adjaye associates celebrates sydney's aboriginal heritage with perforated canopy

adjaye associates celebrates sydney's aboriginal heritage with perforated canopy

learning from sydney’s aboriginal roots

 

Adjaye Associates announces the completion of its George Street Plaza & Community Building, a work of architecture deeply connected to the ‘lost history’ of its site in Sydney, Australia. The architecture takes shape as a representation of the heritage and identity of the place, seeking to uncover and honor the Eora roots of the coastal region, focusing on a blending of cultures and establishing identity in a constantly evolving world. The recognition of these differences is central to the proposal, as the design team aims to borrow influences from the area’s multi-layered history to shed light on the interactions between settlers and indigenous communities across history.

 

Designed together with Daniel Boyd, a contemporary artist of Kudjla / Gangalu Aboriginal descent, who took inspiration from aboriginal dot painting. The proposal was first unveiled in late 2019. See designboom’s previous coverage here!

adjaye sydneyimages © Trevor Mein@trevormein

 

 

adjaye associates + daniel boyd

 

Adjaye Associates introduces its George Street Plaza & Community Building as a new cultural anchor point for Sydney. The architects draw influence from ‘simple unitary forms and placemaking in Aboriginal culture,’ and focus on the concept of shelter as a symbolic space of retreat from the rapidly changing city. This space is revealed and fades away through the interplay of light.

 

To establish a deep connection between this significant center and the site’s heritage and origins, Adjaye worked with artist Daniel Boyd on the project’s main element — a 27×34 meter perforated canopy that provides protection and brings together the community building and the plaza, creating a poetic blend of light and darkness, as well as solid and void.

 

My hope is that this new community building and George Street public plaza will become a cherished destination in Sydney’s city center, a generative place for people to connect, recharge, reflect and take a pause from the rhythm of a fast-transforming city.’ says David Adjaye.

adjaye sydney

 

 

The community building’s unique pitched roof, which weaves layers evoking a sense of place, alludes to the primary silhouette of early settlers’ houses, encapsulated in a minimalist, utilitarian steel structure. Beneath it lies an open-plan gallery and indoor-outdoor viewing platform that overlooks the plaza, featuring a versatile space inspired by indigenous concepts of enclosure and characterized by a warm, inviting timber material palette.

 

Seamless interactions between art and community are facilitated by connections to the plaza and nearby developments, with histories and memories interwoven into the location as one moves through it. This results in a hybrid form that combines the legacy of early settlers and industrial materiality with Aboriginal roots.

adjaye sydney

 

 

It provides a space of contemplation and diversity, a space to extend knowledge of experience – a multiplicity of experiences and narratives, currently extending back 60,000 years through the connection of the Gadigal people of the Eora nation. Acknowledging that we can never fully comprehend our past or future is the first step in reconciling differences of perception,’ comments Daniel Boyd.

 

The idea of a public plaza provided a great opportunity for David and I to work together on the concept of relationships – how we as individuals perceive our relationship to a particular place and how collectively those relationships play out in a space.’

adjaye sydney
the steel canopy is punctured by mirror-lined openings with views to the sky adjaye sydney
perforated light shines onto a timber clad viewing terrace

david-adjaye-associates-george-street-plaza-community-building-sydney-australia-designboom-06a

a perforated canopy filters dappled light onto the plaza and the facade of the community building

adjaye sydney
a warm timber material palette defines this open plan, flexible community space overlooking the george street plaza

david-adjaye-associates-george-street-plaza-community-building-sydney-australia-designboom-08a

the canopy artwork comprises seventy-two panels with circular, mirror lined openings

 

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patterns distilled from canopy artwork create shadows onto the street paving which features circular detailing
patterns distilled from canopy artwork create shadows onto the street paving which features circular detailing
adjaye associates celebrates sydney’s aboriginal heritage with perforated canopy
 
the pitched roof is formed by a rhythmic utilitarian steel screen
the pitched roof is formed by a rhythmic utilitarian steel screen
site plan
site plan
upper ground floor plan
upper ground floor plan
first floor plan
first floor plan
second floor plan
second floor plan
roof plan
roof plan
axonometric
axonometric
south elevation
south elevation
north elevation
north elevation
north-south section
north-south section
east elevation
east elevation
west elevation
west elevation
west-east section
west-east section

project info:

 

project title: George Street Plaza & Community Building

architecture: Adjaye Associates @adjayeassociates

location: Sydney, Australia

architect of record: Architectus

artist: Daniel Boyd | @d_a_n_b_o_y_d

mechanical/plumbing engineer: Lendlease

structural engineer: Arup

previous coverage: December 2019

photography: © Trevor Mein@trevormein

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