¹úÃñ²ÊƱ

BE In Review

2024/25
Personalise
Student at BE showcase

Message from the Head of School

Welcome to BE in Review, the annual compilation of research and education highlights from ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ School of Built Environment, covering Architecture, Construction, Design, Planning, Property and more.

In 2024, ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ turned 75 years old with Built Environment also celebrating this milestone. The original Faculty of Architecture was established the same year as the university, in 1949, and I’m proud to say in the many years since, our institution has gone from strength to strength. Today, ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ Built Environment is ranked 35th in the world in the 2024 QS Rankings and named as the world-leading research institution in Architecture by the Australian, in their annual 2025 Research Magazine.

  • Over the past year, our researchers have received $7.8m in grant funding to develop new knowledge and tackle some of the biggest challenges in our fields. These range from projects exploring how we can use Artificial Intelligence to improve city-making decisions, to research developing supercool materials to mitigate the urban heat island effect in cities around the world. Our researchers have also been awarded at the highest level this year, receiving global lifetime achievement awards, national fellowships and international residencies. 

    2024 was also a wonderful year for our students, with seven Built Environment graduates named in Australian Design Review’s ‘30 under 30’, along with wins in the Australian Design Graduate of the year and NSW Young Planner of the Year awards. An annual highlight for me as Head of School is attending our end of year student exhibition, which this year was held in the remarkable setting of White Bay Power Station, showcasing the models, drawings and visions of over 400 students. It was a fitting way to end the year, celebrating our students’ ambitions to create more sustainable, equitable and resilient designs for our future cities.

    At ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ Built Environment, we are home to many different disciplines. But 2024 emphasised the shared missions that unite our collective endeavours.

    Firstly, we seek to create smart built environments that use data and advanced digital tools to make evidence-based decisions and develop new systems and designs. For instance, in 2024, we officially opened the ARC Centre for Next-Gen Architectural Manufacturing, a new $5 million research and training centre that will accelerate digital transformation across our industries.

    We want to create healthy and equitable built environments, meeting the diverse needs of all people across products, buildings and cities. In 2024, we launched ‘How We Survive’, a long-term initiative to change how disaster recovery efforts are managed globally, by putting disaster-impacted communities at the centre of decisions that affect them and their families.

    We also recognise that the built environment is one of the biggest contributors to the climate crisis, and we’re committed to developing the research, technologies and education to tackle this. That’s why we’re delighted that ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ was recognised as 7th in the world in the 2024 Times Higher Education SDG Impact Rankings, and 12th in the world for SDG11: Sustainable Cities and Communities.

    Finally, we want to ensure the next generation of city-makers – our students – have an impactful education, learning from the very best. One avenue is through the Seidler Chair in the Practice of Architecture, which turned ten years old in 2024. With Dr. Penelope Seidler’s generous support, this has seen Pritzker Prize winner Prof. Glenn Murcutt and Profs. Richard Hassell and Mun Summ Wong of Singapore-based WOHA, lead award-winning studios at ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ for hundreds of students.

    All of this, and more, is captured in this edition of BE In Review. I do hope you enjoy the stories, videos and links within.

    Prof. Philip Oldfield
    Head of School, ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ Built Environment 

Highlights

¹úÃñ²ÊƱ was named the world-leading research institute in architecture by The Australian in their 2025 Research Magazine 

Learn more

¹úÃñ²ÊƱ Professor of Practice Philip Thalis was awarded the 2024 Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal – the Institute’s highest honour – in recognition of his design excellence and city making

Learn more

In 2024, ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ Built Environment and City Futures Research Centre researchers received $7.8m in grant funding to tackle some of the biggest challenges in our fields, from embedding AI into city-making decisions to mitigating the urban heat island effect.

Learn more

Funded by the Judith Neilson Chair in Architecture endowment, ‘How We Survive’ is a long-term initiative to change how community-centred disaster recovery efforts are enacted and understood globally

Learn more

Many talented ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ students and alumni won prestigious awards in 2024, including Australian Design Graduate of the Year, Young Planner of the Year and seven wins in Australian Design Review’s 30 under 30

Learn more

In November, ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ exhibited the work of 400 final year students in the remarkable setting of Sydney’s White Bay Power Station

Learn more

Since 2014, over 600 ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ students have been taught by a Seidler Chair, or travelled to a global city as part of a Seidler International Studio

Learn more

Researchers have developed a new smart seating system to better understand how women, girls, and gender-diverse individuals use public space

Learn more

In 1974 ¹úÃñ²ÊƱ established the first university degree in Landscape Architecture in Australia. 50 years later, Director of Landscape Architecture, Dr. Sara Padgett Kjaersgaard, looks back on the program’s impact.

Learn more