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    Architects recognized in 2021 Queens Birthday Honours

    Six people have been recognized for services to architecture in the 2021 Queen’s Birthday Honours.
    Among them are Charles Justin, founding director of both Plus Architecture and SJB Architects; Epaminondas (Nonda) Katsalidis, founding partner of Fender Katsalidis; Lolita Mohyla, architect, lawyer and author; Shelley Penn, architect, academic and government advisor; Dominic Charles Richards, architect, educator and LGBTQI activist; and Roger William Poole, former director and chairman of Bates Smart.
    Charles Justin was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for significant service to the museums sector, arts administration and architecture. He was a founding director of Plus Architecture (1997) and SJB Architects (1980s) and has been the planning and project advisor for the Caulfield Hebrew Congregation since 2013. He is a life fellow of the Australian Institute of Architects and was president of the Institute’s Victorian chapter from 1986 to 1988. He was president of the Jewish Museum of Australia from 2004 to 2009 and is the founder and director of the Justin Art House Museum.

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    Nonda Katsalidis.

    Nonda Katsalidis also appointed a Member of the Order of Australia, for significant service to architecture and sustainable construction innovations. He was the co-founding partner of Nation Fender Katsalidis , (1996-2001) and, later, Fender Katsalidis (since 2001). His citation notes that his is a “leader in the integration of art into architecture” with notable buildings including the Melbourne Terrace Apartment, Republic Tower and Eureka Tower.
    Lolita Mohyla was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for significant services to architecture and construction law. She is the author of Construction in Australia: Law and Project Delivery (1996) and has been senior counsellor for the Australian Institute of Architects’ South Australian chapter since 2002. She is also a commissioner for the Environment, Resources and Development Court of South Australia and is managing partner of Mohyla Architects Interior Designers.

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    Shelley Penn.

    Shelley Penn was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for architecture and design in the public realm, and to professional institutes. She is an associate professor in architecture at the Melbourne School of Design and has been the principal architect and owner of Shelley Penn Architect since 1993. She was president of the Australian Institute of Architects from 2012 to 2013, associate Victorian government architect from 2006-2010 and has sat on numerous government advisory boards in Victoria, NSW and the ACT.
    Elsewhere in the honours, Dominic Richards was awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to architecture and the community. He is the co-founder and chief executive of Our Place, London and a director of Architekton. He is also chairman and co-founder of Prosper Education, Sydney and RoyalABC and was previously chairman of LGBT London and co-founder of Queercompany.
    Roger Poole was also awarded a Medal of the Order of Australia for services to architecture and the community. He was a director of Bates Smart from 1981 to 1997 and chairman from 1998 to 2015. He has been director of Roger Poole Architects from 2015 and has sat on various committees and boards for the Property Council of Australia and Committee for Melbourne.
    Interior designer Sue Carr was also appointed a Member of the Order of Australia for services to interior design, to education, and to women in business. The founder of Carr Design Group is also a member of Women Chiefs of Enterprise in Australia. She has been inducted into the Australian Businesswomen’s Hall of Fame and the Design Institute of Australia’s Hall of Fame, and was named one of 100 Women of Influence by the Australian Financial Review in 2016. More

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    After Half a Century, White Columns Still Surprises

