
THE PHILIP WEBB AWARD 2008
An annual award for Part II students at UK Schools of Architecture
SPAB and Philip Webb

Philip Webb and William Morris were the main founders of the Society for the
Protection of Ancient Buildings in 1877. From the start Webb devoted time to teaching
young architects the principles and methods of practical conservation. The Society
maintains that educational tradition today.
Purpose of the Award
To encourage new design in the context of historic buildings and to develop an
appreciation of old buildings amongst architectural students, through an understanding
of the architectural and historical values of old buildings and the purpose, philosophy
and techniques of conservation.
The Brief
The Student (or groups of Students) are to choose an individual building or group
of buildings of historic interest in the UK which are subject to decay or neglect.
The Student(s) are required to produce a scheme which will sympathetically re-vitalise
the building(s) and setting for appropriate new existing use(s). The scheme should
include a significant element of new design. Some local authorities have produced
'Buildings at Risk' Registers, which might be used as the basis for such a choice
of building(s).
The Prize
A prize of £1000 will be awarded to the winner. A second prize of £500 and a
third prize of £100 will also be awarded.
Eligible Students
All Students at UK Schools of Architecture who have achieved RIBA Part I and
are presently working towards RIBA Part 2 examinations.
The Submission
Each Student is requested to submit 2 x A1 size drawings (on card or lightweight
board) and a report which should include location and survey drawings of the existing
buildings as well as photographs of the building and surrounding environment.
Judging Criteria
Judges will be looking for:
- a clear historical and architectural appraisal of the existing buildings through
research, measured drawings etc.
- details of proposed conservation techniques and materials, as well as details
of the student's contemporary interventions, clearly showing the relationship
between old and new.
Submission Procedures & Conditions
- Each entry must be accompanied by a completed entry form, available from the
SPAB, 37 Spital Square, London E1 6DY.
- The closing date for entries is no later than 4pm on the Friday 5th December
2008 at the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings, 37 Spital Square,
London E1 6DY.
- Entrants must ensure that their name is clearly written on the reverse of each
drawing and on the report.
- Entrants must not write their names, initials or any other distinguising marks
on the face side of any submitted material.
- Please do not send any drawings in glass frames.
- Photographs must be securely fixed within the report.
- Models cannot be accepted, but photographs of models can.
- The SPAB can accept no liability for loss of or damage to submitted material.
We suggest students retain copies of all their material.
- The SPAB reserves the right to publicise entries.
Collection of material
Material not required for publication or exhibition must be collected from the
SPAB by 5pm on Friday 13th February 2009. Unfortunately the SPAB has no storage
facilities and will have to dispose of material not collected by that date.
Judging
The judging will take place shortly after the date of submission. The judges
are always eminent members of the architectural profession and have included Patty
Hopkins, George Ferguson, Richard Murphy, Eva Jiricna, and John McAslan in the
past few years.
Application Form
THE PHILIP WEBB AWARD WINNERS
Philip Webb Award Winners 2004
First Prize
A student at the Bartlett School, London, won the First Prize of £1,000. "A Hostel
on the Heights" was her scheme for a new hostel and function space built against
the Drop Redoubt of the Dover Western Heights, the military defences built on
the cliffs overlooking Dover Western Harbour. Illustrated above is Susie’s model
of the defences, with the proposed hostel and function building in the foreground.
The section is through the breakfast room facing towards the sea on the east
(to left) and the evening room facing west and the Drop Redoubt (right).
Second Prize
The Second Prize was won by three students from the Scott Sutherland School,
Aberdeen – David Maciver, Graeme McRobbie and Yannis Christodoulou. Their scheme
provided a base for the Scottish film industry at Broadford Works – a former textile
mill.
Third Prize
Nicholas Henderson, whose scheme for the recolonisation of the vast Tobacco Warehouse
at Stanley Dock, Liverpool won the Third Prize, was another Bartlett student.
The Judges were John McAslan, John McAslan & Partners; Alan Forsyth, Benson
& Forsyth; and Paul Crosby, architect, and first winner of the Award in 1993.
Philip Webb Award Winners 2003
Joint First Prize - £700
Joint first prizes of £700 were awarded to Khalil ur Rehman, a student at de
Montfort University in Leicester and Argus Gathorne Hardy, a student at Oxford-Brookes
University. Khalil Rehman's scheme was the conversion of a decommissioned electricity
sub-station at Mere Green, Sutton Coldfield into a GP's medical centre. The rejuvenation
of the Old Silk Mill, Chipping Campden, once the home of CR Ashbee's Guild of
Handicraft, was the scheme submitted by Argus Gathorne Hardy.
Third Prize - £200
The third prize was awarded to Mark Marshall for his scheme to build a new University
School of Arts, Culture and the Environment within the imagined ruins of Edinburgh's
South Bridge.