AILA National Civic Landscape Award of Excellence
Lady Cilento Children's Hospital
Conrad Gargett

Photo: Christopher Frederick Jones
The Lady Cilento Children’s Hospital project, in inner city Brisbane, has taken landscape architecture beyond the conventional two-dimensional realm and showed that design innovation can lead to tangible benefits to health and wellbeing. The rooftop subtropical landscapes, community spaces and vertical gardens are clear evidence of effective design collaboration between project partners on what was a complex and challenging site.
The design capitalizes on and creates clever relationships within its urban location, and provides for public amenity at a variety of scales. The new civic space on Vulture Street is a significant addition to the public environment of South Bank and demonstrates the importance of engaging with the existing urban context irrespective of the building project’s scale.
The micro landscapes in and around the hospital provide an accessible form of relief and escape for seriously ill and infirm patients and have demonstrative benefits in sustainability and building efficiency. The landscape designs are bold, progressive and conversant with the language of Lyons’ building facades. The series of garden rooms offer parents and children places that inspire curiosity and play as well as a reprieve from hospital visits. Green walls and green roofs become wonderlands as well as lush, verdant vistas from hospital beds.
The project makes a major contribution to the advancement of green infrastructure landscape design practice at a national level.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
One Central Park
ASPECT Studios and OCULUS

Photo: Simon Wood
One Central Park is a standout project by virtue of its application of technical advancements. These include soil and planting research, testing and development for the seven kilometres of balcony planting and green facade that cover the buildings in a challenging urban environment, and the recycled backwater irrigation system developed for the project, the first of its kind in Australia. The courtyards are inviting spaces for residents and visitors alike to enjoy and socialise.
The project makes a substantial contribution to the promotion of landscape architecture and the advancement of culture through design advocacy. Demonstrating a highly integrated community and sustainable design outcome of outstanding quality, the client is commended for taking on the risks associated with this non-standard project solution, one that has delivered exceptional rewards for the locale and its residents.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
UTS Alumni Green
ASPECT Studios

Photo: Simon Wood
The UTS Alumni Green is a well-executed public space project that has enlivened the heart of the University of Technology, Sydney City Campus.
Prior to the design competition and construction of Alumni Green, the campus was characterised by a disparate collection of buildings with extremely limited opportunities for students to gather and enjoy. The project has put people first, providing a welcoming environment for the campus community to work, relax and socialise.
The design has created spaces with controlled materiality and an excellent balance between hard and soft surfaces. Special attention has been paid to circulation and the new experience. The space flows into its surrounding buildings and streets making it highly accessible. Lifting the ground plane allowed adequate soil depth for growing trees on slab and lush ground covers with careful attention paid to collection of stormwater for irrigation. This has given the space a soft texture with the masterstroke of the central lawn adding calm and relaxation to a busy campus.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
Rundle Mall
HASSELL

Photo: Peter Bennetts
The revitalised Rundle Mall in the Adelaide CBD is the people’s place. The design creates a destination beyond the merely transactional and encourages communal gathering and social engagement. Its adaptable, flexible spaces and openness create opportunities for people to engage in a variety of experiences. The bespoke furnishings and structures are delightful in their arrangement, amorphous in their form but subtly shift the regimented geometry of the original street walls.
The design for Rundle Mall moves away from typical pedestrian street amenities and commercial singular programs; it embraces emerging and dynamic short, medium and long-term strategies that anticipate change and drive urban vitality. Perhaps most importantly, doubling the tree cover provides for more appropriate human microclimates.
The successful collaboration with Adelaide City Council and the retail traders is evident in the quality of this project, which is a vitally important reimagining of the city’s retail precinct and a major contribution to its public space network. The project has already delivered a significant economic dividend in stimulating property reinvestment.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
Glenorchy Art and Sculpture Park (GASP!) Stage 2
McGregor Coxall
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GASP stage 2 is a highly site-responsive design solution. The location’s breath-taking landscape provides a stunning backdrop to a new cultural asset that provides a stage for people to engage with Wilkinson’s Point through art and experience of place. Applying a ‘build it and they will come’ philosophy, the project is a well-used civic and cultural space.
The project is tactical and precise; its sweeping arc boardwalk and entrance provides a sequence of spatial experiences that are deeply embedded in the site. Exposure to the weather and water balanced by cloistered courtyards; concrete expanses and found objects juxtaposed with temporary artworks and refined seating arrangements. Importantly, this once vacant and disused site, is reconnected to the now well established cultural and natural precincts that recently re-invented Tasmania’s civic identity.
It has captured the imagination of locals and visitors as well as being recognised nationally and abroad. It has acted as a stimulant to renewed interest and investment in the local economy. The project is already delivering social, economic and environmental dividends and is to be commended for achieving this outcome with a fairly modest public investment.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
The Goods Line
ASPECT Studios

Photo: Florian Groehn
The Goods Line is an exemplary addition to the social infrastructure of inner-Sydney through the clever adaptive use of a defunct rail line. It is an outstanding demonstration of landscape’s role in improving urban connectivity.
The repurposed rail line completes a missing link in the green infrastructure connecting Central Park, Darling Harbour and Circular Quay, while also providing an enjoyable destination in its own right with shaded performance spaces, play areas and places for both reflection and connection.
The hard and soft landscape detailing is extremely well done. Post-industrial chic intertwines with sinuous, sleek concrete; the railway is remembered but not memorialised.
The project creates a vibrant urban park that has broad demographic appeal and as a result, strengthens the public life of the area. The design cleverly interprets the rich industrial history of the structure while also creating an exciting new identity that is already stimulating the possibilities of adjacent spaces.
AILA National Award for Civic Landscape
Fiona Stanley Hospital
HASSELL

Photo: Peter Bennetts
Fiona Stanley Hospital is a world-class example of the integration of landscape spaces across a large public health facility. Within a diverse multi-disciplinary team, the landscape architects ensured that a holistic view of the entire precinct was maintained. The integration of environmentally sustainable design solutions, including the salvaging and replanting of existing vegetation and WSUD techniques, mark this as a highly successful project. The roof top gardens are a distinctive and popular feature of the facility, while the natural environment of this project is already promoting healing benefits for the hospital’s patients and workers.