Grand designs take their place on Leeds Architecture Awards shortlist: Awards 1

08 Aug 2023

Grand designs take their place on Leeds Architecture Awards shortlist

Awards

Beautiful buildings and stylish structures have got designs on success after being shortlisted in this year’s Leeds Architecture Awards.

Taking place for the first time since 2019, the awards are a collaboration between Leeds Civic Trust, Leeds Society of Architects, Leeds City Council and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA).

More than 50 entries were received earlier this year across five categories – cultural projects, new buildings (up to £10m in value), new buildings (more than £10m in value), altered buildings and public realm & landscape.

Now a final shortlist of 15 has been announced, with the winners due to be revealed at a ceremony at the Howard Assembly Room on November 1.

Celebrating excellence in architectural design across the metropolitan borough of Leeds, the awards were open to schemes completed between July 2018 and June this year.

Organisers included a cultural projects category as a nod to activity taking place in the city as part of LEEDS 2023.

Councillor Helen Hayden, Leeds City Council’s executive member for sustainable development and infrastructure, said:

“Leeds has a proud heritage of design excellence, and the architects of today are doing a fine job of maintaining that tradition in interesting and inclusive ways.

“The shortlisted buildings, public spaces and projects are all playing their part in making our city a distinctive, thought-provoking, environmentally-friendly and welcoming place to live, work, visit and spend time. Congratulations to everyone involved.”

Martin Hamilton, director of Leeds Civic Trust, said:

“I would like to thank all entrants for their submissions. The quality was very high, and the judges had a very difficult decision to make in identifying a shortlist.”

Luke Sach, co-president of Leeds Society of Architects, said:

“The Leeds Society of Architects are honoured to be involved with this year’s Leeds Architecture Awards, helping to celebrate the very best projects, which over the last few years have positively contributed to Leeds’s ever-evolving architectural landscape.

“Thank you to everyone who submitted entries, we’re thrilled to have seen such a large number of high-quality applications. A huge congratulations to all the projects shortlisted and best of luck on November 1.”

The shortlisted schemes and architects are:

Cultural Projects

Leeds Playhouse: Page\Park

This much-loved city centre theatre has been transformed by a reconfiguration and extension of the existing building, with a new frontage – featuring brightly-coloured ceramics – being created on St Peter’s Street. Extra seating capacity and improvements to access have also been delivered in the site’s two main performance spaces.

Leeds School of Arts: Hawkins\Brown

Situated on Portland Street in the city centre, this building provides a state-of-the-art hub for more than 2,500 students and staff from Leeds Beckett University’s departments of film, music, performing arts and creative technologies. The building’s mix of interconnected spaces is designed to encourage collaboration and showcase the talents of all those who use it.

WOW Barn: LEEDS 2023 and The WOW Foundation

The WOW Barn is an accessible, inclusive pop-up space that was built by 300 women, girls and non-binary people over the course of just 24 hours at Cinder Moor, Woodhouse, earlier this year as part of the LEEDS 2023 cultural celebrations. Kirkstall Valley Farm has since been announced as the barn’s long-term home.

Buildings (up to £10m in value)

Maggie’s Yorkshire Centre, St James’s Hospital: Heatherwick Studio

This cancer support centre was opened by the Maggie’s charity in 2020. The building was constructed using a prefabricated and sustainably-sourced spruce timber system. Inside, a mix of natural and tactile materials, soft lighting and variety of spaces all encourage social opportunities as well as quiet contemplation.

Young People’s Cabin, St Gemma’s Hospice: ArkleBoyce Architects

Sitting in the gardens of St Gemma’s Hospice in Moortown, the Young People’s Cabin is a sustainable building designed with the needs of bereaved children in mind. The concept for the project included a roof that would not only provide a protective canopy but also reference the surrounding trees and other relaxing greenery.

Newlyn Building, University of Leeds: dla architecture

A teaching hub for the Leeds University Business School, this two and three-storey building sits in the heart of Little Woodhouse. Its design draws on the surrounding Victorian context, with external elevations constructed in complementary brick and supplemented by timber cladding. The building has a light and airy feel inside, thanks in part to its dual aspect larger teaching rooms.

Buildings (more than £10m in value)

11 & 12 Wellington Place: tp bennett

Hailed as one of the UK’s most sustainable office developments, 11 & 12 Wellington Place’s design elements include a distinctive bridge and striking metallic bronze facades that mirror the stonework pattern of an adjacent Grade II-listed railway lifting tower. Situated between Wellington Street and Whitehall Road in the city centre, the buildings run entirely on renewable electricity.

Sir William Henry Bragg Building, University of Leeds: ADP Architecture

This seven-storey glass-and-steel complex off Woodhouse Lane is home to the University of Leeds’s Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences. Its high-tech teaching rooms and laboratories have been designed to further establish the university as a world-leading research centre, while also providing a welcoming, accessible and modern gateway into campus.

Globe Point: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios 

This striking ‘flat iron’-style office development sits on Globe Road, at one of the key entrance points to the South Bank’s Temple neighbourhood. Designed to provide next generation workspace for more than 400 people, the building makes maximum use of natural daylight while also offering spectacular views across the city from its roof gardens.

Altered buildings

The Majestic: dla architecture

One of Leeds city centre’s best-known buildings, this Grade II-listed former cinema and nightclub has been transformed into a stylish mix of offices and other workspace. The reinvention of the City Square landmark – now home to Channel 4 – took care to preserve and enhance its existing external fabric while also drawing inspiration from the grandeur of the original interior.

First White Cloth Hall: Buttress

This project on Kirkgate in the city centre has poured fresh life into one of Leeds’s most historic buildings. The former cloth trading hall spent many years in a state of disrepair but has now been brought back into use as a commercial, co-creation and innovation space, with surviving elements of the original brick and stone walls being conserved and incorporated into its new internal structure.

Opera North’s Music Works: Enjoy Design

Music Works has given New Briggate and Harrison Street an extra cultural dimension with the opening of the Howard Opera Centre, complete with facilities such as an education studio, tuition rooms and orchestra rehearsal space. A dedicated box office and public atrium have also been incorporated into Opera North’s Howard Assembly Room.

Public realm & landscape

Leeds Footbridge: Gagarin Studio

This 50-metre-long bridge straddles the River Aire and connects two different parts of the South Bank’s Climate Innovation District. The bridge’s concertina-style appearance was achieved through the use of steel slats which appear to fold and crank across its length, providing an eye-catching point of sculptural interest for those moving over or passing below it.

Stourton Park and Ride: Mott MacDonald

The UK’s first solar-powered park and ride facility, this clean and green site is home to 1,200 vehicle spaces, electric car charging points and a smart energy grid. A solar canopy powers the terminal building, which is served by a fleet of zero-emission electric buses. Extensive landscaping and tree-planting complete the site’s eco-friendly feel.

Playhouse Gardens: re-form landscape architecture

These terraced gardens are a gateway to a part of the city centre that is home to landmarks such as Leeds Playhouse and Leeds City College’s Quarry Hill campus. Pathways, steps and seating ledges have been created via the high-quality detailing of hard landscape materials, with the space being softened through the incorporation of a number of native and ornamental trees.

ENDS

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