    New York’s longest running alternative art space celebrates its own near-mythic history — as well as the twists and turns of the city’s cultural scene.“I’m going to use a word you’re not supposed to say,” the sculptor Jeffrey Lew declared with a touch of bravado. “I’m sort of a sociopath.”In 1969 Lew and Rachel Wood, then his wife, purchased a decrepit six-story rag-salvaging factory in SoHo for $110,000. They moved into its upper floors with an assortment of kindred artists and, with fellow sculptors Gordon Matta-Clark and Alan Saret, turned the unheated ground floor and basement into a 7,400-square-foot exhibition space named 112 Greene Street (and later 112 Workshop), after its location. Subsequent shows featured a wall-mounted piece made of 500 pounds of decaying carrots, massive holes cut into the floor, and a dance troupe swinging overhead from the 17-foot-high ceiling.Installation view of the inaugural group show at White Columns’ first home at 112 Greene Street, Oct. 1970.Cosmo Sarchiapone, via White ColumnsThe Glenn Branca Ensemble performing at White Columns’ “Noise Fest,” June 20, 1981.Terri Slotkin, via White ColumnsThose early ’70s spectacles have since attained near-mythic status; work staged there that Lew felt museums and established galleries either couldn’t, or wouldn’t, show has since been feted in museums and blue-chip galleries. But Lew soon grew tired of the creeping professionalism brought on by a National Endowment for the Arts grant. “When I got the N.E.A. grant they said, ‘Give us your schedule.’ A schedule?” Lew recalled with a laugh. “The minute people start acting like curators, that’s when the good stuff ends.”By late 1978, Lew said he’d had enough of committees and payroll issues. He’d already turned the building’s upper-floor lofts into co-ops, but he was still the art space’s landlord. Citing his hefty tax bill, he tripled its $550 monthly rent, fully aware that its governing board could never afford the new rate. “Like I said, I’m a sociopath,” Lew explained. “I just didn’t have any feelings whether it went under.”Audience at a concert by the Italian folk group Pupi e Fresedde, held in conjunction with a White Columns exhibition of Peter Schumann’s puppets and masks, September 1977. Peter Schumann and White ColumnsYet 112 Greene Street didn’t die. Quite the opposite. It eventually found a new home in the West Village, as well as new leadership. Rechristened White Columns, the nonprofit became not only New York City’s longest running alternative art space, but one of its most enduringly vital. The evidence is on its walls as part of its 50th anniversary exhibition, which Matthew Higgs, the gallery’s director and chief curator since 2004, describes as part celebration and part tribute to the ongoing story of the New York art scene.Poring over the archival installation photos and printed ephemera, what emerges is a dizzying array of artists who began their careers with solo debuts there. From John Currin and Cady Noland in the ’80s to Rachel Feinstein and Glenn Ligon in the ’90s, no one style predominates. The common thread is simply that a given director found an artist interesting enough to present work and offer it for sale with no strings — one of 15 to 20 such shows every year — relying on grants and donations to cover its now approximately $1 million budget.Jeffrey Lew with his installation “Drawerings,” Jan. 25 – Feb. 6, 1975.Jeffrey Lew and White Columns; Cosmo SarchiaponeOne of Lew’s parting gifts may be precisely what allowed White Columns to continue past his brinkmanship. In late 1979, sensing a simpatico spirit, Lew encouraged Josh Baer, then 23 years old, to apply for the space’s vacant director position. Baer had no formal administrative or curatorial experience. But he’d grown up at the heart of the ’70s New York art world — his mother and stepfather were the acclaimed painters Jo Baer and John Wesley. Even more crucially, he was immersed in the new art forms bubbling up downtown. “Everything was blending together,” Baer recalled. “Hip-hop was breaking out, break dancing, graffiti art, noise music. That Gordon Matta-Clark era, that minimalist sculpture thing of SoHo, had now been replaced by a generation that’s more at home at the Mudd Club.”Baer insisted that being chosen to run White Columns in 1979 “wasn’t a glamorous thing to walk into. It was in impossible shape.” Sighing over his own naïveté, from his current perspective as an art adviser, he added, “Only somebody that young would be dumb enough to do it.” Monthly rent may have only been $415 at the space’s next home near the West Side Highway, but that was hardly a well-trafficked art burg. Moreover, the entire year’s budget was a mere $8,000 — with no provision for a director’s salary.From left, the artists Gretchen Bender, Cindy Sherman with Josh Baer, the White Columns director, at a fund-raiser, May 27, 1982.Robin Holland, via White ColumnsThe crowd inside a Danceteria benefit for White Columns, May 27, 1982.Robin Holland, via White ColumnsThe artist and new board member Mike Roddy suggested that Baer rebrand the space as “White Columns,” an architectural nod to the classically styled features of both its old and new addresses. It was also a droll statement about the rigid hierarchy of the art world being 100 percent white, Baer said critically. Hoping the frisson of spotlighting artists of color under the new name wouldn’t be lost on anyone, the updated moniker was made public for a September 1980 show featuring a sprawling subway-style mural by Lee Quiñones and Fred Brathwaite, a.k.a. Fab Five Freddy, one of the first times graffiti had been brought indoors into a prominent gallery setting.