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The Pineapples awards 2025: New partners announced as entry deadline nears

New judges, categories and sponsors have been announced for the 2025 awards with just three weeks to go until the entry deadline, Kimberley France reports

 

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Wates Group, the Town and Country Planning Association (TCPA) and Vestre have announced their sponsorship of The Pineapples awards for place as the entry deadline approaches.

 

Wates Group and the TCPA have partnered with The Pineapples to launch a new Healthy Homes category which aims to recognise housing that incorporates healthy living into its design, delivery and engagement. Launched as part of the TCPA’s ongoing Campaign for Healthy Homes, the award highlights a commitment to the Healthy Homes pledge which seeks to improve the quality of new developments.

 

In supporting the awards, Wates Group hopes to "inspire better ways of creating the places, communities and business of tomorrow.” The award is part of the organisation’s commitment to "the long-term sustainability of the built environment and making our industry more inclusive and representative of the communities we work in." 

 

“Our commitment aligns perfectly with The Pineapples’ goal to celebrate projects that make our cities more welcoming, inclusive, and resilient,” explains Matt King, Business Development Manager, Vestre.

 

"The Healthy Homes Principles take into account the impact of the wider place, including access to nature, transport and climate resilience. It’s going to be a coveted prize and I look forward to reviewing the entries and highlighting the best that the built environment has to offer," says Murray.

 

Vestre has announced their support for the Public Space and Future Public Realm categories this year as part of their mission as a manufacturer of urban furniture to bring communities together by creating social, colourful, and sustainable spaces. 

 

“Our commitment aligns perfectly with The Pineapples’ goal to celebrate projects that make our cities more welcoming, inclusive, and resilient,” explains Matt King, Business Development Manager, Vestre.

 

“What’s interesting about The Pineapples is how the awards celebrate the urban life of places. For us that’s important, as we care not just how much public realm or how many benches someone has access to, but the quality and impact these places can have on everyday life,” adds Vestre’s Jack Arkney, Business Development Manager.

 

The Pineapples awards for place are open for entries to the 2025 awards which celebrate excellence in the design and development of places where people want to live, work and play. The categories aim to cover all phases of development from community engagement to completion.

 

The final entry deadline is 28 November. Enter now for your chance to win a coveted golden pineapple for your initiative or project team.  

 

The Pineapples 2025 key dates

 

August 2024 – Entries open 

28 November – Final entry deadline 

January 2025 – Shortlist announced

25-27 February – Live shortlist judging presentation event 

March/April – The Pineapples prize giving party

May – The Developer magazine featuring The Pineapples 2025 finalists and winners

July – The Pineapples stage at Festival of Place (curated selection of finalist)

 

Judges for this year’s The Pineapples include architects, developers, investors, local authorities, academics, and consultants. With a rigorous judging process, the judges will be looking for an approach that contributes positively to urban life, from shared spaces that foster community, to developments worth living in, to meaningful engagement and retail experiences that encourage footfall and drive connection.

 

Several past winners of The Pineapples have joined this year’s judging panel, including Jennifer Russell, Town Planning Manager with University of Glasgow Estates Directorate; Penny Halliday, Director of Meridian Water, Enfield Council; and Ruth Lin Wong Holmes, Head of Landscape and Public Realm with Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.

 

“Our judges have great conversations, shaping and redefining excellence in the powerful growing community of professionals motivated to make a positive impact while delivering quality places – with and for people and planet,” Murray says. “The Pineapples are an unmatched opportunity to benchmark your social impact and showcase work that delivers on quality and kindness to your peers and beyond.”

