Five Architect Teams Shortlisted for Ipswich Bridges Contest

Five teams of architects have been shortlisted to enter a design competition for the construction of new bridges in Ipswich.

Suffolk County Council is seeking to improve connections between the town centre and the waterfront and ease traffic congestion in the town.

Its solution is the £77 million Orwell Crossings Project, which will see the construction of two new crossings near the waterfront area of the town, along with the refurbishment of an existing swing bridge across the lock that provides access to the Wet Dock and its marina facilities.

The new crossings should also pave the way for a wider regeneration of the waterfront area of Ipswich.

A design competition for the project is being run by the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) Competitions, which has now produced this shortlist of applicants:

– Adamson Associates (Toronto) with William Matthews Associates and Ney & Partners

– Foster & Partners (London)

– Knight Architects (High Wycombe)

– Marc Mimram (Paris)

– Wilkinson Eyre (London) with consulting engineers Fhecor Ingenieros Consultores (civil) and Eadon Consulting (mechanical)

During the shortlist selection, the evaluation panel looked for architectural teams that showed experience of collaborating on big infrastructure schemes, working within a multi-disciplinary team environment, and designing projects of architectural distinction with a complexity, scale and/or budget similar to that required on the Upper Orwell Crossings scheme.

The final winner will join an existing project team led by WSP Parsons Brinckerhoff, which will be responsible for providing structural and civil engineering input to the project.

The evaluation panel was made up of Suffolk County Council’s project manager and planning consents manager, along with WSP associate director Kevin Drain and Matter Architecture director Jonathan McDowell acting as the RIBA architect adviser.

The five short-listed teams will be invited to present their design concepts to the judging panel, chaired by architect Sir Michael Hopkins, in mid-December 2016. A winner is scheduled to be announced in early 2017.

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Issue 324 : Jan 2025