2022 Building Beauty Awards, Royal Fine Art Commission Trust Property Prize News, Architects
Building Beauty Awards 2022
20 October 2023
Building Beauty Awards Announces 2023 Finalists
post updated 22 November 2022
Building Beauty Awards Winners in 2022
Tintagel Castle Footbridge wins Building Beauty Awards, the richest prize in UK architecture
photograph © Alan Crow, Hufton & Crow
Building Beauty Awards in 2022 Winners News
From left to right, Paul Finch: Judge of the Building Beauty Awards, Rory Sutherland: Judge of the Building Beauty Awards, Sean Mulryan: Founder and CEO of Ballymore, Kassia St. Clair: Judge of the Building Beauty Awards, Laurent Ney: CEO of Ney & Partners,
William Matthews: Director at William Matthews Associates, Nichola Tasker: Territory Director, Stonehenge & West at English Heritage, Kate Mavor: Chief Executive Officer of English Heritage, Lord Foster of Thames Bank OM: Presenter of the awards, Clive Aslet: Judge of the Building Beauty Awards, Stephen Bayley: Chairman of the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust – Chair of the Building Beauty Awards judging panel, Theo Fennell: Theo Fennell – Judge of the Building Beauty Awards:
photo : Keaton Chau
London, 22 November 2022: Last night, the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust unveiled the winners of its 2022 Building Beauty Awards at a glittering ceremony at Bloomberg European Headquarters in the City of London, with prizes presented by Lord Foster of Thames Bank O.M. The awards, sponsored by Ballymore, celebrate buildings, engineering structures and urban landscaping schemes that add beauty to Britain’s built environment. The judging panel was led by Stephen Bayley Hon FRIBA, Chairman of the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust and one of Britain’s foremost design critics.
photo © Alan Crow, Hufton & Crow
Overall Winner & Engineering Winner
The overall winner, chosen from the four category winners, was Tintagel Castle Footbridge in Cornwall, which received a £10,000 cash prize, and will now represent the UK in the race to be crowned the world’s most beautiful new building at the World Architecture Festival in Lisbon on 02 December. The Tintagel Castle Footbridge was also the winner of the Engineering category, beating Leeds Footbridge to the prize. The 225ft-span steel bridge, designed by Ney & Partners and William Matthews Associates for English Heritage, provides level access to Tintagel Castle and comprises two cantilevers with a gap in the middle to allow for expansion.
“This was a challenging assignment, given the terrain and the sensitivity of the site as both an ancient monument and a place of natural beauty. How best to complement the dramatic context? The answer is not timidity but the kind of boldness that suits the rough and raw Atlantic coast of Cornwall.” commented the judging panel, chaired by Stephen Bayley, “The designers, necessarily, have understood every inch of their canvas and from an intellectual response to the engineering requirements have generated something graceful, perfectly poised, restrained: nothing here is unnecessary but what is necessary has been finessed to the point of beauty.”
Kate Mavor, English Heritage’s Chief Executive, said: “English Heritage’s purpose is to care for great historic sites like Tintagel Castle and to inspire people to visit them. Our bridge does both. Quite simply, this wonderful crossing encapsulates our ambitions as a charity to bring history to life in imaginative ways.
“We are delighted that the judges recognised the brilliant work by Ney & Partners and William Matthews Associates. We’d also like to thank The Julia and Hans Rausing Trust for their generous donation, without which we could not have reunited Tintagel Castle.”
New Tintagel Castle Bridge Cornwall
Building Winner
McGrath Road Housing, East London
McGrath Road in Stratford, London, designed by Peter Barber Architects, came out on top in the Building category, beating two Manchester buildings, the Oglesby Centre and the Welcome Building at RHS Garden Bridgewater. to the title. This high density, shared-ownership housing development sits around a central courtyard in a reinterpretation of Victorian back-to-back housing typology, creating a beautiful space that stands out from its surroundings.
“Peter Barber is one of the most innovative and exciting social housing architects, creating developments with marked visual and kerb appeal”, said the judges, “High-quality materials, provision of communal space and a robust, muscular aesthetic – all evident at McGrath Road – generate pride and a sense of ownership in residents (as was clear when we visited) and act as a beacon locally, giving a lift and a sense of civility to a neighbourhood that suffers the usual inner-city problems of crime and anti-social behaviour.”
Public Space Winner
image © Malcolm Reading Consultants and Leo Villareal and Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands
Illuminated River London bridge designs
The winner of the Public Space category was Illuminated River in London, a lighting project by Lifschutz Davidson Sandilands and Leo Villareal Studio for the Illuminated River Foundation, beating Borough Yards and Walala Parade to the crown. This eye-catching art installation stretches 3.2 miles across nine Thames bridges in central London, with LED light sources being controlled by custom software to avoid patterns being repeated.
“Until recently – until this project, more precisely – the Thames in central London was a black ribbon with precious little night-time personality, its darkness punctuated every so often by more or less random floodlighting. No more.” commented the judges, “This art installation, covering three miles of the serpentine river, acts as a permanent yet ever-mutating light festival: the lighting on each bridge changes to a timed sequence but also with the tide and the river’s moods – the reflections on the water mean that this is a light show on the river itself as much as on the static mass of the bridges.”