 

The Pineapples 2025 judges

 

Eleanor Fawcett, Head of Design, Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation

Elizabeth Rapoport, Director, Polygon Place Strategy

Noah Chulu Chinn, Co-founder, SUMweekly

Ruth White, City of Edinburgh

Will Sandy, Founding Director, Will Sandy Design Studio

Duncan Laird, Head of Urban, National Trust

Frances Wright, Head of Community Partnering, TOWN

Nicola McLachlan, Architect / Director, Collective Architecture

Rene Sommer Lindsay, Associate Urban Designer, AtkinsRéalis

Sophie Thompson, Director, LDA Design

Jennifer Russell, Town Planning Manager, University of Glasgow Estates Directorate

Elaine Cresswell, Director, reshaped

Alice Lester, London Borough of Brent, Corporate Director for Neighbourhoods and Regeneration

Alison Benzimra, Head of Research and Influence, United St.Saviour

Azzees Minott, Chief Operating Officer, 2-3 Degrees

Ben Adams, Founding Director, Ben Adams Architects

Blossom Young, Head of Operations, Poplar HARCA

Chloe Mcfarlane, Community Engagement Consultant

Christopher Arthey, Director, Axiom Developments

Clive Nichol, Founder / CEO, Fabrix

Danna Walker, Founder / CEO, Built By Us

David West, Founding Director, Studio Egret West

Felicia Mattis-Rome, CEO, Business Launchpad

Felicity Maries, Programme manager - community development, partnerships and circular economy, Lancaster West Neighbourhood Team

James Bowthorpe, Company Director, a-r-c-s

James Stockdale, Development Director, Muse

Jordan Whitewood-Neal, Researcher, Quality of Life Foundation

Julian Tollast, Head of Masterplanning and Design, Quintain

Kate Brown, Head of Strategic Communications, HUB

Larry Botchway, Co-Founder of POoR Collective , POoR Collective

Lucy Atlee, Senior Quality and Design Manager, Places for London

Magali Thomson, Project Lead for Placemaking, Great Ormond Street Hospital

Marie Williams, Founder and CEO, Dream Networks

Paul Monaghan, Executive Director, Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

Penny Halliday, Director of Meridian Water, Enfield Council

Rebecca Thomas, Director, Fathom Architects

Richard Coppell, Group Development Director, Urban&Civic

Rose Marshall, Associate Director, ING Media

Ruth Lin Wong Holmes, Head of Landscape and Public Realm, Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

Sharon Giffen, Head of Design, The Earls Court Development Company

Sophie Trotman, Head of Place Brand, Marketing & Comms, Notting Hill Genesis

Laura Cassulo, Regional Director, Stride Treglown

James Bruce, Director, Civic Engineers

Caroline Aikman, Director of Marketing, Brand & Place, MediaCity

Nick Barton, Strategic Project Manager, City Centre Growth & Infrastructure Team, Manchester City Council

Cathy Russell, Urban Design Director, Ryder Architecture

Catherine Dewar, Regional Director North West, Historic England

Paul Richards, Deputy Chief Executive, Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council

 

 

Find out more For more information about entering or sponsoring a category at The Pineapples, you can contact Kimberley France at kimberley@thedeveloper.live

 

Place in Progress winners 2024
Place in Progress winners 2024
Pineapples Awards party at St. Andrew Holborn
Pineapples Awards party at St. Andrew Holborn

Winners of the Pineapples 2024

 


The Pineapple for Place of the Year


Gascoigne East Phase 2, London: London Borough of Barking & Dagenham and Be First with White Arkitekter, Civic Engineers, Turkington Martin and Willmott Dixon

Gascoigne East Phase 2, London: London Borough of Barking & Dagenham and Be First with White Arkitekter, Civic Engineers, Turkington Martin and Willmott Dixon

The £135 million second phase of the redevelopment of the Gascoigne neighbourhood consists of 434 apartments and four townhouses. Sixty-two per cent of housing is designated as affordable or shared with the remaining 38 per cent for private sale. The 46,500 sq m phase includes a 5,000 sq m park co-designed with students from local Greatfields School and sitting in the heart of the neighbourhood.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“The site fulfils the design objectives for a city at eye level and creates public luxury. Being tenure- blind and mixed-use also achieves a permeable and varied community asset”

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Magna Square, Egham, for Runnymede Borough Council and Places for People, with Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, Elliott Wood, Atelier 10 and Graham Construction

 

Media City and Quayside, Salford, for Peel Media and Landsec, with Chapman Taylor 

 

Your New Town Hall, London Borough of Lambeth for Muse and Lambeth Council, with Cartwright Pickard

 

