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grad project

‘smith street redux’

Mixed-use apartment scheme for Smith Street in Collingwood. A public and community focussed alternative to the controversial Banco development proposed for this site. It seeks to respond to the question ‘can a very large building engage meaningfully with a sensitive urban context?‘

Major project for the completion of Bachelor of Architecture at RMIT University, 2005.

Program: Mixed use (apartments, retail, cinemas, supermarket)
Location: Smith St, Collingwood, Melbourne
Status: Unbuilt
Awards: Anne Butler Medal for Excellence in Design and the RAIA / SJB Practice Prize.
Supervisors: Stuart Harrison, Graham Crist and Conrad Hamann.

Smith St view

banco proposal

Smith Street Redux is an alternative scheme for the controversial Banco development proposed for Smith Street in the inner-Melbourne suburb of Collingwood in 2004. This proposal comprised of 250 apartments, a large underground carpark, a supermarket, and a number of retail tennancies. The council denied the project a permit after receiving a record 1500 objections from local residents due to scale, noise, traffic, programmatic and design concerns.

Proposed development rejected by council and residents

alternative scheme

Rather than shy away from the scale of this proposal, Smith Street Redux uses this original brief as a starting point while taking into consideration these residents objections, recommendations, and my own interpretation of the character of the area.

Webb St view


Smith street ‘culture collage‘

design strategies

Strategies for engaging with this sensitive context include drawing upon local iconic architecture, most notably the black and white stripes of the nearby Victoria Park stadium, in an attempt to invest the new scheme with some of the cultural pride of the area, and by retaining the ‘neighbourhood characters‘, or the traders that currently occupy the strip of tenancies on the site.

Aerial view


On roof

envelope

All of the existing program plus a large amount of community program and public open space is accomodated within a built envelope smaller than that originally proposed by Banco, achieved by replacing the inefficient single bedroom apartments with a number of 3 bedroom share-house style apartments.

Areas


Public space view

‘tough contextualism’

The architectural response is not polite and does not try to please everyone, but instead favours a ‘tough contextualism‘ that is more interesting and appropriate to the distinct and individual character of Smith Street.

Under awning

drawings


Ground floor plan

Sixth floor plan

Roof plan

Sections

Elevations

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