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Architecture Studios Open For Sydney Open

Architecture Studios Open For Sydney Open

Sydney Open Candalepas Photo by Brett Boardman

Get up close and personal in the studios of some of the industry’s most talented architects at Sydney Open this 4-5 November.

As a part of Sydney Open this year, not only have architecture practices Candalepas Associates, DKO Architecture, Grimshaw, JPW, PTW in Aurora Place, and Unipsace at Grosvenor Place granted public access to examples of their most revered work, but they’re also opening the doors to their studios.

 

Sydney Open Candalepas Photo by Brett Boardman

Candalepas Associates. Photography by Brett Boardman

Candalepas Associates converted a turn-of-the-century inner-Sydney industrial warehouse into their own architectural studio and have occupied the space since 2016. Although the space was Heritage Listed the refurbishment of the space has honoured many elements from its original use such as high ceilings, circulation plans, original staircase (there is a new lift), timber framing, and brick walls.

 

DKO Offices, formally the Redfern Post Office. Photography by Dan Hocking

DKO Offices, formally the Redfern Post Office. Photography by Dan Hocking

DKO Architecture sits within a two-storey brick and rendered building dominated by a four-storey clock tower built in 1882, once the Redfern Post Office. Nearly a century and a half later many of the original design features remain well preserved, these include ornate plaster cornices, pressed metal ceilings, timber floorboards and a grand central timber staircase.

 

333 George Street designed by Grimshaw. Photography by Ashleigh Hughes

333 George Street was designed by Grimshaw for Charter Hall to exemplify a “new breed” of workplace design. Eighteen storeys and a fully glazed façade the building illuminates the street below and surrounding buildings.

 

JPW office. Photography by Richard Glover

JPW office. Photography by Richard Glover

JPW is hosting rare, guided tours of within their Pitt Street Studio. Having worked on some of Sydney’s most recognisable contemporary buildings – The National Portrait Gallery in Canberra, The Museum of Sydney, the Asian wing of the Art Gallery of New South Wales and an extension to Sydney’s Anzac Memorial in Hyde Park – their own offices exhibit their signature, controlled approach to design.

 

Sydney Open PTW Syd Offices Photo by Murray Fredericks

PTW Sydney Offices. Photography by Murray Fredericks

 

PTW approached the design of their headquarters less like a brief to problem solve and more like a calling card. The brief, as well as the design, was informed by a number of staff workshops to ensure modern working habits and needs were addressed. The resulting office boasts natural ventilation, a reduced need for artificial overhead lighting, breakout spaces and height-adjustable desks.

Unispace Office. Photography by Shannon McGrath

Unispace Office. Photography by Shannon McGrath

Visit Unispace studio on Level 43 of Grosvenor Place. As the building nears its 30-year anniversary it remains an iconic feat of Australian architecture. As one of Harry Seidler’s most complex and (with a slew of awards to its name) celebrated works, the building features two crescent towers split by an elliptical central core: a convex lenses through which to view picturesque Sydney.

Sydney Open
sydneylivingmuseums.com.au/sydneyopen


Author:

Holly Cunneen was the editor of Habitus and has spent her time in the media writing about architecture, design and our local industry. With a firm view that “design has a shared responsibility to the individual as much as it does the wider community,” her personal and professional trajectory sees her chart the interests, accomplishments, and emerging patterns of behaviour within the architecture and design community.