Springfield Village, London Borough of Wandsworth, for South West London and St George’s Mental Health NHS Trust and STEP (Joint venture between Sir Robert McAlpine, Capital Ventures and Kajima Partnerships)

 

Kampus, Manchester, for Capital & Centric and HBD, with Native Residential, Mecanoo, shedkm and Chapman Taylor

 

Stanley Square, Sale, for Altered Space, with SimpsonHaugh Architects

 

Unity Place, London Borough of Brent, for London Borough of Brent, with Gort Scott, Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios and Alison Brooks Architects

 


The Pineapple for Public Place


West End Project, Camden, London: Camden Council with Central District Alliance, LDA Design, Norman Rourke Pryme, Arcadis and Michael Grubb Studio

West End Project, Camden, London: Camden Council with Central District Alliance, LDA Design, Norman Rourke Pryme, Arcadis and Michael Grubb Studio

Camden Council’s £35 million investment into the area around London’s Tottenham Court Road aims to dramatically enhance urban public space. The project reclaims road space for 0.7 hectares of new parks, squares and incidental pocket plazas and the reimagining of 0.3 hectares of existing space. Removing the one-way systems and reducing traffic on Tottenham Court Road and neighbouring streets and introducing a planting plan for over 1,000 sq m of new beds and borders supports an expansion of soft landscaping in the capital.

 

Judges' comments: 

 

"The masterplan achieves simplicity within a complex urban environment, successfully opening the locale for safer and pedestrianized streets and small parks".

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Bishops Square, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, for Spitalfields Development Group, with Foster + Partners and SEAM

 

Eddington Hotel, Cambridge, for edyn, with dRMM, Robert Myers Associates and AvroKo

 

Regents Place, London Borough of Camden, for British Land, with Townshend Landscape Architects and Nex Architects

 

Union Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen for Aberdeen City Council, with LDA Design, Stallan Brand, Arup and Balfour Beatty

 

Union Terrace Gardens, Aberdeen, for Aberdeen City Council, with LDA Design, Stallan Brand, Arup and Balfour Beatty

 

Green Spine, City of Westminster, for Westminster City Council, with BDP, WSP and FM Conway

 

Glade of Light, Manchester, for Manchester City Council, with Galliford Try, BCA Landscape, Planit, Civic Engineers

 

Pound's Park, Sheffield, for Sheffield City Council, with Get Building Fund, Planit, Henry Boot Construction, Whittam Cox Architects, Dudley Engineers, Riveline, Julian Stocks and Timberplay

 


The Two Pineapples for Creative Retrofit


3 Mills Studios, London: London Legacy Development Corporation with Gort Scott and Freehaus

 3 Mills Studios, London: London Legacy Development Corporation with Gort Scott and Freehaus

On the bank of the River Lea, 3 Mills Studios is the city’s oldest surviving industrial centre. The retrofit project has created over 900 sq m of new workspaces for production teams through the adaptive and creative reuse of three key buildings: the locally listed Gin Still, the Grade II-listed Custom House and the Rush House. Flood-resilience measures have been employed to ensure the long-term preservation of the heritage site. Photo: Lorenzo Zandri

 


Tower Hamlets Town Hall, Tower Hamlets, London: London Borough of Tower Hamlets with Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, Richard Griffiths, Elliott Wood, Atelier 10 and Bouygues UK

Tower Hamlets Town Hall, Tower Hamlets, London: London Borough of Tower Hamlets with Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, Richard Griffiths, Elliott Wood, Atelier 10 and Bouygues UK

The Georgian external facades of the Grade II-listed former Royal London Hospital are the key architecture feature of Whitechapel High Street, and now house Tower Hamlets Town Hall within its 2.6ha site. The £125 million development includes an extension with six floors of office space for 2,470 council staff plus partner organisations, a new council chamber and meeting facilities. Photo: Timothy Soar

 

Also shortlisted:

 

All Saints, London Borough of Southwark, for EPR Studio, with EPR Architects and Kate Malone

 

East Ham Old Fire Station, London Borough of Newham, for Populo Living, with dRMM

 

Arding and Hobbs, London Borough of Wandsworth, for W.RE, with Stiff+Trevillion, Knight Hardwood, AKT II and Blackburn Co. 

