LONDON.- The Royal Institute of British Architects has today (Wednesday 6 September) announced the shortlist for the coveted 2023 RIBA Stirling Prize, awarded to the UKs best new building sponsored by Autodesk.
Presented since 1996, the RIBA Stirling Prize is the highest accolade in architecture.
The six new buildings in the running to be crowned the UKs best are:
A House for Artists, Barking (Apparata Architects)
Central Somers Town Community Facilities and Housing, Camden (Adam Khan Architects)
Courtauld Connects - The Courtauld Institute of Art, Westminster (Witherford Watson Mann Architects)
John Morden Centre, Blackheath (Mæ)
Lavender Hill Courtyard Housing, Clapham (Sergison Bates architects)
University of Warwick - Faculty of Arts, Coventry (Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios)
RIBA President Muyiwa Oki, said: "The 2023 Stirling Prize shortlist illustrates why architecture matters to all of us. These six remarkable buildings offer thoughtful, creative responses to the really complex challenges we're facing today. Whether it's tackling loneliness, building communities, or preserving our heritage, these projects lay out bold blueprints for purposeful architecture.
Amidst a backdrop of housing shortages, growing inequality, and economic uncertainties, this year's shortlist demonstrates that well-designed buildings can offer genuinely inspiring solutions to our most pressing problems."
Amy Bunszel, Executive Vice President of Architecture, Engineering and Construction Design Solutions at Autodesk, sponsors of the 2023 RIBA Stirling Prize, said:
The 2023 RIBA Stirling Prize shortlist winners are inspiring examples of architectures continued innovation to solve for humanitys biggest challenges. The industry is under rising pressure to design where we live and work to withstand the impacts of climate change and growing populations. The projects honoured on the shortlist are representative of whats possible to design and make when creativity, functionality and fostering community are at the forefront.
The shortlisted projects include:
A model for affordable city living: An apartment complex in Londons Barking offers an ambitious model for shared living, with resident artists delivering free creative programmes for the local community via a street-facing exhibition space. A permanent installation by Grayson Perry in the complexs central courtyard pays tribute to the homes of wartime heroes and workers (A House for Artists, Barking).
Building community and tackling inequality: Playfully designed spaces, arranged around a small park in Londons Camden. Contributing to a wider regeneration plan, the development provides local residents with social housing, an after-school club, a very generous adventure playground, and includes premises for a theatre education charity (Central Somers Town Community Facilities and Housing, Camden).
Modernising a landmark building: Careful conservation and bold interventions rework a warren of spaces inside an eighteenth-century building, home to a cultural institute and the UKs smallest university. Subtle interventions, including re-levelled floors and new doors to the main galleries, have notably improved accessibility and eased visitor flow (Courtauld Connect - The Courtauld Institute of Art, Westminster).
Elderly living without isolation: In Blackheath, a 300-year-old residential and nursing facility has been given a new lease of life. With treatment rooms, a hair salon, nail bar, events space and wellbeing facilities, the centre has been designed to encourage connection and movement among residents, supporting healthier and longer lives (John Morden Centre, Blackheath).
Maximising difficult urban spaces: New apartments have been ingeniously inserted into a previously undesirable and highly constrained urban site. Beyond the unassuming entrance, a welcoming courtyard centres the scheme and offers communal space for residents (Lavender Hill Courtyard Housing, Clapham).
Creating connections in higher education: The surrounding parkland is woven into a building that unites the arts and humanities under one roof. A feature staircase, inspired by the structure of a tree, grows through the central atrium with each branch leading to flexible spaces designed to inspire collaboration and cross-pollination of the arts (University of Warwick - Faculty of Arts, Coventry).
The winner of the 2023 RIBA Stirling Prize will be announced live in Manchester at the Stirling Prize ceremony on 19 October 2023.