Kerry and Lindsay Clare

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Kerry and Lindsay Clare
Alma mater
Gold Medal
(2010)
PracticeClare Design

Kerry Clare and Lindsay Clare are a wife and husband duo who are Australian

Gold Medal
.

Professional career

Kerry Clare and Lindsay Clare practiced in

Australian Institute of Architects for housing, public, recycling, civic, and commercial projects. Major awards include the National Robin Boyd Award
in 1992 and 1995, National RAIA Commercial Award 1995, National Belle/BHP Steel Futures Award 1993 and National RAIA Environment Citation 1996. They have won the RAIA Robin Dods Award (previously House of the Year) six times (1982 to 1997).

In 2010, they were joint recipients of the

Gold Medal. The jury citation notes that "Lindsay and Kerry Clare have made an enormous contribution to the advancement of architecture and particularly sustainable architecture, with a strong held belief that good design and sustainable design are intrinsically linked".[1]

They have been members of state, national and international architectural juries, lectured internationally in Graz, Helsinki, Vancouver, Los Angeles, Seattle, Calgary, New York, Bogota, Taiwan, Panama, Barranquila, Auckland, Sri Lanka, Mexico City, Beijing, and Shanghai and have led winning design teams for a large number of competitions, both nationally and internationally.

Following the inclusion of the McWilliam residence in the Venice Biennale 1991 their Cotton Tree social housing project was selected worldwide for inclusion in the 'Ten Shades of Green' exhibition in New York; an exhibition demonstrating architectural excellence and environmental sensitivity organised by the Architectural League of New York.

The Clares were appointed as Design Directors to the

Queensland Gallery of Modern Art (National RAIA Award for Public Architecture 2007), the University of the Sunshine Coast Chancellery (AIA State Public Architecture Award and the Harry S Marks Environment Award in 2008), the University of New South Wales
student housing (2009), and the Brisbane Wesley House Commercial Building (2009).

Kerry and Lindsay are currently appointed as Professors of the School of Architecture and Built Environment at the University of Newcastle, NSW and as Visiting Professors at the Abedian School of Architecture, Bond University, QLD. Clare Design (with Hayball as Architect of Record) recently completed the Library at The Dock in Melbourne's Docklands for the City of Melbourne, Lend Lease and Places Victoria. The library is the first six star Green Star public building in Australia.

Notable projects

  • White Residence, Fig Tree Pocket (QLD)
  • Goetz House, Buderim (QLD)
  • Kirami, Buderim (QLD)
  • Thrupp + Summers, Nambour (QLD)
  • McWilliam Residence, Mooloolaba (QLD)
  • Rainbow Shores housing, Rainbow Shores (QLD)
  • Clare Residence, Buderim (QLD)
  • Hammond House, Cooran (QLD)
  • Cotton Tree Pilot Housing Project, Cotton Tree (QLD)
  • University of Sunshine Coast Recreation Club, Sippy Downs (QLD)
  • Refurbishment of Circular Quay wharves (NSW)[2]
  • No. 1 Fire Station, Sydney (NSW)
  • Queensland Gallery of Modern Art (Architectus), Brisbane (QLD)
  • University of Sunshine Coast Chancellery (Architectus), Sippy Downs (QLD)
  • University of NSW Student Housing (Architectus), Kensington (NSW)
  • Wesley House (Architectus + Fulton Trotter Architects), Brisbane (QLD)
  • Library at The Dock, Melbourne (Clare Design with Hayball), Melbourne (VIC)

Bibliography

  • Midant, Jean Paul (ed): 1996, "Clare, Lindsay et Kerry", Dictionnaire de l’Architecture du xxe siecle, Hazan, Institut Francais D’Architecture, France, pp 202 –203
  • Pearman, Hugh: 1998, "Living" and "Sport", Contemporary World Architecture, Phaidon Press Limited, London, pp 221, 229, 424
  • Smith, Robert: 1999, Allgemeines Kunsterlexikon, Germany
  • Beck, H & Cooper, J: 2000, ‘Practice Profile: Clare Design’, Architectural Design Vol 70 No 2 * * Space Architecture, John Wiley and Sons Ltd, London, UK, pp 102–108
  • Hyatt, P: 2000, ‘Lindsay and Kerry Clare - The Identity of Place’, Local Heroes, Architecture of Australia's Sunshine Coast, Craftsmen House, Sydney, August, pp 6, 18-52, 168-219
  • Stungo, N: 2001, The House Book, Phaidon, London, UK, p 78
  • Buchanan, P: 2005, Ten Shades of Green: Architecture and the Natural World, Architectural League of New York
  • Gossel, P (ed): 2007, ‘Clare, Kerry and Lindsay’ Modern Architecture A-Z, Taschen, Cologne, pp 206–207
  • Rihan, X 2008: 100x400 Collections of Famous International Architects, HK RIHAN, Int’l Culture Spread Ltd, Hong Kong. vol. 1, pp 36–43
  • Wallace, M & Stutchbury, S: 2008, Place Makers - Contemporary Queensland Architects, Queensland Art Gallery, Australia, pp 118–131
  • Beck, H + Cooper, J: 2010, Architectus - Between Order and Opportunity, ORO Editions, California, USA, pp 1–271
  • Beck, H + Cooper, J: 2015, Clare Design Works 1980 - 2015, ORO Editions, California, USA pp 1–271
  • Goad, P: 2015, Library at The Dock, Architecture Australia, Jan/Feb, pp 92–99
  • Goad, P (ed), Willis, J (ed): 2012, The Encyclopaedia of Australian Architecture, Cambridge University Press, New York, USA, pp 41–42, 148-149, 157, 248, 382, 429, 484, 548, 555, 578, 589, 609, 668, 717, 755
  • Xu, Y: 2010, 'Creating the Pleasure of Occupation: The Perspective and Practice of the Clares', World Architecture-Contemporary Architecture in Australia, World Architecture Magazine Publication, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, pp 16, 25-35, 42-47, 138

References

  1. ^ "Australian Institute of Architects 2009 Gold Medal - Jury Citation: Kerry and Lindsay Clare". Australian Institute of Architects. 18 March 2010. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
  2. ^ "Architecture's golden couple a prized breath of fresh air". The Sydney Morning Herald. 18 March 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2015.

External links