 

Nottingham Energiesprong, Nottingham, for Nottingham City Homes, with Melius Homes, Studio Partington and Energiesprong UK

 

Bath School of Art and Design, Bath, for Bath Spa University, with Grimshaw, ARUP, Currie & Brown, Montresor Partnership, Mann WIlliams, Capita, Gleeds, and Wilmott Dixon

 

Balfron Tower, London Borough of Tower Hamlets, for Poplar HARCA and Telford Homes, with Studio Egret West and Ab Rogers Design

 


The Pineapple for Community Engagement 

 


Designing Cities for and with Women and Girls, London: The London Legacy Development Corporation

Designing Cities for and with Women and Girls, London: The London Legacy Development Corporation

Site experience walks with women, girls and gender-diverse people developed a shared perception for LLDC’s work in hotspot sites. A Women and Girls Safety Charter was signed by local key stakeholders and landowners to ensure an approach that aligns with the findings. The engagement project intends to influence infrastructure lists and planning powers, such as the allocation of Section 106 funds and the neighbourhood portion of Community Infrastructure Levy money.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“An original and very rigorous piece of work”.

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Edgware Town Centre, London Borough of Barnet, for Ballymore and Places for London, with Field Consulting, Howells, Gustafson Porter + Bowman and Savills

Church End Growth Area, London Borough of Brent, for Brent Council, with Hawkins\Brown and Jan Kattein Architects

 

Waltham Forest Affordable Housing Commission & Housing Strategy, London Borough of Waltham Forest, for London Borough of Waltham Forest, with Waltham Forest Affordable Housing Commission and PRD

 

Earls Court, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham, for The Earls Court Development Company, with ZCD Architects 

 

The Phoenix, Lewes, for Human Nature, with Periscope and Arup

 

Glade of Light, Manchester, for Manchester City Council with Galliford Try, BCA Landscape, Planit and Civic Engineers

 

Hartree, Cambridge, for LandsecU+I and TOWN, with Cambridge City Council and Kjellander Sjöberg

 


The Two Pineapples for Place in Progress

 


The Verdean, Ealing, London: Peabody and Mount Anvil with Levitt Bernstein, Kew Gardens, Exterior Architecture, Light Follows Behaviour and Tigg Coll

The Verdean, Ealing, London: Peabody and Mount Anvil with Levitt Bernstein, Kew Gardens, Exterior Architecture, Light Follows Behaviour and Tigg Coll

The Verdean is a £520 million development set to create 1,228 new homes, 455 of which will be affordable. Two residential towers will contain 160 and 170 homes, respectively. Six per cent of commercial spaces will be allocated to local businesses. The scheme will incorporate additional public realm community connectivity improvements and biodiverse green spaces.

 

Judges’ comments:


“The vision and quality shine through – from the tenure-blind design to the thoughtful and ambitious alignment of people and environment. This is reflected in the community kitchen, which also provides an important resource to the community in the cost-of-living crisis”.


University of Glasgow Western Campus, Glasgow: University of Glasgow and Multiplex with LUC, AECOM, 7N and Arup

University of Glasgow Western Campus, Glasgow: University of Glasgow and Multiplex with LUC, AECOM, 7N and Arup

Redevelopment of the Western Campus of the University of Glasgow includes the refurbishment of four buildings. One of these, the Adam Smith business school, required £50 million of the £430 million total budget. The project has 85,000 sq m of student accommodation, learning, teaching, and research space.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“We were impressed by the project’s repurposing and reuse of existing buildings and features, use of recycled materials and focus on native biodiversity, as well as promotion of active transport.”

