RIBA Stirling Prize 2008 Winner, Shortlist, Award, Picture, News, Architecture, Accordia
Stirling Prize 2008 Winners
UK Architecture Award: Best British Buildings + Architects
Accordia Cambridge by Feilden Clegg Bradley
RIBA Stirling Prize Winner 2008
Stirling Prize 2008 Shortlist
Accordia, Cambridge, England, UK
Design: Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios ; Alison Brooks Architects; Macreanor Lavington
photo © Adrian Welch
Manchester Civil Justice Centre, Manchester, England, UK
Design: Denton Corker Marshall
photograph : Tim Griffith
The Royal Festival Hall, London, England, UK
Design: Allies and Morrison
photo © Dennis Gilbert
Westminster Academy, London, England, UK
Design: Allford Hall Monaghan Morris
photo © Tim Soar
Bijlmer Arena Station, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Design: Grimshaw / Arcadis
photo © Ger Van Der Vlugt
Nord Park Cable Railway, Innsbruck, Austria
Design: Zaha Hadid Architects
photo Helene Binet
Stirling Prize : main page
Stirling Prize Dinner Venue
Arena and Convention Centre, Liverpool, England
Date: 11 Oct – winner announcement broadcast live from 9pm on Channel 4 TV
Stirling Prize 2008 Venue : Liverpool Arena
William Hill Betting Odds
Westminster Academy at the Naim Dangoor Centre: 3/1
Manchester Civil Justice Centre: 7/2
Nord Park Cable Railway: 4/1
Amsterdam Bijlmer Arena Station: 9/2
Royal Festival Hall: 5/1
Accordia Cambridge: 5/1
Stirling Prize Judges 2008 – revised:
Eva Jiricna, Eva Jiricna Architects
Gordon Murray, Gordon Murray + Alan Dunlop Architects
Shelley McNamara, Grafton Architects
Kieran Long, AJ Editor
Diarmuid Gavin, landscape architect
Major schemes not shortlisted include Wembley Stadium and Heathrow Terminal 5
The Stirling Prize shortlist was drawn from the 16 RIBA National Award winners, and eligible RIBA European Award winners for the prize
RIBA Awards : contenders – RIBA Award winners
Judging took place : 4 – 8 Sep
Stirling Prize Shortlist announcement : 17 Jul
Location: UK
Stirling Prize 2008 News
Stirling Prize 2008 – Change
Revisions made to the Stirling Prize to strengthen the prize’s British connections. Eligibility remains unchanged for all other awards, with the ‘pyramid structure’ introduced in 2007 where RIBA Awards are judged and presented at local level.
For next year the description ‘built or designed in Britain’ will have to apply to all schemes shortlisted for the Stirling Prize. The rule change will restrict eligibility to buildings in the UK designed by RIBA chartered members and International Fellows, and to buildings built elsewhere in the EU as long as the practice has its principal office in the UK.
Tony Chapman, RIBA Head of Awards, says the new pyramid structure has been judged successful and better reflects the diversity of architectural practice.
‘The RIBA Awards reward the best buildings throughout the regions and nations of the UK, allowing for responses to local contexts of style, scale and materials, while the RIBA National Awards compare schemes nationally and by building type. From these a shortlist will be derived for the RIBA Stirling Prize in association with the Architects’ Journal.’ Chapman explained.
Another recent change to the awards was the call this year for statements on the sustainability of buildings, reflecting the institute’s climate change commitments – energy performance statistics, signed by an engineer, are now ‘highly desirable’ for all entries and mandatory for all projects with a contract value over £1m. For 2008, there will also be a requirement for a statement on how projects address the principles of inclusive design.
Contemporary Architecture Awards
Stirling Prize Judge : Eva Jiricna
Stirling Prize Winner 2007 : Museum of Modern Literature, Marbach
Stirling Prize 2006 – incl. Shortlist buildings / architects / favourite
Pritzker Prize architects – Architect Winners
Stirling Prize 2008 Judge : Gordon Murray of gm+ad architects
Comments re Stirling Prize 2008 Winning Buildings + Architects welcome