Architectural promise revealed in Student Design Awards

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Victoria University of Wellington’s Emily Newmarch has won the top prize in the annual competition for final year students at New Zealand’s three Schools of Architecture.

The Student Design Awards programme, which is staged by the New Zealand Institute of Architects (NZIA) with the support of Resene, is contested by four fifth-year architecture students from each of the University of Auckland, Unitec (Auckland) and Victoria University.

The two-day event, in which students present their work to a panel of three judges, was this year held at St Matthew-in-the-City, Auckland, in November.

Ms Newmarch’s winning project, “Climatic conscience for dwelling design”, investigated the energy and thermal performance of houses in the rapidly growing Central Otago region.

The awards judges — NZIA president Tim Melville, Nelson architect Rachel Dodd and Sydney architect and academic Iain Maxwell — said Emily’s work “ably reconciles the pragmatic requirements and poetic possibilities of architecture”.

“The project exhibits an impressive command of technical issues built on a thoroughgoing commitment to meaningful research to produce admirable architecture as exhibited in convincing and beautifully made models.”

Ms Newmarch grew up in Timaru and attended local Roncalli College after her family emigrated to New Zealand from Zimbabwe when she was five.

She put part of her $5000 cash prize towards a recent trip to Hong Kong, where she presented a paper based on her research at an international conference on sustainable architecture.

Two highly commended awards were made in the competition, both to students at the University of Auckland.

Icao Tiseli was highly commended for her project “Mapping the feke”, which the judges described as “a rich and resonant scheme that draws on Tongan traditions of mapping and celestial navigation to locate a people at the centre of their wide and watery world.”

Annie Tong’s highly commended project “The Fleeting Acts” is a beautifully drawn and highly atmospheric exploration of Auckland city, the judges said.

The other finalists in the 2018 Student Design Awards were Kevin Ding and Jintao Yang (University of Auckland); Annaliese Mirus, Emily Pearce, Carleone Posala and Sianne Smith (Unitec); and Janice Chan, Mikayla Heesterman and Jahmayne Robin-Middleton (Victoria University of Wellington).

 

Huge promise and potential

Judging panel convenor Mr Melville said the 2018 Student Design Awards demonstrated the huge promise and potential of the country’s architecture students.

“It’s great to see the imagination, optimism and commitment of young people who are about to enter the architecture profession,” Mr Melville said.

“All the students whose work we judged are highly aware of the environmental, cultural and technological issues that confront us.

“This competition gives me hope that the next generation of architects will rise to the challenges our society has bequeathed them.”

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