“We were both planting our flags in a whole new atmosphere,” Quiñones said recently, speaking of Baer’s invitation to spray-paint White Columns’ interior. Indeed, his show drew a host of downtown luminaries, from the critics Edit DeAk and Rene Ricard to the writer and cable TV host Glenn O’Brien, all of whom in turn helped spark a thorny love affair between the worlds of contemporary art and graffiti which continues to this day. The buzz-laden response also firmly linked White Columns’ new identity with both the nascent East Village art scene and the art market boom as each gathered steam in the ’80s.Lee Quiñones’s and Fred Brathwaite’s Sept. 1980 show at White Columns, one of the first prominent gallery exhibitions of graffiti in New York City.Charlie AhearnThat soaring market — and the ability of a White Columns show to catapult an unknown artist into its midst — could take on almost ridiculous aspects. “The commercial art world is a genius in finding ways to sell things that seem unsellable,” noted Bill Arning, who became director in 1985 and is now a Houston gallerist. At the March 1988 solo debut of Cady Noland’s unsettling installations — including a pair of geriatric walkers slung over a stanchion with a photo of a pistol leaning nearby — Arning said he fruitlessly tried to convince the collectors Don and Mera Rubell to purchase a piece for $400. He said Mera Rubell eventually admitted to him that she’d ended up buying that same piece a year later, once Noland’s career exploded — for $40,000.As the ’80s ended and the market mania collapsed, the resulting tensions rebounded inside White Columns. The painter Marilyn Minter said her 1988 solo debut there resulted in no less than 10 galleries pursuing her. Grateful to the space for plucking her out of semi-obscurity, she joined its board in 1991, happy to put her growing cachet at its service, even as her own sales slowed. “We were lucky to keep the doors open back in the ’90s,” Minter remembered. “Just keeping the air-conditioning on in the summer was a big deal!”Jeff Lewis studying a selection of White Columns publications from the 1990s and early 2000s.Victor Llorente for The New York TimesDespite the ’90s deepening recession, artists continued to see a White Columns show as transformational. “It changed my life completely,” John Currin said of his 1989 debut there, long before his portraits would fetch seven-figure sums at auction. “I made $5,000, that was huge! My entire income for the whole year before was $9,000 slaving away on drywall jobs.” A decade later, his wife, the sculptor Rachel Feinstein, said her own debut quickly moved her from working at the front desk of the Marianne Boesky Gallery to becoming one of its represented artists.Accordingly, Paul Ha, Arning’s successor in 1996 — and current director of the MIT List Visual Arts Center, in Cambridge, Mass. — said he learned to set aside his misgivings at having White Columns act as a de facto “talent scout” for commercial galleries. “When you see so many people struggling, you just want to help them with their career,” Ha explained. Some of Esteban Jefferson’s work at his Nov. 2019 solo debut at White Columns.Esteban Jefferson and White Columns; Marc TattiHiggs continued that tradition, with a notable tweak. “When I arrived at White Columns,” he said, “the question for us as an organization was what could we do that would make a difference?” The inclusion of both Black and female artists was finally on the cultural world’s radar. However, “What was strikingly obvious to me was that the work of artists with developmental disabilities was just completely underrepresented in the field of contemporary art. There were these extraordinary organizations like Creative Growth in Oakland or Visionaries + Voices in Cincinnati, supporting extraordinary communities of artists. But they just didn’t have access to the same kind of networks that artists coming out of Yale or Columbia’s M.F.A. programs might.”Enter White Columns. Higgs has presented 25 solo shows of developmentally disabled artists so far, including William Scott, who he notes finally had a work acquired by the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art — 14 years after his debut at White Columns. “Patience is a key factor here,” he quipped.Matthew Higgs, left, and the artist B. Wurtz during the opening of White Columns’ 50th anniversary exhibition.Victor Llorente for The New York TimesYoung art school graduates haven’t been entirely nixed: The painter Esteban Jefferson was an immediate sensation with his 2019 solo debut, an expanded version of his Columbia M.F.A. thesis vividly contrasting a Paris museum’s African statues with the faces of its staffers and their blandly institutional setting. But Higgs has also made a point of spotlighting barely seen older figures, from David Byrd, who drew chilling drawings of the Westchester psychiatric ward where he worked for 30 years until 1988, to Ben Morea, who created abstractions in 1964 before becoming better known as an art world provocateur and political activist. Even other venues have received attention: In 2010, the artist Margaret Lee was asked to put together a retrospective on the raucous, everything-but-the-kitchen-sink group shows she began staging in 2009 at her semi-legal 179 Canal space in Chinatown.Lee said she was pleasantly shocked by her discussions with Higgs as she explored recreating 179 Canal’s chaotic vibe and messy energy within White Columns. “He never said ‘I don’t like the aesthetics of this.’ It was more ‘I’m around if you want to talk, but you’re free. Just be responsible.’” So, echoing the anti-guidelines first offered by Jeffrey Lew on Greene Street decades ago — Do what you want, just don’t burn the place down? “Actually,” Lee recalled wryly, “we did almost burn White Columns down. We wanted to leave a microwave running for 24 hours. Matthew said, ‘No, you cannot do that. You need a fake microwave.’ That’s where he drew the line!”From the Archives: White Columns & 112 Greene Street/112 Workshop — 1970-2021Through July 31 at White Columns, 91 Horatio Street, Manhattan; 212-924-4212; whitecolumns.org. More

