Philip Cox

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Philip Cox
Born
Philip Sutton Cox

New South Wales, Australia
Alma mater
OccupationArchitect
SpouseLouise Cox (sep. 1988)
PartnerJanet Hawley
Children2
PracticeCox Architecture (1963–2015)
Buildings
ProjectsSydney Olympic Park
Websitecoxarchitecture.com.au
File:Sydney Football Stadium 2.jpg
Sydney Football Stadium, Moore Park, Sydney
File:AusNatMM.JPG
Australian National Maritime Museum, Sydney
File:Craigieburn train station facade.jpg
Craigieburn railway station, Melbourne
File:Energex head office in Newstead, Brisbane.jpg
Energex headquarters located in Newstead, Brisbane
File:Double-Helix-Bridge.jpg
The Helix bridge at night, located in Marina Bay, Singapore
File:Kaohsiung Exhibition Center 20160109.jpg
Kaohsiung Exhibition Center located in Kaohsiung, Taiwan

Philip Sutton Cox AO FAHA is an Australian architect. He is the founding partner of Cox Architecture, one of the largest architectural practices in Australia. His work has won him multiple awards, the first being in 1963, one year after graduating from the University of Sydney.

Early years and education

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Philip Sutton Cox[citation needed] grew up in Killara on the North Shore in Sydney.[citation needed]

Cox attended Gordon Public School and then the Sydney Church of England Grammar School (Shore) in North Sydney. In his first years at Shore, art was taught by John Lipscombe, who had helped plan the new art block which had been praised by the architect Harry Seidler, who had lectured in the building in July 1952. Cox decided at quite an early age that he wanted to be an architect, though this was not clear until it was nearly time to leave school. He won a Commonwealth scholarship which was to pay his fees.[1]

Cox studied at the University of Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning between 1957 and 1962, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Architecture, then at the University of New South Wales between 1970 and 1975, where he was awarded a Doctorate of Science.[1]

Career

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Cox commenced his first practice with Ian McKay in 1962, and in 1967 he founded his own practice, Philip Cox and Associates.[2][3]

Shortly after he had graduated in 1980, Michael Rayner joined Philip Cox & Partners, working closely with Cox for the next ten years. Rayner was responsible for designing noted public buildings, including Australian National Maritime Museum and the Sydney Exhibition Centre (now demolished) in Darling Harbour.[4][5] In 1990 Rayner moved to Brisbane and established Cox Rayner Architects.[6]

The firm grew, becoming become Cox Architecture, with offices across Australia as well as in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.[7][8]

Involved in much of concept design for each project over 50 years, Cox stepped back from the business in 2015. Cox Architecture is responsible for projects throughout Australia and also in Southeast Asia, China, the Middle East, South Africa, and Europe.

Cox has been described as "epitomising the Sydney School of Architecture" in earlier projects.[9][10]

Awards and honours

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Cox has won many architectural awards, the first being in 1963, one year after graduating from the University of Sydney.[2]

Cox has received the Royal Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal in 1984, the Sir Zelman Cowen Award for Public Architecture in 1985. His was given Life Fellowship to the RAIA in 1987 and Honorary Fellowship of the American Institute of Architects in the same year.[citation needed]

In 1988 he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia in recognition of service to architecture.[11]

In 1993 he received the inaugural award for Sport and Architecture from the International Olympic Committee, and was elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in the same year.[12]

Other roles

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Cox has held a range of voluntary positions during his professional career including Vice President, Environment Board, RAIA, NSW Chapter; a Member, Historic Buildings Committee, Cancer Patients Assistance Society of NSW; Vice President, Cancer Patients Assistance Society of NSW; Vice Chairman, Architecture and Design Panel, Visual Arts Board, Australia Council; and Chairman of Education Board of the RAIA, Federal Chapter.[citation needed]

Major works

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Cox was the architect responsible for initially implementing the American Radburn design for public housing in New South Wales.

