• EKY Hub Commended at the QLD PIA Awards!

    EKY Hub Commended at the QLD PIA Awards!

    In news just in, the Eastern Kuku Yalanjiwarra Culture and Tourism Hub received a commendation the ‘Planning for Country’ commendation at the QLD Planning Excellence Awards! ⁠ ⁠ This project was a huge collaboration between ourselves, the Jabalbina Yalanji Aboriginal Corporation, Blaklash Creative, Planz Town Planning, CA Architects and Cox Architecture. ⁠

    In announcing the award the jury stated, ‘this project features an inclusive and extensive engagement approach with the Eastern Kuku Yalanji people to establish a set of unique design principles. The principles relate to Caring for Country, Language, Unity/Kinship and Markers of Country. The principles have had a significant positive influence on the project and the Judges applaud the approach, which has a high degree of transferability to design projects across Australia.’

  • Freocast Fundraiser!

    Freocast Fundraiser!
    Support the new sound in town and come party with us at this summer sundowner event!

    We’ve said it before, nobody loves a side hustle as much as the team at TF.A. Our Associate Principal, Nick Juniper is the person behind Freocast , a new online community radio station launching in 2023.

    Nick and the Freocast team are hosting a shindig at the Naval Store to kick off the summer holidays and raise funds for the station. The event is being held on Saturday 17th December from 5pm onwards. Tix are only $15! Get yours here .

  • Rivermark wins at the PIA awards!

    Rivermark wins at the PIA awards!
    Project initiation smoking ceremony

    On Friday night our Rivermark project won the ‘Planning with Country’ Award at the WA Planning Institute of Australia Awards! ⁠

    The Rivermark development sits on the banks of the Derbal Kerrigan (Swan River) and is a place of cultural significance for Indigenous people. Our client, Hesperia , were keen to ensure that this history was embedded in the design of the new community. ⁠

    Nick Juniper, Barbara Bynder and Farley Garlett

    We worked alongside Karrda, an Aboriginal-owned anthropological consultancy led by Barbara Bynder and Farley Garlett, with close connections with the Noongar community in Perth.

    Together our role was to facilitate meaningful engagement with the Noongar community and to develop a series of built environment outcomes and narratives that reflected the cultural history of the site. The jury stated that ‘this work demonstrates how early engagement and reconciliation can play a formative role in the master planning process.’

    We are delighted to win this award and also congratulate Hesperia for committing to such a progressive and meaningful approach.

  • Equity Journal Launch

    Equity Journal Launch

    Here’s some images from the launch of our journal, Equity – a special evening with friends, collaborators and clients at Stackwood. ⁠ ⁠

    Sandra Harben, a Whadjuk Ballardong Noongar woman, gave the most generous Welcome to Country; while, Kieran spoke about the privilege of working with First Nations people across this land, including Noongar, Martu, Bunuba, Anindilyakwa, Narrunga, Mirruwong, Arrente, Jaru, Kija, Kukatja, Walmajarri, the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, Turbbal, Yuggera, Kuku Yalanji, Ngunnawai and Gooniyandi. ⁠ ⁠

    We are incredibly fortunate to work in the places we do, alongside the people we worth with. This privilege is not lost on us as a team; it cements the values of the agency as we seek social justice in the built environment for First Nations communities. ⁠ ⁠

    Copies of Equity can be read online or are available to purchase here , with 100% of revenue going towards projects in First Nations communities.

  • Groote Archipelago Housing Programme wins (twice) at the Good Design Awards!

    Groote Archipelago Housing Programme wins (twice) at the Good Design Awards!

    Our work on the Groote Archipelago Housing Programme (GAHP) won two awards at the prestigious Australian Good Design Awards in Sydney last Friday – the award for Social Impact and the Michael Bryce Patron’s Award!

    The Patron’s Award is particularly special as it celebrates the best Australian-designed product, service or project and is awarded to the entry that has the potential to shape the future economic, social, cultural and environmental aspects of our planet.

    This was an inspiring example of human centred design in practice. The evidence of the engagement of people from the community, and the persistence of the team should be an example for future projects of this type. The approach led to a deep understanding of the complexities of creating culturally sensitive housing in remote Australia, and as a result an extraordinary outcome of which both the team and the community can be proud.
    The Good Design Awards Jury comment:

    The great thing about these awards is that they celebrate two distinct aspects of this project:

    + our seven-years spent working with the Anindilylakwa people to improve life on the Groote Archipelago through better designed housin g. By working with community over several years, we were able to enhance built environment literacy and empower people to be proactively involved in the design of their housing.