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    New regional library to be topped with green roof

    The community of Drysdale, east of Geelong on the Bellarine Peninsula, will soon have a new public library. Designed by Melbourne firms Antarctica Architects and Architecture Associates, the two-storey library will be circular in form and will “stitch together” surrounding parkland and the town centre. The design incorporates a planted roofscape and an amphitheatre and […] More

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    Final designs unveiled for Western Sydney Airport

    The Western Sydney Airport corporation has unveiled the final design for the international airport passenger terminal at Badgerys Creek.
    Zaha Hadid Architects and Cox Architecture together won a competition for the concept design in 2019. Following a competitive tender process, construction company Multiplex was awarded the contract to take the initial concepts through to final design and construction with Woods Bagot as part of the Multiplex team. Woods Bagot had also submitted a concept design in the 2019 competition, together with RSHP with Aspect Studios.
    The final design seeks to respond to Australia’s natural beauty and the region’s Aboriginal heritage, while adopting strong sustainability principles.
    Western Sydney Airport CEO Simon Hickey said the design would offer passengers and airlines an experience unrivalled among Australian airports.
    “Flying from Western Sydney International will be fast, easy and seamless,” he said.
    “For airlines, our terminal will be all about operational efficiency and reliability, providing an environment where passengers arrive at the aircraft feeling relaxed and ready to fly.”
    He also noted the importance of the consultation with Aboriginal communities throughout the design process.
    “A connection to Country will be reflected across both the departures and arrivals, ensuring the terminal has an authentic sense of place in Dharug country,” he said.
    The terminal will draw on passive design principles, embracing natural light and airflow to provide energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions.
    “A climate responsive façade with ample shading and high-performance glass will ensure less energy is needed to keep the terminal at a comfortable temperature all year round,” he said.
    Western Sydney Airport describe the final design as an “evolution” from the initial concepts by Zaha Hadid Architects and Cox Architecture.
    “While key design principles have been retained, the final design delivers the best customer outcomes in the context of a strong regional identity that is unmistakably at home in Western Sydney.”
    Terminal construction is due to begin at the end of 2021, with international and domestic passenger services and air cargo operations expected to commence in late 2026. More

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    Sydney Harbour Bridge cycle ramp proposal falls flat

    A proposal to build a cycling ramp at the northern end of Sydney Harbour Bridge has been slammed as “an outright assault on North Sydney’s open space” by the local council.
    Transport for NSW has developed a linear and looped design options for the cycleway ramp, which it says is necessary to serve cyclists who make around 2,000 trips across the bridge each day.
    As it stands cyclists have to carry or push their bikes through safety barriers and up or down 55 steps at Bradfield Park. The department estimates that removing the bottleneck of the stairs would “more than double” capacity on the cycleway, which runs along the western edge of the bridge, helping to meet growth in cycling demand over the next 15 to 20 years.
    But North Sydney councillors are staunchly against the proposal, voting unanimously at an extraordinary meeting on 7 June to spend up to $15,000 on a “grassroots” campaign opposing the ramp. The council adopted a dramatically worded mayoral minute penned by mayor Jilly Gibson that likened the ramp proposal, along with the state government’s plan to increase the number of workers and residents in the area, to a “campaign of war.”