Cox and his firm have designed many iconic public buildings in Australia and throughout South East Asia, including a number of the buildings used for the 2000 Summer Olympics. The following list provides a summary of some of the major architectural design works of Cox and his firm, ordered from earliest to most recent, where Cox has either worked individually or as part of consortia:

Completed Project name Location Award Notes
1963 St Andrews Presbyterian Church Leppington, South-western Sydney, New South Wales John Sulman Medal (1965) (demolished)[3][13]
1965 C B Alexander Agricultural College Tocal, New South Wales
  • John Sulman Medal (1965);
  • Blacket Award (1965)
[2][3]
1969 Hawkins Residence 19 Norma Crescent, Cheltenham Wilkinson Award (1969) [9]
1977 Bruce Stadium Bruce, Australian Capital Territory [2][14]
1985 Ayers Rock Resort Yulara, Northern Territory Sir Zelman Cowen Award (1985) [2]
1987 Haileybury Chapel Springvale Road, Melbourne, Victoria
1988 Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre Darling Harbour, Sydney, New South Wales John Sulman Medal (1989) (demolished 2013)[15]
1988 Rod Laver Arena Flinders Park, Melbourne, Victoria (refurbished 1995)[14]
1991 Australian National Maritime Museum Darling Harbour, Sydney, New South Wales [16]
1988 Sydney Football Stadium Moore Park, Sydney, New South Wales (demolished 2019) [14]
1995 Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre South Bank, Brisbane, Queensland
1994 Sydney Olympic Park Aquatic Centre Sydney Olympic Park, Sydney, New South Wales
1997 Sydney Harbour Casino Darling Harbour, Sydney, New South Wales [14]
1999 Sydney SuperDome Sydney Olympic Park, Sydney, New South Wales
1999 Singapore Expo Changi, Singapore
2001 National Wine Centre of Australia North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia [17]
1996 Cairns Convention Centre Cairns, Queensland
2000 Princess Alexandra Hospital Redevelopment Woolloongabba, Brisbane, Queensland
2001 Goodwill Bridge South Bank, Brisbane, Queensland [18]
2002 Western Australian Maritime Museum Victoria Quay, Fremantle, Western Australia
2004 Brisbane Magistrates Court George Street, Brisbane, Queensland
2005 Challenger Institute of Technology, Marine Campus Fremantle, Western Australia
2006 Northern Stand, Melbourne Cricket Ground
2007 National Institute of Circus Arts Prahran, Melbourne, Victoria Award for Architectural Steel Design – Large Project, Australian Steel Institute VIC (2008)
2008 District Court of Western Australia Perth, Western Australia
Australian Film, Television and Radio School Moore Park, Sydney, New South Wales State Commendation for Commercial Architecture, AIA NSW (2010)
2010 Energex Headquarters Newstead, Brisbane, Queensland
The Helix Marina Bay, Singapore [19]
AAMI Park Sports & Entertainment Precinct, Melbourne, Victoria World's Most Iconic and Culturally Significant Stadium, World Stadium Congress (2012)
National Award for Public Architecture, AIA (2011)
State Architecture Medal, AIA VIC, (2011)
William Wardell Award for Public Architecture, AIA VIC (2011)
[14]
2012 One One One Eagle Street Brisbane, Queensland John Dalton Award for Building of the Year, AIA QLD (2013)
Corian Design Awards Winner (Project) (2015)
[20]
Queensland Performing Arts Centre Refurbishment South Bank, Brisbane, Queensland Interior Design Impact Award, AIDA (2016)
2013 Neuroscience Research Australia Randwick, Sydney, New South Wales The People's Choice Award, Randwick City Council (2013)
2014 Kaohsiung Exhibition Center Kaohsiung, Taiwan Excellence Award, Chinese Institute of Engineers (2014) [21]
2015 Carnarvon Police and Justice Complex Carnarvon, Western Australia
Newcastle Courthouse Newcastle, New South Wales
Indonesia Convention Exhibition BSD City, Tangerang, Indonesia [22]
2016 Anna Meares Velodrome Chandler, Brisbane, Queensland Venue for 2018 Commonwealth Games [23]
2018 Sir John Monash Centre Villers-Bretonneux, France [24]
Jakarta International Velodrome Jakarta, Indonesia
2020 National Maritime Museum of China Tianjin, China
Christchurch Justice and Emergency Services Precinct Christchurch, New Zealand
2021 Oman Across Ages Museum Muscat, Oman Special prize for an Exterior, Prix Versailles (2024) [25]

Personal life

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Cox is separated from wife Louise Cox AO, a fellow architect.[2] They married in Sydney in April 1972 and have two daughters.[1]

His longtime partner is the journalist Janet Hawley.[1]

References

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  17. ^ Australian Institute of Architects: "National Wine Centre" Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 15 November 2013
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Further reading

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  • Patrick Bingham-Hall (2020). Philip Cox: An Australian Architecture. Pesaro Publishing.
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  • Philip Cox unleashed - ABC radio
  • "A decade in review", by Philip Cox, Australian Design Review, 20 December 2010

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