Jackson Clements Burrows Architects (JCB) is a design-focused studio working across residential, commercial, institutional, interior and urban design projects. The studio is based in Melbourne and was established by Tim Jackson, Jon Clements and Graham Burrows in 1998 forming a collaborative team with a shared commitment to the exploration of innovative architecture driven by environmentally sustainable design principles.
The studio’s projects have been widely recognized with coverage in leading Australian and international design journals.
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2023 National Award for Commercial Architecture
JCB Studio by Jackson Clements Burrows
JCB-designed student housing tower approved
The City of Melbourne’s Future Melbourne Committee has unanimously voted in favour of a proposed student accommodation tower designed by Jackson Clements Burrows.
Melbourne timber tower receives green finance backing
A hybrid timber tower in the Melbourne suburb of Collingwood has received a $70 million investment from the Clean Energy Finance Corporation.
Driven by flexibility: Divided House
In the design of a home for his family in an inner Melbourne suburb, Jon Clements uses considered spatial moves as well as more overt references to acknowledge the site’s past occupants and histories.
Heritage kiosk inspires new pier at popular Melbourne beach
Jackson Clements Burrows Architects and Site Office Landscape Architects have produced designs for a $50 million pier at St Kilda beach that will include a community pavilion and a Little Penguin viewing boardwalk.
2020 National Architecture Awards: National Commendation for Residential Architecture – Multiple Housing
Gillies Hall by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects.
Gillies Hall on the Mornington Peninsula
This Passive House-certified design rethinks the traditional student housing typology and creates a hilltop “village.”
2020 Australian Interior Design Awards: Sustainability Advancement
The jury agreed this project is an outstanding example of how the power of design can be used to express sustainability.
‘Forest of towers’ approved for Melbourne’s Docklands
Victoria’s planning minister has approved a $1.2 billion five-tower development in Docklands, which was unanimously rejected by the City of Melbourne and described as a “visually dominant wall.”
Monash University Halls of Residence
Four new halls of residence, by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects, McBride Charles Ryan, and Hayball and Richard Middleton Architects, are shaping the urban environment of the Clayton campus and fostering a sense of community.