Two projects win award celebrating building longevity
Two of our projects have been named winners in the inaugural Architecture Today 'Test of Time' awards!
The awards celebrate buildings that stand the test of time, recognising projects that have been in use for at least three years and that demonstrate a strong track record of delivering on their environmental, functional, community and cultural ambitions.
Snape Maltings Concert Hall, Cambridge, took the prize in the Religion & Culture category and New Court, Trinity College, Cambridge, where our founder Max Fordham once lived as a student, won the Editor’s Special Award.
A panel of expert judges selected winners from a shortlist of 32 entries, measuring key areas of performance criteria, including construction approach, environmental performance, user comfort and well-being, accessibility, inclusivity and legibility, adaptability and flexibility, facilitation of sustainable lifestyles, robustness and resilience, biodiversity and natural capital, social impact, civic pride and sense of place, and contribution to shared learning.
Read more about the winners unveiled for the Architecture Today Awards 2022.
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Trinity College New Court, University of Cambridge
Architect: 5th Studio
Completed: 2016
Working alongside architects, 5th Studio, we delivered a strategy for the project’s environmental performance, energy consumption and operation of the building services. Last year, five years on from its completion, 5th Studio director, Oliver Smith, wrote a piece for Architecture Today on the lessons learnt from the project.
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Snape Maltings, Suffolk
Architect: Penoyre & Prasad
Completed: 1999
This £4.5 refurbishment of the Snape Maltings Concert Hall comprised a 100-seat restaurant within a mezzanine floor created by raising the roof 1.5 m on new steel frames. We provided M&E services for the project which included an energy-saving ground water cooling system which improved ventilation, cooling and lighting within the auditorium.
Our founder, Max Fordham, also worked on the site during its conversion to an 800-seat concert hall in 1967.