PTW Architects

Not to be confused with Peddle Thorp.
PTW Architects
Subsidiary
Industry Architecture
Founded 1889 in Sydney
Founder
  • James Peddle
  • Samuel George Thorp
  • H. Ernest Walker
Headquarters Sydney, Australia; with offices in Beijing, Shanghai, Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Taiwan
Owner China Construction Design International
Website www.ptw.com.au
The National Aquatics Center, Beijing

PTW Architects is an Australian architecture firm founded in Sydney in 1889. In 2013, PTW was acquired by the China-based state-owned enterprise, China Construction Design International.[1][2]

PTW has become a highly diversified architectural practice with its design leaders specialized in a broad range of sectors including residential/mixed use, infrastructure, aged care, the arts (education/culture) and sport. PTW Architects has also made a point of developing techniques and relationships that allow the firm to create genuine partnerships with other architectural firms and specialist consultants, sharing specialised knowledge and awareness of local context and culture amongst a project’s designers.

History

PTW Architects (formerly Peddle Thorp & Walker) was established in Sydney by James Peddle[3] in 1889. James Peddle was notable in the domestic field, adapting the practice of architecture he learned in England and the United States to the Sydney climate and conditions. Samuel George Thorp was made a partner of the firm soon after his award-winning entry for Sydney's first planned garden suburb Daceyville in 1912. In 1924 H. Ernest Walker joined as the third partner bringing an interest in efficiency and technology developed while working for major American firms in the 1920s. Henceforth the firm was known as Peddle Thorp & Walker and the office began to diversify from a purely domestic practice to one that also excelled at commercial and industrial architecture.

During the years of the Second World War, PTW continued to practice with numerous defence projects awarded to it by the Commonwealth Department of Works. In the mid-1950s the massive growth of Australia's built environment saw PTW grow under the leadership of the late Graham Thorp to dominate the commercial building market, for which it is still renowned. The 120-metre (390 ft)-high AMP Tower at Circular Quay built in Sydney in 1962 was the first office building to break the 50-metre (160 ft)-height limit imposed in 1912. It was not only a physical landmark, but reached a standard of architectural refinement rare in such buildings at that time. Since then, PTW has been responsible for more than 50 commercial office buildings in Sydney and more than 150 throughout Australia, New Zealand and South-East Asia. PTW is also responsible for the bulk of the harbour waterfront development opportunities in Sydney; most recently with Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners on the Barangaroo project.

Contributing to the firm’s projects is the ability to create buildings where commercial objectives are balanced with cultural and public uses, leading to the enhancement of the public realm and a city’s facilities. This can be seen in projects such as the Walsh Bay Redevelopment, Angel Place and City Recital Hall, the recently completed extension of the National Gallery of Australia, the Forum Development, and East Circular Quay.

Major architectural works

PTW Architects has designed some of Australasia's landmark buildings including the following major architectural projects:

Completed Project name Location Award Notes
1932 Science House, Sydney Inaugural winner of the Sir John Sulman Medal
1962 AMP Building, Sydney Sydney central business district [4]
1977 AMP Centre, Sydney Sydney central business district
1997 & 2010 National Gallery of Australia Extension Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
2007 Beijing National Aquatics Center (known as the Water Cube) Beijing, China LEAF Award (2007)) [5]
TEDA Waterfront Masterplan Tianjin, China Zhan Tian You Award, Winner (2005)
Lu Ban Award, Winner (2005)
[6]
Calyx, Royal Botanical Gardens, Sydney [7]
1972: 1988 & 2010 AGNSW 21st Century John Kaldor Family Gallery Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney AIA Emil Sodersten Award for Interior Architecture (2012) [8]
Walsh Bay, Sydney Walsh Bay, Sydney [9]
Revy, Sydney [10]
One Central Park, Sydney Broadway, Sydney

See also

References

  1. "Peddle Thorp & Walker acquired by China-based company". Architecture and Design. 11 March 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  2. Allen, Lisa (7 March 2013). "Architects sell to Chinese". The Australian. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  3. "OBITUARY. MR. JAMES PEDDLE". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 25 December 1930. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
  4. Global Tall Building Database - Skyscraper Center, Council on Tall Buildings & Urban Habitat
  5. "Emirates Glass LEAF Awards Winners 2007". nuildingtalk. Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  6. "TEDA Tianjin Waterfront City Masterplan". PTW Architects. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
  7. "Calyx". PTW Architects. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
  8. "History of the building and site". Sydney Modern Project. Art Gallery of New South Wales. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  9. "PTW Architects » Walsh Bay Redevelopment Masterplan". Ptw.com.au. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
  10. "The Revy". The Revy. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
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