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

The Britannia project, London Borough of Hackney, for London Borough of Hackney, with Tibbals, Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios and FaulknerBrown Architects

 

Stockport Town Centre West, Stockport, for Stockport Mayoral Development Corporation, Stockport Council, Homes England and Greater Manchester Combined Authority

 

Rochester Riverside, Medway, for Medway Council, Countryside Partnerships (Vistry Group) and The Hyde Group, with BPTW and LUC

 

Harringay Warehouse District, London Borough of Haringey, for Provewell, with Ruth Campbell & Co, Tibbalds, Morris+Company, Container City and Dakota

 


The Pineapple for Future Place


Lancaster West Estate, Kensington and Chelsea, London: Lancaster West Neighbourhood Team with Lancaster West Residents’ Association

Lancaster West Estate, Kensington and Chelsea, London: Lancaster West Neighbourhood Team with Lancaster West Residents’ Association

Following the Grenfell Tower tragedy, the Lancaster West Neighbourhood Team was set up to oversee the refurbishment of the Lancaster West Estate. The 7.7-hectare estate contains 826 homes, which will be redeveloped with the addition of nursery and outdoor spaces. The £57.9 million project contains an initiative that employs more than 25 North Kensington residents in full or part-time positions within the development team.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“This example of a community finding their own way to recover from the immense challenges they have experienced over the last seven years through ‘people power’ is remarkable”.

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Golden Valley, Cheltenham, for Cheltenham Borough Council and Henry Boot Developments, with Grimshaw, Grant Associates, HGH Consulting, Buro Happold, Vectos and EDP

 

Edgware Town Centre, London Borough of Barnet, for Ballymore and Places for London, with Howells and Gustafson Porter + Bowman

 

Red Bank Masterplan, Manchester, for Far East Consortium, with Maccreanor Lavington, Schulze + Grassov, Op-en, Useful Projects and WSP

 

Kensal Canalside, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, for Ballymore and Sainsbury’s, with FaulknerBrowns and Spacehub

 

Oxford North, Oxford, for Oxford North Ventures, with Fletcher Priest Architects, Gustafson Porter + Bowman, Stantec, Wilkinson Eyre and Gort Scott

 

Earls Court, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham, for The Earls Court Development Company, with Hawkins\Brown and Studio Egret West

 


The Pineapple for Future Place: Up to 5ha

 


Church Street Regeneration, City of Westminster, London: Westminster City Council with Bell Phillips, Arcadis, Stantec, Max Fordham, Savills, Flint and Camlins

Church Street Regeneration, City of Westminster, London: Westminster City Council with Bell Phillips, Arcadis, Stantec, Max Fordham, Savills, Flint and Camlins

The 3.84-hectare development site sits between Edgware Road – the neighbourhood’s primary retail and commercial area – and quieter terraced streets to the north of Marylebone Station. It provides up to 1,200 new homes and 7,000 sq m of retail space. The project aims for a 40 per cent increase in publicly accessible open space and will support around 525 retail jobs and 3,500 construction- related jobs.

 

Judges’ comments: 

 

“We were impressed by the commitment to the tenants who are there at the moment and the promise that they can return on their current terms. This is a good model that could be replicated. The future of the place and the market is being cemented”

 

Also shortlisted:

 

The Clay Community, Hambrook, with Tuckey Design Studio, Lehm Ton Erde and Stonewood Builders

 

South Molton Triangle, City of Westminster, for Grosvenor and Mitsui Fudosan UK, with Hopkins, BDP, Donald Insall Associates, Twin & Earth and WSP

 

The Littlewoods Project, Liverpool, for Capital & Centric, Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and Liverpool City Council, with shedkm

 

Prestwich Village, Manchester, for Muse and Bury Council, with Jon Matthews Architects and Planit

 

Helping Hands, Liverpool, for the Independence Initiative and Neighbourhood, with Studio MUTT

 


The Pineapple for Activation 

 


Bexleyheath High Streets for All, London: London Borough of Bexley with We Made That and POoR Collective

Bexleyheath High Streets for All, London: London Borough of Bexley with We Made That and POoR Collective

A series of events and activities were run from May 2021 till May 2023 to test new approaches to revitalising Bexleyheath town centre. The team behind Bohemia Place Market have been successfully running markets alongside community consultation, leading to wayfinding and accessibility improvements. The team conducted 14 youth workshops with 59 students aged between

11 and 18 along with eight older residents, while 180 young people took part in an online survey

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“The project brought the different groups using the space together and worked to overcome the barriers and preconceptions associated with young people and the elderly using our streets”

