The Robin Boyd Award for New Residential Architecture is an Australian national architecture prize presented annually by the Australian Institute of Architects since 1981.

Robin Boyd Award for New Residential Architecture
Current: Edition Office
Robin Boyd Medal
Awarded forHighest Residential Architecture Award in Australia
CountryAustralia
Presented byAustralian Institute of Architects
First awarded1981; 43 years ago (1981)
Last awarded2024
Websitewww.architecture.com.au/awards

The award is the highest in the residential architecture category. Alongside the named award, secondary awards are given including a 'National Award' and 'National Commendation' to highly regarded entries.

2023 Robin Boyd Award, 19 Waterloo Street, Surry Hills by SJB Architects
2016 Robin Boyd Award, 'Indigo Slam' by Smart Design Studio

The award is presented in memory of the Australian architect Robin Boyd CBE (1919—1971), and is awarded to residential architecture that sets benchmarks for meeting client's needs, responding to the site and providing shelter that is at the leading edge of house design.

Multiple winners

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Sydney based architect Peter Stutchbury has been awarded the Robin Boyd Award on four occasions; 2003, 2005, 2020 and 2021.

The office of Durbach Block Jaggers based in Kings Cross, Sydney has won the award three times; in 1998 and 2004 (as Durbach Block) and 2017.

Two time winners include Glenn Murcutt, Lindsay Clare, John Wardle, Timothy Hill, Sean Godsell, Alexander Tzannes, Kerstin Thompson, Troppo Architects and Denton Corker Marshall.

List of recipients

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Robin Boyd Awards by year
Year Winner Project Location Other RAIA/AIA Awards
1981 Glenn Murcutt Two Houses (Nicholas and Carruthers Houses)[1] Mount Irvine
1982 NO AWARD
1983 McIntyre Partnership Sea House Caraar Creek Lane, Beleura Hill, Mornington
1984 Louise St John Kennedy Downes–Stoney Residence East Perth
1985 Glenn Murcutt Magney House[2][3] Bingie Bingie Point, New South Wales
1986 Geoffrey Pie Architects/Planners Pie Residence[4] Peregian Beach
1987 Ken Woolley, Ancher Mortlock Woolley Palm Beach House Palm Beach
1988 Alexander Tzannes Henwood House[5] Paddington
1989 Don Watson Campbell House/Graceville House[6] 35 Molonga Terrace, Graceville
1990 Alex Popov Architects Griffin House 8a Rockley Street, Castlecrag
1991 Gabriel Poole
(Joint Winner)
Tent House Eumundi
Dale Jones–Evans
(Joint Winner)
Gallery House 23 Morang Road, Hawthorn
1992 Lindsay Clare Architects Clare House Buderim
1993 Gordon & Valich
(Joint Winner)
Palm Beach House 7 Northview Road, Palm Beach
Hamish Lyon and Astrid Jenkin with Charles Salter
(Joint Winner)
Lyon/Jenkin House[7] Carlton
Troppo Architects
(Joint Winner)
Commonwealth Defence Housing Authority, Larrakeyah Housing Precinct 2[8] Larrakeyah, Darwin
  • Tracy Memorial Award, 1993 (NT)
1994 Bud Brannigan Brannigan Residence[9] St Lucia
1995 Clare Design
(Joint Winner)
Hammond Residence[10] Cooran
Craig A Rossetti
(Joint Winner)
106–112 Cremorne Street (Six Terraces) Richmond
1996 Ken Latona
(Joint Winner)
Additions to a front verandah[11] Woollahra
John Mainwaring & Associates
(Joint Winner)
Chapman House[12] Noosa Heads
1997 Alexander Tzannes Associates House Northbridge
1998 Durbach Block Architects Droga Apartment Foster Street, Surry Hills
1999 Denton Corker Marshall
(Joint Winner)
Sheep Farm House[13] Kyneton
Graham Jahn Associates
(Joint Winner)
Grant House 1 Esther Street, Surry Hills
2000 Denton Corker Marshall Emery Residence[14] Cape Schanck
2001 Donovan Hill D House[15] Harcourt Street, New Farm
  • House of the Year Award, 2001[16]
2002 Bligh Voller Nield & Troppo Architects Lavarack Barracks Redevelopment Stage 2[17] Townsville
2003 Stutchbury + Pape
(Joint Winner)
Bay House[18] Watsons Bay
  • NSW Chapter Award for Architecture – Single Housing, 2003[19]
Kerry Hill Architects
(Joint Winner)
Ogilvie House[20] Sunshine Beach
2004 Durbach Block Architects House Spry[21] Point Piper
  • NSW Chapter Award for Architecture – Single Housing, 2004
2005 Stutchbury and Pape Springwater[22] Seaforth
  • NSW Chapter Award for Architecture – Single Housing, 2005
2006 Sean Godsell Architects St Andrews Beach House[23] St Andrews Beach
  • Victoria Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2006
2007 Paul Morgan Architects Cape Schanck House[24] Bass Vista Boulevard, Cape Schanck
  • Victoria Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2007
2008 McBride Charles Ryan Klein Bottle House[25][26] Rye
  • Harold Desbrowe-Annear Award for Residential Architecture, 2008
2009 Chenchow Little Architects Freshwater House[27][28] Freshwater
  • NSW Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2009
2010 HBV Architects (James Jones) House at Trial Bay[29][30] 3101 Channel Highway, Kettering
  • Tasmania Chapter, Esmond Dorney Award (Residential Architecture), 2010
2011 Neeson Murcutt Architects Castlecrag House[31][32] Castlecrag
  • NSW Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2011
2012 John Wardle Architects Shearer's Quarters[33] North Bruny Island
  • Tasmania Chapter, Colorbond Award for Steel Architecture, 2012
  • Tasmania Chapter, Esmond Dorney Award (Residential Architecture), 2012
2013 John Wardle Architects Fairhaven Beach House[34][35] Fairhaven Beach, Fairhaven
  • Victoria Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2013 (1 of 3 awarded)[36]
2014 Kerstin Thompson Architects House at Hanging Rock[37] Hanging Rock
  • Harold Desbrowe-Annear Award for Residential Architecture, 2014[38]
2015 Jesse Bennett Architect Planchonella House[39] Cairns
  • Queensland Chapter, Robin Dods Award for Residential Architecture, 2015[40]
  • 2015 Houses Awards: Australian House of the Year[41]
2016 Smart Design Studio Indigo Slam[42] 63 O'Connor Street, Chippendale
  • Wilkinson Award, 2016
  • Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture (National), 2017
  • NSW Architecture Award for Interior Architecture, 2017
  • World Architecture Festival (INSIDE) Awards, Residential (International), 2016
2017 Durbach Block Jaggers Tamarama House[43] 23 Kenneth Street, Tamarama
2018 Sean Godsell Architects House on the Coast[44] Mornington Peninsula
  • Victoria Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2018 (1 of 3 awarded)[45]
2019 Partners Hill (Timothy Hill) Daylesford Longhouse[46] Daylesford
  • Victoria Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2019 (1 of 5 awarded)[47]
2020 Peter Stutchbury Architecture
(Joint Winner)
Basin Beach House[48][49] Basin Beach, Mona Vale
  • NSW Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2020 (1 of 5 awarded)[50]
Kerstin Thompson Architects
(Joint Winner)
East Street[51][52] 350 East Street, East Albury
  • NSW Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2021 (1 of 5 awarded)[53]
2021 Peter Stutchbury Architecture Night Sky[54][55] Blackheath
  • NSW Chapter, Residential Architecture Award – New Houses, 2021 (1 of 5 awarded)
2022 NO AWARD
2023 SJB (Adam Haddow) 19 Waterloo Street[56] 19 Waterloo Street, Surry Hills
  • Wilkinson Award, 2023 (NSW)
  • Commendation, New House (under 200m2), Houses Awards[57]
  • Commendation, Residential Design, AIDA[58]
2024 Edition Office Naples Street House[59][60] 17 Naples Street, Box Hill South, Victoria
  • Harold Desbrowe—Annear Award, Residential Architecture – Houses (New), 2024 (Victoria)

