Allies and Morrison’s Fitzwilliam College buildings scoop prizes at 2005 Brick Awards


The auditorium at Fitzwilliam College was one of the reasons why it won top prize at this year’s Brick Awards
The auditorium at Fitzwilliam College was one of the reasons why it won top prize at this year’s Brick Awards


Architect Allies and Morrison has scooped the BDA’s top ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV of the Year award with its impressively cool buildings for Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge. The award was made at the culmination of the BDA Brick Awards 2005 gala evening, held on the 2 November at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London.

Unusually for a Brick Awards winner, Allies and Morrison’s entry comprised two distinct buildings – a rational, three-storey, mauve brick gatehouse and a contrasting creamy buff brick auditorium building with abstract elevational compositions. Both extend Sir Denys Lasdun’s original 1958 masterplan for Fitzwilliam and make a significant contribution to the role of brick in modern architecture. The judges were impressed by the two buildings, which enhance the academic environment and complement an already distinguished line-up of buildings on the campus. The project was also awarded the Best Public ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV Award.

Best Private Housing development went to The Matrix in Glasgow by Davis Duncan Architects, a contemporary development of 73 apartments, café–bar and office space that has created a powerful urban landmark. BPTW Partnership’s Pepys Estate in London, an elegant project characterised by its refined detailing, took Best Public Housing Development. And Feilden Clegg Bradley’s central headquarters for the National Trust in Swindon, a building with a strong industrial geometry that was inspired by local railway sheds, took the Best Commercial ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV award.

The winners in full are:

BDA ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV of the Year 2005 and Best Public ºÃÉ«ÏÈÉúTV
Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, by Allies and Morrison

Best private housing development
The Matrix, Glasgow, by Davis Duncan Architects

Best public housing development
Pepys Estate, London, by BPTW Partnership

Best commercial building
National Trust New Central Offices, by Feilden Clegg Bradley Architects

Volume housebuilding award
Countryside Properties

Best refurbishment project
Oak House, East Hampshire. Stedman Blower Architects

Best landscape project
Church Street enhancement project, Nuneaton, by Nuneaton & Bedworth council

Best export award
Jersey Airport Fire Training Ground, by Dr John Knapton and Quintin Murphin of the States of Jersey Engineering Department

Innovative use of brick and clay products
Lye Corner House, Thaxted, Essex, by Snell David Architects

In the opinion of the Judges, the following projects merited a special award:

Brick House, London, by Caruso St. John Architects

Bank Top Project, Blackburn, by Urban Renewals (Blackburn & Darwen council)

Brick Bulletin Autumn 2005