 

Also shortlisted:

 

Bringing the wonder back to Earls Court, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea and London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham, for The Earls Court Development Company, with Hawkins\Brown and ​​Studio Egret West

 

Five Years On: Wembley Park’s Cultural Placemaking Strategy, London Borough of Brent, for Quintain, with Futurecity

 

The Place Between, Milton Keynes, for centre:mk and IF, with Jason Singh and Rebecca Louise Law

 

We Invented the Weekend Festival, Salford, for Peel Media, Landsec and Salford City Council, with The Lowry, BBC, HemingwayDesign and Quays Culture

 

Assemble in the Forest, Bath, for Forest of Imagination, National Trust, with Bath Spa University, Bathscape, RSA, Rainforest Concern, Grant Associates, HOI, Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios and Invisible Studio

 

PoliNations, Birmingham, for UNBOXED: Creativity in the UK, with Trigger, THISS studio and Carl Robertshaw

 


The Pineapple for Activation: Community Space

 


Sparks Bristol, Bristol: Bristol Artspace and Global Goals Centre with Invisible Circus

Sparks Bristol, Bristol: Bristol Artspace and Global Goals Centre with Invisible Circus

Located at 78 Broadmead Road, Sparks Bristol offers visitors retail and education opportunities from fashion and food to nature and energy. Since 13 May 2023 the project has had more than 376,000 visitors to the ground floor, where visitors can experience a range of shops, installations, events and more in each curated department. The upstairs is a hub for local artists, offering affordable studios, rehearsal and performance space. Photos: Paola Di Bella

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“The project realises effectively its ‘commune not consume’ message, and proposes a strong model for high-street regeneration that is responsive to the character and values of

its location.”

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

The Bell, Ticehurst, for AreYou?, with We Like Today, Chris Baxter, Ben Stagg Architects and Gleeds

 

New Greenhill Building, London Borough of Harrow, for Harrow Arts Centre, with Chris Dyson Architects, Webb Yates, KLA, Studio Emmi and PT Projects

 

Houlton, Rugby, for Urban&Civic and Aviva Investors, with the Houlton Project Team

 

LJ Works, London Borough of Lambeth, for London Borough of Lambeth, with Architecture 00, Jan Kattein Architects, Public Works and Meanwhile Space CIC

 

Tooting Works, London Borough of Wandsworth, for Business Launchpad, with alma-nac, Townlab and Dollman Ralston

 


The Pineapple for Climate Resilience


Urban GreenUP, Liverpool: Liverpool City Council, Mersey Forest and University of Liverpool with reShaped

Urban GreenUP, Liverpool: Liverpool City Council, Mersey Forest and University of Liverpool with reShaped

Across 44 different postcodes and sites, GreenUP has enhanced access to local greenspace for 500,000 residents, planted 100,000 trees and shrubs, and created accessible walking routes and a general increased footfall for local business. £4 million of Horizon 2020 European funding has supported the creation of 40 innovative nature-based solutions implemented in city-wide renaturing projects.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“An amazing project with huge public engagement and brilliant accessibility. It was investigative, strategic and innovative. A really comprehensive, authentic way to try things out in the city”

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Jaywick Sands Place Plan, Jaywick, for Tendring District Council, with HAT projects

 

West End Project, London Borough of Camden, for Camden Council, with Central District Alliance, LDA Design, Norman Rourke Pryme, Arcadis and Michael Grubb Studio

 

Northfield Grove, Edinburgh, for City of Edinburgh Council, with Thomas & Adamson, Civic Engineers and Raeburn Farquhar Bowen

 

The Forest Garden, London Borough of Waltham Forest, for London Borough of Waltham Forest, with HUT, HOS landscapes, Moira Lascelles and John Little

 


The Pineapple for Infrastructure


Brent Cross West, Barnet, London: Barnet Council and Related Argent with Mace and Studio Egret West

Brent Cross West, Barnet, London: Barnet Council and Related Argent with Mace and Studio Egret West

