The interior fitout of the recently completed Canberra Airport Hotel has earned its architects national recognition within the industry.

The Australian Institute of Architect’s top interior architecture honour, the Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture, was handed to Bates Smart at the National Architecture Awards held recently in Sydney.

The Canberra Airport Hotel beat the Geelong Library & Heritage Centre by ARM Architecture (which took out the Public Architecture category) as well as the University of Queensland Oral Health Centre (QLD) by Cox Rayner Architects with Hames Sharley and Conrad Gargett Riddel to win the prize.


View the full list of winning projects from the 2016 National Architecture Awards here.


Read the full jury citation for Canberra Airport Hotel (ACT) by Bates Smart and see the other awarded projects in the Interior Architecture category below:

The Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture - Canberra Airport Hotel (ACT) by Bates Smart 

Canberra-Airport-Hotel-ACT-by-Bates-Smart-Photo-Anson-Smart.jpgPhotography by Anson Smart

Jury citation: The nation’s capital gets another gem hotel with Bates Smart’s Canberra Airport Hotel for the Canberra Airport Group. From the outside the architecture presents as a welldetailed, sheer glass and aluminium facade designed to wall out the airport and chaotic road network it is situated within. On the inside, however, the project opens up masterfully and through the manipulation of void, contrast and light it becomes a world away from the harsh realities of the industrial context outside. Central to this manipulation of space and light is the seven-storey-high circular void forming the entrance, lobby and atrium. The void is worldclass in size and is similar in proportions to the void at the Guggenheim in New York or the Pantheon in Rome. But this is not a museum, or a religious edifice, but rather a commercial building, where net lettable area and gross floor area are usually the primary drivers. To be able to build a void, or really to not build at all, in this manner in any modern building is exemplary. The fact that this is an airport hotel makes it even more admirable and award-worthy. 

The architect has used five circular skylights at the upper ceiling level to filter natural light through the void and down onto the ground-floor reception area and bar. The shifting circles of natural daylight track across the floor to create a dynamic and everchanging light quality. The internal balconies of the void are deeply contrasted with black reveals, resulting in the amplification of light and dark areas. Their simple yet striking geometry and optical illusions graphically transfix the eye in the same way that a Sol LeWitt or James Turrell artwork captures your attention. The circle, referenced from Walter Burley Griffin’s original masterplan of Canberra, continues throughout the project as a geometric driver, popping up wherever functionally possible. The material palette of the bar areas, fireplace and restaurant is a balanced blend of leather, timber and anodised aluminium, creating warm and sophisticated spaces to energise and revitalise their occupants.  

OTHER AWARDS

  • Award for Interior Architecture - University of Queensland Oral Health Centre (QLD) by Cox Rayner Architects with Hames Sharley and Conrad Gargett Riddel 
    University-of-Queensland-Oral-Health-Centre-QLD-by-Cox-Rayner-Architects-with-Hames-Sharley-and-Conrad-Gargett-Riddel-Photo-Christopher-Frederick-Jones-2.jpgPhotography by Christopher Frederick Jones
     
  • Commendation for Interior Architecture - Geelong Library & Heritage Centre (VIC) by ARM Architecture
    Geelong-Library-Heritage-Centre-VIC-by-ARM-Architecture-Photo-John-Gollings.jpgPhotography by John Gollings