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    The loop option for the Sydney Harbour Bridge cycleway northern access ramp.

    “The two options on the table are wrong on many levels,” the mayor’s statement reads. “Both options have a detrimental effect on the beauty and heritage of the Harbour Bridge, an asset that belongs to all of Sydney.
    “Both options cut into our open space. It’s not just the footprint of the ramps that is at issue, it is how the park will feel when the ramp is installed. The sunny, open parkland of Bradfield Park North, for example, will have an entirely different feel with massive support pillars and a cycle way stretching above it.”
    For its part, Transport for NSW concedes that both the linear and looped ramps would have some effect on views and surrounding public spaces, but says the ramp is needed to improve safety and increase capacity for the only cross-harbour bike route in eastern Sydney.
    The department said the while the proposed designs were still in their early development, they had been conceived in consultation with “leading urban design, architectural and heritage experts.”

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    The linear option for the Sydney Harbour Bridge cycleway northern access ramp.

    The linear option is a gently curving ramp running above the Milsons Point Station Plaza, weaving between the palm trees at the Station Plaza and stopping short of the tree canopy in Bradfield Park North.
    “The gentle curve would set the ramp back from the entrance of Milsons Point Station, reducing the view impact from Alfred Street and avoiding the need to remove trees,” a department said in a document describing the proposal.
    “The linear option provides better rideability compared to the loop and is a smaller structure that has a stronger artistic form and design.
    “However, the linear ramp would run over the much-loved Station Plaza, affecting views from Bradfield Park North to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, and from Alfred Street to the heritage entrance of Milsons Point Station. In addition, this option would have some impact on Bradfield Park North.”
    The looped option, on the other hand, would be located at the southern bowling green in Bradfield Park Central, with the double loop structure minimizing land coverage and avoiding the northern bowling green completely.
    “It would be located well away from the Station Plaza and Bradfield Park North and allows for a future pedestrian connection between Burton Street and Fitzroy Street.
    “However, the loop is a larger structure compared to the linear option and would be clearly visible when viewing the Sydney Harbour Bridge from the eastern side of Bradfield Park. It would require the removal of the old bowling club building and a frangipani tree on Fitzroy Street and could affect active recreation on the southern bowling green.”
    Mayor Gibson said such a trade-off was not worth it, since the ramp would link to a “narrow substandard cycleway that is unfit for any real growth in commuter and recreational cycling.”
    The two options are open for public feedback until June 27. More

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    Architects appointed for Perth CBD university

    A consortium comprising Lyons, Silver Thomas Hanley, and UK firm Haworth Tompkins has been appointed to design Perth’s first CBD university campus.
    The $695 million campus for Edith Cowan University is the centrepiece of the $1.5 billion city deal for Perth.
    It will be built over Perth Busport, adjacent to Yagan Square, and will link the Northbridge dining and entertainment precinct to the Perth Cultural Centre, home to the new WA Museum Boola Bardip.
    “Lyons, in partnership with Silver Thomas Hanley and Haworth Tompkins, will bring a combination of local knowledge, design leadership, renowned expertise, and world-leading specialist capabilities that will capture our ambition and ensure the seamless delivery of the project,” said ECU vice-chancellor Steve Chapman.
    “We are looking forward to these extraordinary minds not only conceptualizing but delivering this unique project.”
    The campus is jointly funded by the federal and state governments and the university. The WA government will provide $150 million and the land, the federal government will contribute $245 million and ECU will contribute $300 million. The existing ECU site will revert back to the state government and a masterplan for the site will be undertaken to determine its future.

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    Proposed site of Edith Cowan University’s city campus.

    “The new ECU City Campus will not only bring together students, teachers and experts across a range of sectors to foster learning and research, but it will be an important feature in the city’s cultural landscape, create flow on economic benefits for local businesses and improve the city’s vibrancy,” said Paul Fletcher, federal minister for communications, urban infrastructure, cities and the arts.
    Due to open by 2025, the campus will accommodate 9,200 students and staff. That number is projected to grow to 11,000 by 2034. It will be home to the Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts.
    “We anticipate that the campus will bring more than 8,000 students into the city from day one, creating flow on economic benefits for local businesses,” said WA planning minister Rita Saffioti.
    “I look forward to seeing the designs of the campus develop and take shape.” More

