Our highest honour is presented this year to two architects, the first time the Gold Medal has been jointly awarded since The Group received it in 2001.
By their own admission, Nicholas Stevens’ and Gary Lawson’s work and practice and talent are inextricably entwined, and their extraordinary achievements of the past two decades cannot be meaningfully separated. Architecture is a profoundly collaborative endeavour, and nowhere more so than in this remarkable partnership.
Stevens and Lawson joined forces in 2002, supported by two staff. Today they have a team of 15 and more than 200 completed projects behind them, encompassing 80 bespoke houses and 20-odd multi-residential projects, including a papakāinga development with Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei. So far the Institute has recognised Stevens Lawson Architects with 25 national and 24 regional awards, as well as the New Zealand Architecture Medal, the Supreme Award and the 2022 John Scott Award for Public Architecture. They were awarded a category win and highly commended at the 2022 World Architecture Festival.
First came a portfolio of astonishing houses, all of them thoughtful and elegant, each of them utterly unique. All display the same relentless focus on quality, including immaculate detailing and beautiful, often unusual, use of materials. The same principles of quality and care are carried faithfully into Stevens Lawson Architects’ larger buildings. The practice’s highly awarded public projects now include a concert hall, a school library, a chapel and a civic plaza and community centre.
For 20 years Stevens and Lawson have worked at the leading edge of their profession, bringing a restless curiosity and finely honed aesthetic instinct to all they do. Their work interrogates the status quo, asks ‘what if?’ and pushes the boundaries of innovation, while remaining consciously anchored in a long tradition of humanist architecture. The work shows great sensitivity to how people live and how they experience and move through the world. All their projects, the institutions as well as the residences, have a quality of ‘home’ about them, of comfort as well as beauty, of places to be welcomed and belong. These buildings sit gently and timelessly in their landscapes, as if they were always meant to be there, and always will be.
This thought, care and craft comes together exquisitely in HomeGround, the supportive housing project for Auckland City Mission – Te Tāpui Atawhai. An extraordinary achievement by any measure, HomeGround is a work of international significance, winning that World Architecture Festival commendation and standing as a model of care-informed architecture. It’s also a model of technical innovation: the tallest structural timber building in Aotearoa, and the product of meticulously considered sustainability principles.