2022 Award

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In 2022 the following projects were shortlisted for the award:[61]

  • Mays Point House, Mays Point, Tasmania[62] — Tanner Architects
  • LiveWorkShare House, Samford Village, Queensland[63] — Bligh Graham Architects
  • Curl Curl House, Curl Curl, New South Wales[64] — TRIAS (2022 National Award)
  • Stable House, Forest Lodge, New South Wales[65] — Sibling Architecture
  • Corner House, Flinders, Victoria[66] — Archier (2022 National Commendation)
  • Jimmy's House, Goonderup, North Perth, Western Australia[67] — MJA Studio with Studio Roam and IOTA (2022 National Award)

For only the second time, and the first time in forty years, no named award was given by the jury; Tony Giannone (Chair), Caroline Pidcock, Adrian Iredale, Poppy Taylor and Tim Ross.

2023 Award

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The following projects were shortlisted for the 2023 Robin Boyd Award by the AIA:[68]

  • 19 Waterloo Street, Surry Hills, Sydney, New South Wales[69] – SJB (2023 Robin Boyd Award)
  • Blok Stafford Heights, Stafford Heights, Brisbane, Queensland[70] – Blok Modular with Vokes and Peters
  • Celilo Springs, Mount Lawley, Perth, Western Australia[71] – Western Architecture Studio
  • Merricks Farmhouse, Mornington Peninsula, Victoria[72] – Michael Lumby with Nielsen Jenkins (2023 National Award)
  • Mossy Point House, South Coast, New South Wales[73] – Edition Office (2023 National Commendation)
  • Spring Creek Road Farm House, Bannockburn, Victoria[74][75] – Architect Brew Koch (2023 National Award)
  • Triptych, Rural Tasmania[76] – Room 11 Architects

The 2023 jury members were Shannon Battisson (Chair), Shaneen Fantin, William Smart, Stephanie Kitingan and Scott Burchell.[77]

The Robin Boyd Award was presented to Adam Haddow and Stewart Cowan from SJB for 19 Waterloo Street, at the National Awards[78] held in Canberra on 31 October 2023. National Awards were also presented to Merricks Farmhouse by Michael Lumby with Nielsen Jenkins and Spring Creek Road Farm House by Architect Brew Koch. Mossy Point House by Edition office was presented a National Commendation.

