Client: National Parks and Wildlife Service
Collaborators: CHROFI with Bangawarra
Location: Manly, NSW
Status: Complete
Program: Viewing Platforms, Designing with Country, Placemaking
Year: 2021-2023
The proposed lookouts offer a new visitor experience to the area of North Head, traditionally known as Car-rang gel, supporting the future identity of the precinct by responding to its rich history and establishing a world-class attraction that caters to both the local community and an international audience. Connecting with Country has been central to the design from the outset, ensuring that the lookouts acknowledge and connect with the history, stories and place that is called Car-rang gel. The essential collaboration with Bangwarra through the entirety of the design process and the lookout's sensitive awareness of Country and community earnt the lookout both the AIA National Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture, and the 'NSW Architecture Medallion'.
Driven by this approach, the lookouts are designed to merge comfortably with the landscape by expressing the durable and earthy materiality of the surrounding sandstone and vegetation. Stone pavers are used to line the pathways, knitting into the existing rock so the boundaries between built and natural forms are blurred. At each of the platforms, seats are carved out of solid stone and arranged to form a gathering place where ceremony, teaching and meetings may occur. In addition to this, the shapes of the platforms trace the natural contours of the topography below and express local landforms, making visible the often lost or indiscernible patterns of the ground on which the visitor stands. These curves – much like Sydney Harbour – create a series of “outcrops” that focus the visitor's attention to specific outlooks and offer a place to gather.
These features aim to enable a ‘reading' of Country that emphasises a connection to place and an appreciation of the landscape. To heighten the sense of standing on the cliff edge, the platforms have been gently raised above the ground to offer an elevated outlook from which the visitor has access to the numerous and magnificent prospects of Sydney Harbour. Only at this point, perched above the Tea Trees and Banksia Scrub, can one begin to comprehend the history, the beauty, and the vastness of the land that is Car-rang gel.
Clinton Weaver
AIA NSW - Architecture Medallion 2024
AIA National - Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture 2024
AIA NSW - Robert Woodward Award for Small Project Architecture 2024
North Head Viewing Platforms
Client: National Parks and Wildlife Service
Collaborators: CHROFI with Bangawarra
Location: Manly, NSW
Status: Complete
Program: Viewing Platforms, Designing with Country, Placemaking
Year: 2021-2023
The proposed lookouts offer a new visitor experience to the area of North Head, traditionally known as Car-rang gel, supporting the future identity of the precinct by responding to its rich history and establishing a world-class attraction that caters to both the local community and an international audience. Connecting with Country has been central to the design from the outset, ensuring that the lookouts acknowledge and connect with the history, stories and place that is called Car-rang gel. The essential collaboration with Bangwarra through the entirety of the design process and the lookout's sensitive awareness of Country and community earnt the lookout both the AIA National Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture, and the 'NSW Architecture Medallion'.
Driven by this approach, the lookouts are designed to merge comfortably with the landscape by expressing the durable and earthy materiality of the surrounding sandstone and vegetation. Stone pavers are used to line the pathways, knitting into the existing rock so the boundaries between built and natural forms are blurred. At each of the platforms, seats are carved out of solid stone and arranged to form a gathering place where ceremony, teaching and meetings may occur. In addition to this, the shapes of the platforms trace the natural contours of the topography below and express local landforms, making visible the often lost or indiscernible patterns of the ground on which the visitor stands. These curves – much like Sydney Harbour – create a series of “outcrops” that focus the visitor's attention to specific outlooks and offer a place to gather.
These features aim to enable a ‘reading' of Country that emphasises a connection to place and an appreciation of the landscape. To heighten the sense of standing on the cliff edge, the platforms have been gently raised above the ground to offer an elevated outlook from which the visitor has access to the numerous and magnificent prospects of Sydney Harbour. Only at this point, perched above the Tea Trees and Banksia Scrub, can one begin to comprehend the history, the beauty, and the vastness of the land that is Car-rang gel.
Project partners
Clinton Weaver
AIA NSW - Architecture Medallion 2024
AIA National - Nicholas Murcutt Award for Small Project Architecture 2024
AIA NSW - Robert Woodward Award for Small Project Architecture 2024