    + in 2020, TF.A launched a series of evidence-based tools to measure a project’s social impact. By applying our ‘Social Return on Design Investment’ (SRODI) kit to this project, we confirmed that the shift towards Local Decision-Making enhanced feelings of community confidence, happiness and cultural safety.

    The co-design process gave people the power to choose and the power to make decisions from their own mind and heart. Decisions we’ve never made before. Cherelle Wurrawilya, Chair of the Anindilyakwa Housing Aboriginal Corporation

  • Martuku Jijiku Maya opens in Newman

    Martuku Jijiku Maya opens in Newman

    Last Friday was a special day at The Fulcrum Agency with the opening of Martuku Jijiku Maya, a hostel for Martu secondary students in Newman, WA. The celebration was attended by Regional Development Minister Alannah MacTiernan, Board members of Jamukurnu Yapalikurnu Aboriginal Corporation (JYAC), members of the Martu community and prospective families.

    Regional Development Minister Alannah MacTiernan cuts the ribbon to officially open Martuku Jijiku Maya on Friday 12 August, 2022.

    Martuku Jijiku Maya came to us through our colleagues at Engawa Architects; we developed their design and managed the project through to completion. The spaces are domestic in scale and feeling, while dashes of colour help to distinguish between buildings.

    Martuku Jijiku Maya

    Described by Minister MacTiernan as a ‘game changer for kids growing up in Martu communities’, the hostel will provide young Martu people with access to quality education whilst remaining close to their families and Country. Students will be educated in Martu lore and the Australian curriculum – enabling them to walk successfully in both worlds.

    ‘The Martu Student Hostel will be a place for learning and for young people to become the Martu leaders of tomorrow.’ JYAC Chair Melvin Farmer

    It is always a privilege to be involved in projects that positively impact the lives of children living in First Nations communities. You can read the full case study on here .

  • A ‘conversation hour’ with Andrew Broffman and Dillon Kombumerri

    A ‘conversation hour’ with Andrew Broffman and Dillon Kombumerri

    TF.A’s Sydney-based Principal, Andrew Broffman , joined Dillon Kombumerri , Principal Architect at the Government Architect NSW, for a conversation about the Connecting with Country framework, which is currently being tested.

    The interview ends with this beautiful line: ‘Connecting with Country is a provocation, a guide, and a gift,’ and is worth reading by anyone working in the built environment… Go here .

  • Emma Williamson on ANZ Breathe

    Emma Williamson on ANZ Breathe

    TF.A Partner Emma Williamson is regularly invited to provide her thoughts on architectural projects around the country. Go here to read her review of Breathe ‘s radical re-thinking of the ANZ bank branch.

    Image: Tom Ross

    Breathe ANZ represents a significant change in the ways in which the bank operates and staff are used to working.

  • TF.A supports new First Nations work at the Blue Room Theatre

    TF.A supports new First Nations work at the Blue Room Theatre
    Read dirt, tea and attempted murder….

    Together with our friends at Block Branding , we are thrilled to announce our sponsorship of SAND, a new play by Zac James and Dureshawar Khan, to be presented at the Blue Room Theatre in November.

    1927 in the scorching deserts of Western Australia, Abdullah, an Afghan cameleer obsessed with tales of Camelot, meets Jarntu, a proud Yamatji man on a journey to save his daughter from a white man’s disease. Together they follow a trail of betrayal and murder that leads them to the tree of eternal knowledge, tasked to spread peace across the desert!

    The play is described as a ‘journey of culture, love, murder and the Blak history of Australia, brought to the stage with puppets and a kick*** soundtrack.’ We can’t wait to see it and are proud to again be able to support First Nations storytelling in WA.

    Book your tickets via the Blue Room website .

  • How climate change is turning remote Indigenous houses into dangerous hot boxes

    How climate change is turning remote Indigenous houses into dangerous hot boxes

    The Conversation have published an excellent article by Simon Quilty and Norman Frank Jupurrurla on climate change and the impact on remote Indigenous housing. In many ways it summarises the conversations we’ve been having in our practice in recent months. The video interview with Mr Jupurrurla tells us just about all we need to know about designing in remote communities: https://bit.ly/TheConversation_ClimateIndigenousHousing

    BOM Heat Map

    For too long architects have been pre-occupied with using passive design principles to mitigate the need for air-conditioning. Design in the north of Australia has often been done through a lens of ‘thermal moralism’ –  seeing the need for air-conditioning as a failure of good design. But as this article (and other research we’ve contributed to [ see here ]) describes, living without air-conditioning is becoming increasingly difficult and this will only worsen as temperatures rise across the north.