Shortlist announced: 2024 Australian Institute of Architects’ Dulux Study Tour

Thirty emerging architects have been selected to proceed to the second stage of judging in the Australian Institute of Architects 2024 Dulux Study Tour.

The annual coveted prize offers five Institute members a 10-day world tour of some of the best international architectural sites and practices.

Entrants are judged on their contributions to architectural practice, education, design excellence and community involvement. The five winners will help curate their tour and nominate their prefered cities, sites and practices.

On the shortlist are:

Rory Betts-McCrae – Welsh and Major Architects
Andre Bonnice – Simulaa
Flynn Carr – Susan Dugdale and Associates
Emma Chrisp – Hayball
Zoe Diacolabrianos – Wowowa
Vlad Doudakliev – Fieldwork
Simona Falvo – Trower Falvo Architects
Georgia Forbes-Smith – Scale Architecture
Daisy Freeburn – Troppo Architects
Silas Gibson – SOS Architects
Kate Harding – Dieppe Design
Imogen Hebart – Walter Brooke and Associates
Jamileh Jahangiri – Studio Orsi
Liehan Janse van Rensburg – Architectus Conrad Gargett
Oskar Kazmanli-Liffen – Edition Office
Owen Kelly – Susan Dugdale and Associates
Stephanie Kitingan – Placement Studio
Rachel Licht – Licht Architecture
Ivan (Zhen) Ling – Ko and Co Architecture
Adam Markowitz – Markowitz Design
Maiya McKenna – Rossi Architects
Joseph Pappalardo – M3 Architecture and Parc Office
Julie Pham – Stonehouse and Irons Architecture
Genevieve Quinn – Deicke Richards
Ilana Razbash – Lyons
Leo Showell – Kerstin Thompson Architects
Mike Sneyd – EKD Architects
Sascha Solar-March – Saha
Tamarind Taylor – Architectus Conrad Gargett
John Yu – Rad Studio

Related topics

More industry news

See all
Hunter Street East over-station development proposed by Sydney Metro. Two towers above Sydney's Hunter Street station get the green light

Two proposals for a 58-storey building above Hunter Street Station East and a 51-storey building above Hunter Street Station West have received planning approval.

The built environment sector produces 40 percent of Australia's solid waste. Built environment sector ‘primed to take on circularity,’ report finds

The federal government has released an interim report from the Circular Economy Ministerial Advisory Group, which identified the built environment as a key sector in …

Most read

Latest on site

LATEST PRODUCTS