Little Gem Winner
image courtesy of architects practice / awards
Tower of Light and Wall of Energy, Manchester
The “Little Gem” title went to the Tower of Light and Wall of Energy in Manchester, designed by Tonkin Liu Architects for Manchester City Council and Vital Energi. This impressive structure comprises a tower, clad in laser-cut steel sheets in a shell-lace structure, and a street wall clad in ceramic tiles in a tessellated lozenge pattern, housing flues for a low-carbon energy centre within the tower. This Little Gem saw off competition from two Folkestone buildings (69 Old High Street and The Cabins, Tontine Street by Neat Architects), and two East London projects (a floating church by Denizen Works and a house in Leyton by McMahon Achitecture).
The judges were impressed with its aesthetic appeal and durability, commenting, “Projects of this sort can be stage-set flimsy, the visual appeal fading from the moment the cheap materials collide with the messy reality of city living. But these structures are convincing and solid, beautifully made in durable materials: one feels their aesthetic appeal will grow rather than ebb with time. In daylight the ceramic tiles give the wall a strong personality. Clever lighting gives the tower an equally powerful presence at night, when the perforations in the envelope mutate into compelling patterns and the surface reflects the headlights of passing cars.”
Tintagel Castle Bridge Contest
24 March 2022
Norman Foster to present Building Beauty Awards 2022
24th of March 2022, London: Lord Foster of Thames Bank OM has been announced as the presenter of the first Building Beauty Awards, run by the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust and sponsored by Ballymore.
Lord Norman Foster:
photo : Frederic Aranda
Building Beauty Awards in 2022 News
The awards, celebrating the power of beautiful new architecture to raise spirits, are now open for entries at www.buildingbeautyawards.com, with categories for buildings, engineering structures, public space projects and ‘Little Gems’ – small interventions such as pavilions that beautify the environment. UK projects completed since the beginning of 2019 are eligible. The deadline for entries is 22 April. Winners will be announced at a ceremony in October 2022.
The overall winning designer will receive £10,000 and have their project automatically shortlisted for the new Royal Fine Art Commission Trust International Building Beauty Prize, also sponsored by Ballymore. The international prize will be awarded at the World Architecture Festival in Lisbon on 2 December 2022.
The Royal Fine Art Commission Trust2
The Royal Fine Art Commission Trust is a registered charity established in 1987 to sit alongside the Royal Fine Art Commission, the Government’s independent advisor on matters affecting public amenity and aesthetics in England and Wales. Its President is Lord Foster of Thames Bank OM and its advisory and trustee boards includes leading names in the worlds of art, architecture and design, including Sir Terry Farrell, Lord Palumbo of Walbrook and Dinah Casson CBE.
Over the past thirty-five years, the Trust has sought to promote visual awareness and public appreciation of high-quality design, and today it continues to advance its charitable objectives through commentary on design matters and by partnering projects where its involvement can add value.
Previously on e-architect:
9 December 2021
Building Beauty Awards Announces £10,000 Prize for the Winning Architect
The Royal Fine Art Commission Trust is delighted to announce that a £10,000 prize will be awarded to the overall winner of its new Building Beauty Awards, to be presented for the first time in 2022. This is the joint biggest architecture prize currently awarded in the UK and the biggest in England.
Stephen Bayley Hon FRIBA, Chairman of the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust:
photograph : Philip Sinden
Building Beauty Awards in 2022
The 2022 Building Beauty Awards celebrate buildings, engineering structures and urban landscaping schemes completed since the beginning of 2019 that add beauty to our environment. Everyone is welcome to submit an entry free of charge at www.buildingbeautyawards.com. The deadline for entries is the end of March 2022.
The judging panel will be led by one of Britain’s foremost design critics, Stephen Bayley Hon FRIBA, Chairman of the Royal Fine Art Commission Trust and founder of The Design Museum in London. He will be joined by the architectural commentator Paul Finch OBE, the architectural writer Clive Aslet and the cultural historian Kassia St Clair. Other judges will be announced shortly. Winners will be announced at a ceremony in early Summer 2022.
In addition to the £10,000 prize, the architect of the overall winner will be invited to help select the recipients of the new Building Beauty Grants, which are aimed at promoting small beautification projects. Grants can be applied for at www.buildingbeautyawards.com
Royal Fine Art Commission Trust Architectural Award in 2022 images / information received 091221
Previously on e-architect:
Design Awards
The SBID Awards 2020 Winners
images courtesy of SBID
SBID International Design Awards 2020
RIBA House of the Year 2021 Winner
photo : Paul Riddle
RIBA House of the Year 2021 Winner
RIBA President’s Medals 2021: Student Awards
Wolfson Economics Prize 2021: Ab Rogers
Brick Awards 2021 – winning Buildings + Architects
Comments for the Building Beauty Awards 2022 winners news page welcome.