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    Fed Square to become part of Melbourne Arts Precinct transformation

    Melbourne’s Federation Square will become part of the transformation of Melbourne’s arts precinct, which will be overseen by a new governing body, the state government announced.
    The establishment of the new entity, the Melbourne Arts Precinct Corporation (MAP Co), follows heated contestation over the future of the square spawned by a plan to knock down the Yarra Building to make way for a Foster and Partners designed Apple shop. That proposal was scotched after a successful community campaign when the Heritage Victoria rejected Federation Square management’s application.
    The state government said the creation of MAP Co responded to the findings of a review into the management of the square in 2020, which called for a “community-driven vision” emphasising Federation Square’s cultural and civic impact along with the need to enliven the space with “captivating experiences.”
    Creative industries minister Danny Pearson said the new governance arrangement would see Federation Square reinvigorated as part of the delivery of the $1.4 billion arts precinct redevelopment on St Kilda Road, which will include a new 18,000-square metre immersive public garden.
    Tania Davidge, conveyor of the Our City, Our Square campaign, said that under the existing governance of Fed Square Pty Ltd the square’s cultural and civic objectives had been marginalized.
    “Propelled by the narrative that the square is losing money, more and more ‘revenue-generating initiatives’ and promotions have been taking place at the site,” she wrote in Landscape Architecture Australia in 2020.
    Davidge told ArchitctureAU that while she is not familiar with all the details, she is optimistic about the new arrangement and welcomed the connection between the square and the Melbourne Arts Precinct.
    “This is a positive step forward, embedding Federation Square more deeply as part of the civic, cultural and public life of the city,” she said.
    “We are optimistic this move will support Federation Square’s continued significance as Melbourne’s most important civic public space. We hope to see stronger connections develop between Federation Square, the city and the new public spaces that will be delivered as part of the Melbourne Arts Precinct transformation.”
    The creation of MAP Co will be overseen by an interim board chaired by James MacKenzie, who is chair of the Victorian Funds Management Corporation and a former president of the Victorian Arts Centre Trust.
    “In addition to ensuring the smooth delivery of Australia’s largest ever cultural infrastructure project, MAP Co will work to draw more Victorians and visitors to the rich and diverse creative offerings across our extraordinary arts precinct – on both sides of the Yarra,” said MacKenzie. More

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    BVN designs overhaul of major Newcastle hospital

    The overstretched John Hunter hospital precinct in Newcastle’s western suburbs is set for a major overhaul, with BVN preparing designs for a new seven-storey acute services building and the refurbishment of existing buildings.
    The John Hunter and John Hunter Children’s hospitals regularly operate at 98 percent occupancy, as major metropolitan hospitals and as the principal tertiary referral hospitals for the Hunter New England Local Health District and Northern NSW. the inpatient bed base, operating theatres and ED treatment spaces are working beyond capacity.
    The NSW government has allocated $780 million to upgrade the healthcare services in Newcastle, with the aim of meeting the demand and creating more integrated service delivery.
    Designed by BVN, the acute services building will include an expanded emergency department, intensive care services, operating theatres, clinical sterilizing department, women’s services, along with integrated education spaces and a new helipad. The project will also include a new Hospital entry canopy and a link bridge to the Hunter Medical Research Institute.

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    John Hunter hospital precinct upgrade by BVN.

    The design is characterized by the “carving out” of the form to create “cut outs” in the envelope, the architects explain in planning documents.
    A matt metal facade with a granular, textured finish skin forms the protective outer layer of the building, while in the cut-outs smooth metal cladding acts as the “inverse” of the skin.
    An elevated garden between the existing John Hunter Hospital and the acute services building will establish interaction between the buildings and act as the primary public space, “offering a space for staff, visitors and patients to enjoy the landscape, natural light and activity from the protection of an internal space.”
    “This world-class health precinct will not only significantly enhance capacity for clinical care and collaboration between the health, research and education sectors but be a key driver of economic growth in the region,” said health minister Brad Hazzard.
    “The cleverly designed acute services building will house cutting-edge technology, enabling John Hunter’s incredible staff to continue to deliver exemplary health care to the greater Newcastle, Hunter New England and northern NSW regions.”
    Works are scheduled to begin in 2022 and are due for completion in 2026.
    The plans are on public exhibition until 28 June. More