Tollcross Housing Association development makes 2020 RIAS awards shortlist
The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland (RIAS) has announced an 18 strong shortlist for its 2020 awards with a Tollcross Housing Association development among the hopefuls.
The £8.38 million Dunira Street Housing project in Glasgow was designed on behalf of the Association by Elder & Cannon Architects.
The shortlist, whittled down from 80 entries, comprises the following buildings (listed alphabetically):
Aberdeen Art Gallery (contract value not for publication)
Hoskins Architects for Aberdeen City Council
Altarf, Isle of Skye (contract value not for publication)
Ann Nisbet Studio for a private client
An Cala, Sutherland (contract value not for publication)
Mary Arnold-Forster Architects for a private client
Bayes Centre, Edinburgh (contract value not for publication)
Bennetts Associates for University of Edinburgh
Bertha Park High School, Perth (£29m)
NORR Consultants Limited for Perth & Kinross Council
Dunira Street Housing, Glasgow (£8.38m)
Elder & Cannon Architects for Tollcross Housing Association
Edinburgh Printmakers (contract value not for publication)
Page\Park Architects for Edinburgh Printmakers
The Egg Shed, Argyll and Bute (contract value not for publication)
Oliver Chapman Architects for Scottish Canals
Faithlie Centre, Aberdeenshire (£2.5m)
Moxon Architects Ltd with Alan S Marshall Conservation Architect for Aberdeenshire Council
Global Research Innovation and Discovery (GRID) (£12m)
Sheppard Robson Architects for Heriot-Watt University
The Hill House Box, Helensburgh (£3.2m)
Carmody Groarke for National Trust for Scotland
King’s Stables Road, Mixed-Use Development (c.£40m)
Fletcher Joseph Associates for Peveril Securities and Campus DM
Kyle House, Sutherland (contract value not for publication)
Groves-Raines Architects Studios Ltd for a private client
Maidenhill Primary School & Nursery, East Renfrewshire (contract value not for publication)
BDP for East Renfrewshire Council
Maryhill Locks, Glasgow (£4.76m)
jmarchitects for Bigg Regeneration Limited
The Prince & Princess of Wales Hospice, Glasgow (£21m)
Ryder Architecture for The Prince & Princess of Wales Hospice
sportscotland National Sports Training Centre, Inverclyde (£11m)
Reiach and Hall Architects for sportscotland
Watt Institution, Greenock (£1.8m)
Collective Architecture for Inverclyde Council
Judging will take place at the end of March with the RIAS Awards winners announced at a dinner at the Assembly Rooms, Edinburgh on May 28. The RIBA National Awards will be announced in June.
Reflecting on this year’s submissions and the climate challenges for Scottish architecture, chair of the RIAS Awards judging panel, Jenny Jones, said: “Given that these projects would have been commissioned at the very least, several years ago, there are some very strong carbon-conscious submissions which demonstrate an attention to the challenges we all face.
“The greater shift will become evident in the next years if we continue to challenge and create innovative responses as to how we can “build” with environmental consciousness.”
The judging panel also includes Tony Chapman, former head of Awards at RIBA and freelance architecture critic (representing the Royal Institute of British Architects), Brian McGinlay, founding director and architect at McGinlay Bell and Ann Allen, chair of Architecture & Design Scotland.
Nick Ribbons, sector manager – construction at Zero Waste Scotland, Joann Russell, head of estates conservation directorate at Historic Environment Scotland and Steven Robb, deputy head of casework, heritage directorate at Historic Environment Scotland were also involved in the shortlisting discussions.