2015-08-03

Architects: JCY

Location: Perth WA, Australia

Jcy Project Team: Madeleine Hug, Jason Welten, James Bolger, Clare Porter

Jcy Design Principal And Contact For Ngoolark: Libby Guj

Project Year: 2015

Photographs: Rob Ramsay, Peter Bennetts





Design Architect: Libby Guj

Project Architect: Will Thomson

Project Manager: NS Projects - Stewart Greensmith & Richard Yeoh

Structural And Civil: BG&E

Mechanical, Electrical: Wood & Grieve Engineers (WGE)

Hydraulic And Fire: SPP Group

Landscape: Plan E Landscape Architects

Bca: JMG Building Surveyors

Acoustics: Gabriels Environmental Design

Esd: Umai Low

Safety At Heights: Altura

Façade Consultant: Arup

Artists: Andrew Stumpfel and Sohan Ariel-Hayes

Public Art Coordinator: Andra Kins

Contractors: PACT Constructions – Kelvin Chance (Project Manager), Steve Ball (Construction Manager)

Site Supervisors: Peter Turner, cSimon Grant, Steve Hearne. Bevan Scanlon, John Lyons

‘Ngoolark’ (the Noongar name for the Carnaby Cockatoo) brings to ECU a building and place with a new living and active platform for ‘University Life’, creating an interactive and integrated campus building bringing together the multitude of functions required to provide the highest quality of student services for the campus community and future master-plan.

The project comprises the development of a new campus building, recognising the need to invest in the urban life of the University creating a combined campus marketplace, podium and forum. Levels one and two provide a strong vibrant and active student hub, with the more ‘private’ corporate structure on upper levels providing flexible and high quality office research and innovation workplaces.

The focus for the whole building is to create an exciting and high quality new typology of accommodation with an iconic identity and an open, connected and collegiate atmosphere.

The site’s inherent level changes provide exciting opportunities to create formal and informal landscaped environments linking together to create a ‘campus street’ filled with both active and passive places. The rich architectural palette comprises a wonderful faceted concrete podium and a gold perforated aluminium sun-shading skin, folded and patterned with the feathers of the Carnaby Cockatoo.

The podium, the lower forum, the external skin and the atrium work together to create a building which is about landscape; which are natural and cultural with the themes; Ngoolark; Joondal and Jingee which are integrally linked to the local Noongar Aboriginal people of the South West of Australia.

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