Archello Awards · Winners Announced
Archello Awards 2024 · Winners Announced
Archello Awards 2024
Winners Announced
Northshore Pavilion
Christopher Frederick Jones

Northshore Pavilion

Anna O'Gorman Architecture as Architects

A TEMPORARY STRUCTURE THAT ASSUMES THE FORM OF A STRIKING LANDMARK

Northshore Pavilion is an inclusive public space that bridges the site’s past and future. Designed and constructed in just 14 months, this project required quick, inventive thinking.

 

Overview

Northshore is Queensland’s largest waterfront urban renewal project, spanning an area greater than Brisbane’s CBD. As the precinct’s steady transformation takes place, Northshore Pavilion provides the public with a continual anchor to the area.

 

The first conversation

While Northshore Pavilion occupies a small footprint, its brief was ambitious on many levels. It challenged us to create a contemporary, human-oriented space using an experimental construction approach that allows for the building’s future relocation.

 

Economic Development Queensland (EDQ) required a temporary public structure that is accessible around the clock and incorporates recycled wharf timber reclaimed from the site. The amenities within needed to include a versatile public space, public bathrooms, a community meeting and rest spot, and a small private meeting room.

 

Developing the concept

We developed seven key design strategies to maximise civic engagement with the pavilion.

  • The river is a magnet: By placing the building at the river’s edge and providing a clear pathway through it, we use the river to draw visitors to the pavilion.
  • Raised landscape platform: To increase visibility of the river, we raised the deck to better frame the outlook.
  • Viewing portal: Framed views of the river and pedestrian links through the building create a positive community gathering place.
  • The pavilion as a landmark: The structure is bold in character. Its main roof height matches the scale of the double-stacked shipping containers at Eat Street Northshore, creating visibility on a relatively flat site.
  • Eroded corners: To the south east, the pavilion’s corners are deliberately carved to allow views of the river from the meeting room and across the park.
  • Human-scale interior, large-scale exterior: This juxtaposition was achieved using contrasting qualities of space and materials.
  • Oasis in a landscape: The pavilion incorporates a trellis for vines that create shade and anchor the building with the landscape. Filtered light through the roof creates a shaded oasis on a site with lots of concrete surfaces and no shade trees.

The outcome

Though the site is rich with history, its present state is immense, hot and glary. The pavilion was designed to create an oasis for the public to engage with Northshore; a beacon of respite set in a terraced landscape.

 

A framed view of the Brisbane River draws visitors up to a raised platform that connects smaller pod buildings under a folded timber canopy. Wharf timber salvaged from the site continues to play a central role in the Northshore story as the site evolves from an industrial centre to an urban lifestyle hub.

 

Eventually, the pavilion will move to make way for the new precinct, and the structure’s prefabricated components will facilitate this transition.

Read story in ItalianoPortuguêsEspañolDeutsch and Français

Project Credits
Project Managers
Timber processing
Landscape Architects
Product Spec Sheet

ElementBrand
Surestep Safety VinylForbo Flooring Systems
Feast Watson Woodshield Timber Cladding & Screening Oil BlackIntergrain
Product Spec Sheet
Surestep Safety Vinyl
Feast Watson Woodshield Timber Cladding & Screening Oil Black
Products Behind Projects
Product Spotlight
News
Green patination on Kyoto coffee stand is brought about using soy sauce and chemicals
10 Dec 2024 News
Green patination on Kyoto coffee stand is brought about using soy sauce and chemicals

Ryohei Tanaka of Japanese architectural firm G Architects Studio designed a bijou coffee stand in Ky... More

New building in Montreal by MU Architecture tells a tale of two facades
10 Dec 2024 News
New building in Montreal by MU Architecture tells a tale of two facades

In Montreal, Quebec, Le Petit Laurent is a newly constructed residential and commercial building tha... More

RAMSA completes Georgetown University's McCourt School of Policy, featuring unique installations by Maya Lin
10 Dec 2024 News
RAMSA completes Georgetown University's McCourt School of Policy, featuring unique installations by Maya Lin

Located on Georgetown University's downtown Capital Campus, the McCourt School of Policy by Robert A... More

MVRDV-designed clubhouse in shipping container supports refugees through the power of sport
9 Dec 2024 News
MVRDV-designed clubhouse in shipping container supports refugees through the power of sport

MVRDV has designed a modular and multi-functional sports club in a shipping container for Amsterdam-... More

Archello Awards 2025 expands with 'Unbuilt' awards categories
9 Dec 2024 Archello Awards
Archello Awards 2025 expands with 'Unbuilt' project awards categories

Archello is excited to introduce a new set of twelve 'Unbuilt' project awards for the Archello Award... More

Kinderspital Zürich by Herzog & de Meuron emphasizes role played by architecture in the healing process
6 Dec 2024 News
Kinderspital Zürich by Herzog & de Meuron emphasizes role played by architecture in the healing process

The newly completed Universtäts - Kinderspital Zürich (University Children’s Hospita... More

Fonseka Studio crafts warm and uplifting medical clinic space in Cambridge, Ontario
5 Dec 2024 News
Fonseka Studio crafts warm and uplifting medical clinic space in Cambridge, Ontario

In Cambridge, Ontario, the Galt Health family medical clinic seeks to reimagine the healthcare exper... More

Contemporary wooden cottage in Šumava National Park is inspired by local vernacular
4 Dec 2024 News
Contemporary wooden cottage in Šumava National Park is inspired by local vernacular

Prague-based Markéta Cajthamlová, Architektonická projekční kancel&aacut... More