Brent Cross West is the first mainline station to open in London in over a decade. Barnet is the first local authority in England to deliver a rail infrastructure project, securing £419 million of central government funding for the realisation of a 650 sq m site with four platforms. The station acts as a gateway to Brent Cross Town, the 73-hectare, £8 billion net-zero park town being delivered in partnership with Related Argent.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“Infrastructure is at its best when it makes a wider impact beyond immediate and physical connections. Brent Cross West station acts as a model for future rail infrastructure projects by integrating the social, environmental and cultural aspects of the place into

the project”

 

Also shortlisted:

 

Newport Active Travel Bridge, Newport, for Newport City Council, with Grimshaw, Arup, Cass Hayward and Alun Griffiths

 

Market Gate Bridge, Barnsley, for Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council, Network Rail and the South Yorkshire Combined Mayoral Authority with Waterman, IBI Group Architects, Arcadis and Keltbray

 

The Pineapple for Future Public Realm


Meridian Water, Enfield, London: Enfield Council and Strategic Infrastructure Works with Taylor Woodrow, Arup and Stace

Meridian Water, Enfield, London: Enfield Council and Strategic Infrastructure Works with Taylor Woodrow, Arup and Stace

The £6 billion Meridian Water project, one of the largest regenerations in London, has a scope of over 25 years. It will provide 10,000 homes over its course with the first 20 delivered in September 2023, including family-sized housing, accessible homes and single-bedroom flats. Enfield Council funded the £46 million Meridian Water station, completed in 2019, and considered a lynchpin for the development.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“This project is huge and the impact will be at a

city scale, demonstrating climate resilience and a comprehensive interplay of health and economics. The engagement seems totally genuine; there has been a really robust public consultation and they have brought the community on board with them”

 

Also shortlisted:

 

St Paul’s Gyratory Transformation Project, City of London, for City of London Corporation, with NRP, LDA Design and Transport for London

 

Aberdeen City Vision, Aberdeen, for Aberdeen City Council, with LDA Design, Fairhurst and Systra

 

Devonshire Gardens, Cambridge, for Railpen and Socius, with RH Partnership and LDA Design

 

Woolwich Town Centre, Royal Borough of Greenwich, for the Royal Borough of Greenwich, with LDA Design and Studio Weave

 

Dock Branch, Birkenhead, for Wirral Council, with OPEN, Mott MacDonald, BB Heritage and Walker Sime

 

The Two Pineapples for Building


Sidcup Storyteller, Bexley, London: London Borough of Bexley with DRDH and Really Local Group

Sidcup Storyteller, Bexley, London: London Borough of Bexley with DRDH and Really Local Group

The 2,000 sq m Storyteller library, cinema and housing block fully opened in summer 2023. It consists of a three-screen independent cinema, a cafe, nine apartments, co-working space, a gallery and a Changing Places sanitary facility. The £6.2 million development is located on the high street of suburban Sidcup. The project is DRDH’s first public building in the capital.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“The council spotted the high street was failing and took the initiative to intervene, creating a project of calibre and civic pride. Acting as developer, the council kept hold of the community benefit of this project – and also kept the mature tree”

 


Appleby Blue Almshouse, Southwark, London: United St Saviour’s Charity, Southwark Council and JTRE with Witherford Watson Mann architects

Appleby Blue Almshouse, Southwark, London: United St Saviour’s Charity, Southwark Council and JTRE with Witherford Watson Mann architects

With a construction value of £25.1 million, the Appleby Blue Almshouse brings a new retirement community to Bermondsey. Of the fifty-seven new homes, fifty-one are one-bedroom flats and six are two-bedroom. The 5,800 sq m size allows for a community centre, lounge, activities room, kitchen, spa and beauty room as well as a garden. Photo: Philipp Ebeling

 

Judges’ comments: 

 

“Appleby Blue is to be praised for its connection to the community, amazing programming and quality architecture, with a programme worth amplifying as a demonstrator project for inner-city living for ageing in place

 

Also shortlisted: 

 

Soho Place, City of Westminster, for Derwent London and Nimax Theatres, with Allford Hall Monaghan Morris, Arup and Laing O’Rouke

 

Hackney Bridge, London Borough of Hackney, for Make Shift, with Turner Works

 