"19 Waterloo Street is a spectacular example of a new approach to urban infill. Constructed on the 30 square metres left between a new mixed-use building (a studio apartment and commercial tenancy) and an existing factory, the home shows how hard architecture can work, even on a small footprint. From the moment it comes into view, the home announces itself as something different. Full of colour, the facade disguises the program within, allowing an element of privacy balanced by a sense of generosity to the public street. All the required elements of home are present, with each opening off the central stair. Entry, workspace, kitchen, living and bedroom all have their own character and charm. Each is also light and radiates an overwhelming impression of space and connection to greenery that is not easily achieved within such a hard, industrial fabric. The culmination of the upwards journey is a rooftop garden that provides that final, much-loved element of the Australian home. No function was jettisoned in the small footprint, and the space is successful as a home for two, or as a space to welcome gatherings."

— 2023 National Awards Jury Citation extract[79]

2024 Award

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The following projects were shortlisted for the 2024 Robin Boyd Award by the AIA:[80]

  • 27 Rule Street, North Fremantle, Western Australian — Officer Woods
  • Burnt Earth Beach House, Anglesea, Victoria — Wardle (2024 National Award)
  • Courtyard House, Albert Park, Melbourne, Victoria — Clare Cousins Architects
  • James Street, Launceston, Tasmania — Taylor and Hinds Architects
  • Kidman Lane, Paddington, Sydney, New South Wales — Plus Minus Design
  • Maitland Bay House, Killcare Heights, New South Wales — Studio Bright (2024 National Commendation)
  • Naples Street House,[81] Box Hill South, Melbourne, Victoria — Edition Office (2024 Robin Boyd Award)
  • Six Ways House,[82] North Fitzroy, Melbourne, Victoria — Kennedy Nolan (2024 National Award)
  • Three Gardens House, Adelaide Hills, South Australia — Parabolica

The Award was presented to Edition Office at the National Awards held in Adelaide on 7 November 2024. National Awards were also presented to Burnt Earth Beach House by Wardle and Six Ways House by Kennedy Nolan. Maitland Bay House by Studio Bright was presented a National Commendation.

"Naples Street House represents a brave departure from suburban conventions, offering a considered rethinking of a family home. A deliberately understated facade prioritises the interior through animation of the inhabitants’ daily lives, creating a quiet address to the under-pedestrianised streetscape that finds belonging through form and scale. The low-peaked brick-slip roof references the brick bungalows of the neighbourhood’s past while rejecting contemporary adaptations of the style. The central courtyard becomes the orienting focus of the home. The symmetrical plan, coupled with the varied section, introduces unexpected interplays of light and space. Public programmed rooms converse with one another through the careful placement of apertures, while bedrooms are discreetly tucked away to the landscaped side of the house."

— 2024 National Awards Jury Citation extract[83]

Distribution and location of Awards

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To 2024 a total of 50 Robin Boyd Awards had been given in the 42 years of the award, with no award given in only two years (1982 and 2022). On seven occasions joint winners have been awarded; 1991, 1993 (three winners), 1995, 1996, 1999, 2003 and 2020.

A total of 80% of the Awards have been given to freestanding houses (40 of 50), and almost half of those to beach houses or holiday houses (19 total). Houses located in remote areas accounts for 40% of the awards, while only 18% of winning projects would be considered inner urban. A total of 17 suburban projects have won the award, around 34% of all Award winners.

Around 47% of awards have been won by projects in metropolitan urban areas, and 53% in non–metropolitan locations. Ten awards have been won in regional Victoria compared with only four awards in regional New South Wales – two of those by Glenn Murcutt — and seven awards in regional Queensland.

To 2024 more than two-thirds of all awards have been won by houses located in New South Wales or Victoria, and 92% of all awards won on the mainland eastern seaboard states of New South Wales (42%), Victoria (28%) and Queensland (22%). No architects or projects from South Australia or ACT have been awarded since the award began.

The most common site locations for awards have been Sydney beachside or harbourside suburbs (10 awards or 20%), Queensland coastal areas (7 awards) or on the Mornington Peninsula, Victoria (6 awards). A total of 24 projects or 50% would be considered coastal, 18% inner city, 12% rural and 34% suburban.

Awards by Australian state or territory, 1981—2024, by location of building (total 50 awards)

  New South Wales (42%)
  Victoria (28%)
  Queensland (22%)
  Tasmania (4%)
  Western Australia (2%)
  Northern Territory (2%)
  South Australia (0%)
  Australian Capital Territory (0%)

See also

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References

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