourhood activity in a new community
centre in the centre of it, providing facilities which can
be readily used by the community such as outdoor BBQ and
hangi areas along with more traditional recreation areas,
thus building physical and metaphorical bridges back into
the neighbourhood.
Wendy Hoddinott
PASSING TIME
AT TE WAIHORA/LAKE ELLESMERE.
SILVER
This is a
project that evokes imagery of both the physical and the
cultural past of the place by using the simple device of a
landscape intervention - albeit on a fairly
dramatic
scale - to symbolize what might have gone before. Water
reclaims the land, but the marks of human influence are
retained. Displays a mastery of design, with beautiful
graphics and illustrations.
Mark
Teesdale
MAUNGATAUTARI ECOLOGICAL RESERVE
SILVER
This project establishes an entry experience to
the ?mainland island? reserve. The entire entry landscape
is a metaphor for ecological history. This design presents
an intriguing solution to the problems of creating a new
landscape in an old one, particularly when the old
landscape has multiple layers of meaning and a strong
cultural past. The masterplan clearly illustrates the
connections between the landscapes and the detailed design
for the visitor facility is simple but effective and
accompanied by good
illustrations.
ENDS