Living Wetland Theatre and Waterscapes Aviary, Slimbridge, for Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust, with BD Landscape Architects, Kay Elliott Architects, Hoare Lea and David Dexter Engineers

 

Unity Place, Milton Keynes, for Santander UK, with LOM architecture and design

 

The Pineapple for International Future Place


Harkness Memorial, Melbourne, Australia: Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust with McGregor Coxall, Aurecon, Architectus, Greenshoot Consulting and Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation

Harkness Memorial, Melbourne, Australia: Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust with McGregor Coxall, Aurecon, Architectus, Greenshoot Consulting and Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation

The first phase of the masterplan concerns 128 hectares of land adjacent to the Gilgai Woodlands Nature Conservation Reserve. The project addresses challenges posed by Melbourne’s rapidly growing western suburbs, with new and improved public spaces across the site. Harkness will be adapted as a multi-use space for memorialisation and community needs.

 

Judges’ comments:

 

“A compelling example of using a development process as a way of recognising and repairing harm. The design was a negotiation, death sat side-by-side with the needs of the living community, celebrating the heritage and spirituality of multiple cultures”

 

Also shortlisted:

 

Sea Gardens, Bray, for Ballymore, with Howells Architects

 

Micro Colony, Coastal Bangladesh, for GROHE, with UArchitects

 

Singapore Makers Land, Singapore, for Jurong Town Corporation, with Broadway Malyan, Savills, Arup

 


Thank you to our judges and chairs

 

Marie Williams, founder and CEO, Dream Networks

Amandeep Singh Kalra, associate director, place and design, Be First

Melissa Lacide, senior engagement officer, Quality of Life Foundation

Noah Chulu Chinn, co-founder, SUMweekly Rose Marshall, associate director, ING Media

Duncan Laird, head of urban, National Trust Chris Williamson, chair, Weston Williamson + Partners

Eleanor Fawcett, head of design, Old Oak and Park Royal Development Corporation Pepper Barney, founder and managing director, BiBO

Chloe Mcfarlane, engagement lead, Tranquil City

Dr Bridget Snaith, lecturer, University of Sheffield, and partner, Shape Landscape Architecture

Nick James, director, Futureground

Sophie Thompson, director, LDA Design Felicity Maries, community development and partnerships manager, Lancaster West Neighbourhood Team

Clive Nichol, founder and CEO, Fabrix Morwenna Hall, partner and COO, Related Argent

Rebecca Thomas, director, Fathom Architects

Gabriel Warshafsky, director of projects, Jan Kattein Architects

James Bruce, director, Civic Engineers Rachel Bell, director of Partnerships, Stride Treglown

Ben Adams, founding director, Ben Adams Architects

Richard Coppell, group development director, Urban&Civic

Julian Tollast, head of masterplanning and design, Quintain

Magali Thomson, project lead for placemaking , Great Ormond Street Hospital Rob Sloper, senior development director, LandsecU+I

Martin Prince-Parrott, founder, Sub/Urban Workshop

Duncan Paybody, director of landscape , Studio Egret West

Ruth White, team manager, placemaking and mobility City of Edinburgh

John Stiles, principal urban design officer, London Borough of Brent

David West, founding director, Studio Egret West

Ellie Cosgrave, director of CIC and research, Publica

Cannon Ivers, director, LDA Design

Prachi Rampuria, co-founder and director, EcoResponsive Environments

James Stockdale, development director, Muse

Christopher Arthey, director, Axiom Developments

Will Sandy, founding director, Will Sandy Design Studio

Catherine Dewar, regional director North West, Historic England

Clarissa Bromelle, head of social imagination, Human Nature

Alison Benzimra, head of research and influence, United St Saviour

Nicola McLachlan, architect /director, Collective Architecture

Rene Sommer Lindsay, associate urban designer, AtkinsRéalis

Paul Monaghan, executive director, Allford Hall Monaghan Morris

Blossom Young, head of operations, Poplar HARCA

Elaine Cresswell, director , reShaped Soham De, co-founder and director, EcoResponsive Environments

Alice Lester, corporate director for communities and regeneration, London Borough of Brent

 


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