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Saltire Awards presented
by Culture Minister Linda Fabiani, with lecture by Professor Isi Metzstein
Saltire Housing Awards 2007 winners:
Awards
St Vincent Place, Edinburgh - Reiach and Hall & Oberlanders Architects
Upper Strand, Granton Waterfront, Edinburgh - Reiach and Hall & Elder
and Cannon
The Cottages, Silverhills, Rosneath - Anderson Bell Christie
Commendations
Telford Drive, Edinburgh - gm+ad architects
Princess Gate, Edinburgh - Malcolm Fraser Architects
George Place, Greenan - Austin Smith: Lord
Smithy Houses, Smithy Brae, Kilmacolm - ATA studio
Miller Street, Hamilton - Hypostyle
70 Hill Street, Garnethill, Glasgow - Elder and Cannon
Special Mentions
27 Hermitage Gardens, Edinburgh - David Blaikie Architect
Main Street, Mossend - Collective Architecture
Saltire Housing Design Awards Exhibition: Test of Time
was until 23 Aug

Saltire Society Housing Design Awards
Details: 0131 556 1836
ARTS AND CRAFTS IN ARCHITECTURE 2007 AWARD
Saltire Awards Panel:
Tony Franks - Convener/Ceramicist
Ian Arnott - Architect
Gillian Forbers - Stone Carver
Glen Onwin - Painter
Roan Rutherford - Architect
Arthur Watson - Sculptor

Saltire Society Housing Design Awards
News Release 30.07.07
The Test of Time
Scotlands Prize-winning Housing 1937-2007
A Retrospective Exhibition
Edinburgh College of Art 4-23 August
It has been seventy years since the Saltire Society created the United
Kingdoms first annual housing design awards. To celebrate, Scotlands
leading cultural organisation has arranged an exhibition which will showcase
the best in Scottish housing design, from the earliest winning entries
up to the present day.
From John A.W. Grants enduring model mining village of the 1930s
to Sir Basil Spences ill fated Hutchesontown C tower
block, the exhibition will review the changing character of housing in
Scotland over the past decades. Visitors will gain access to a range of
exhibits including original archive images, on-camera interviews with
residents of award-winning schemes and contextual material explaining
the changing faces of both housing policy and development, and domestic
life over the years.

The early Saltire housing panel combined a genuine interest in the modernising
programme of post-war reconstruction with an aspiration to preserve parts
of Scotlands built heritage. Significant individuals involved in
the Society included Alan Reiach, Robert Mathew and Robert Hurd. In their
book Building Scotland: A Cautionary Guide (1914) Hurd and Reiach clearly
expressed the societys hopes of the time, appealing for a compromise
between modernism and traditionalism, whilst shunning both the Victorian
age for its balmoralityand free-market individualism and the
machine austerity of extreme functional modernism.
Whether in village or town, the building of our ancestors had a
sturdiness, simplicity and charm well suited to the Scottish scene. Few
of us could honestly say the same of the buildings of modern times.
The exhibition will run from August until October, touring between three
major Scottish cities. Launched at Edinburgh College of Art in August
2007 as part of the festival programme, it will then go on to show in
Aberdeen, ending in Glasgow in October to coincide with the annual Saltire
Awards ceremony.
Karen Anderson, member of the Saltire Panel said:
In days when long term sustainability is paramount, it is important
to reflect on the last 70 years and establish what qualities ensure longevity
and make housing and places that will stand the Test of Time. It appears
that housing has replaced Education as the key priority of our government
and although the provision of Affordable Homes is far from a new pre-occupation,
but there are specific challenges; new challenges that face us now. The
huge market values of housing in rural areas and in our cities has led
to an affordability gap which threatens to exclude the young from their
own communities.
Badly designed and sited housing, whether affordable
or not can widen social gaps and potentially detract from our precious
built heritage and landscapes. We therefore need to concentrate our energies
on designing housing that is truly integrated; that responds to context
and enhances the communities within which it is located- physically and
socially. Well designed housing can mend fractured townscape
and sensitively extend new settlements. Such development requires streets
that are children, pedestrian and cycle friendly, not housing layouts
determined by roads standard.

For more information please contact Penny Lewis, Curator: 07817825849
The Test of Time: 70 Years of Saltire Housing Awards touring exhibition
schedule:
Edinburgh College of Art, Lauriston Place or Lady Lawson St
0870 241 0136
4-23 Aug, 10 am - 6pm daily
Marischal Museum, University of Aberdeen, Marischal College, Broad St,
Aberdeen
01224 274301
5-28 Oct, 10 am - 6 pm daily
Glasgow in November
The Test of Time exhibition was made possible thanks to generous donations
from the following sponsors: CCG, The Scottish Executive, Eastern Exhibition
& Display, Communities Scotland, AMA Homes, RCAHMS, Edinburgh College
of Art, Glasgow City Council, Raploch, The City of Edinburgh Council,
Austin-Smith:Lord, Cruden Building and Renewals, Ayrshire Housing, The
Burrell Company and RMJM. Also with special thanks to: Elder & Cannon,
Reidvale Housing Association, Halliday Fraser Munro and Jacobs.
Founded in 1936 by a small group of intellectuals with the aim of arousing
a critical appreciation of the arts in Scotland, the Saltire
Society is an organisation dedicated to promoting the Scottish culture
and environment. Known for its endorsement of excellence through a variety
of national awards in many fields, including literature, music and civil
engineering, it also seeks to influence decision makers and national policy
in Scotland, through a network of local groups.
Saltire Housing Design
Awards Entries deadline was 25 Jun
Saltire Awards 2007 - Terms of Entry:
1. Work must:
a) be located in Scotland
b) have been completed within the period 1st April 2005 to 31st March
2007 inclusive
c) be an intrinsic part of a building or group of buildings.
2. An entry form must be completed for each entered work (photocopies
will be accepted) and be accompanied by not more that six photographs
(mounted as specified below) of not less than 20cm x 15cm in size and
a location map to enable the Panel to find the work without difficulty
from a main road. Photographs, map and date of entry must be mounted on
not more than two A2 (60cm x 42cm) light weight boards.
3. Each board should be clearly marked with the name and address of the
entrant, the date of completion of work and the name of the artist and
commissioning body or person. Any other information for the purposes of
press publicity, e.g. biographical notes, etc., should be given on an
A4 typed sheet containing not more that 200 words.
4. A fee of £35 must accompany each entry.
Saltire Awards 2007 - Submissions:
The Administrator, The Saltire Society, 9 Fountain Close, 22 High Street
EDINBURGH EH1 1TF
Queries: Kathleen Munro - kathleen@saltiresociety.org.uk / 0131 556 1836
Saltire Awards 2006
Saltire Awards: 2006 Winners
Awarded:
Three Seton Mains, Longniddry
Paterson Architects
Signal Station House, North Queensferry
ICOSIS Architects
Highly Commended:
Housing at Cramond, Phase 1, Edinburgh
Richard Murphy Architects
Paragon, Glasgow
CZWG Architects
White Cottage, Ballintuim
Crichton Wood Architects
Scottish Architecture: best scottish buildings
of the last three decades
Info re Saltire Society Awards:
Kathleen Munro, Administrator
The Saltire Society, 9 Fountain Close, 22 High Street, Edinburgh, EH1
1TF
kathleen@saltiresociety.org.uk
Tel: 0131 556 1836
Civic Trust Award
Dynamic Place Award
RIBA Awards
Stirling Prize
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Scottish Design
Awards 2007
Comments or building suggestions / photos for the Saltire Awards page
welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Saltire Awards: page
- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
www.saltiresociety.org.uk
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