List_of_winners_of_the_Sir_Hugh_Casson_Award

List of winners of the Sir Hugh Casson Award

List of winners of the Sir Hugh Casson Award

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The Sir Hugh Casson Award for the worst new building of the year was awarded annually from 1982 to 2017 by the "Nooks and Corners" column of the British satirical magazine Private Eye. The name ironically honours British architect Sir Hugh Casson. Column author Gavin Stamp explained in 2015 that "he (Casson) would turn up – take a fee – for giving evidence at public inquiries to recommend the demolition of buildings: a trade I despise". Stamp noted that Casson would sometimes mention his office as Vice-Chairman of The Victorian Society when arguing for the demolition of Victorian buildings. The medal of the award uses a sketch of Casson which is a self-portrait.[1]

Winners

More information Year, Building ...

Notes

  1. The award was for the remodelling of The Mound, to make a new public square.
  2. A temporary building, demolished in the year it was built.
  3. This building uniquely won the Stirling Prize for excellence in architecture in the same year.
  4. Shortlisted for Building Design magazine's Carbuncle Cup in 2011.
  5. The column notes that there were two "conspicuous front-runners" for the award, mentioning first the "Walkie-Talkie" (20 Fenchurch Street, by Rafael Viñoly). Column author Gavin Stamp has subsequently said that the Walkie-Talkie was the winner of the award for 2013, as for instance in Eye 1408 p. 21; however the column in 2013 states "The winner this year, however, must be ... the restaurant attached to the new Serpentine Sackler Gallery".

References

  1. "Page 94: The Private Eye Podcast. Episode 13" (Podcast). 30 November 2015.
  2. Wainwright, Oliver (19 June 2018). "Bulldoze or rebuild? Architects at odds over future of Glasgow School of Art". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  3. Wainwright, Oliver (23 June 2016). "RIBA awards 2016: academic buildings dominate list of UK's best architecture". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 January 2022.

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