Genealogy

A+W NZ Awards Jury 2023

03 Mar 2023
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AW Awards 2023 Jury
(L-R) Justine Clark, Sarah Treadwell, Carinnya Feaunati, and Craig Moller

A+W NZ Dulux Awards 2023 Jury

A+W NZ is please to announce the jury panel for the 2023 A+W NZ Dulux Awards. The jury have the hard task of deliberating on your nominations and choosing 5 finalists, and then a winner, for each of the three categories.

Justine Clark (International Juror)

Justine Clark is a co-founder and director of Parlour: gender, equity, architecture. She leads the organisation’s event, advocacy and funding programs, and established the Parlour website, which she now edits with Susie Ashworth. Justine consults to built-environment organisations, institutions and practices on policy, strategy publications, events and public engagement. Justine was awarded co-recipient of the 2014 A+W NZ Dulux Munro Diversity Award with Gill Matthewson for Parlour and has supported and promoted equality and diversity in architecture throughout her career.

Justine is also an architectural editor, writer, researcher, advisor and advocate. She is active in public discussions of architecture; she has convened many events, curated exhibitions and sat on national and international juries. From 2000–2011 Justine worked on Architecture Australia, and was editor of the journal for seven years. Her work has won awards for architecture in the media and her broader contribution to the profession has been recognized with the 2015 Marion Mahony Prize and the 2019 President’s Award. Justine is an honorary Principal Fellow at the University of Melbourne.

Her writing appears in both the scholarly and professional press, and she has worked on topics including gender equity and architecture, architectural criticism, architectural drawing and postwar modernism.

Born and educated in Aotearoa New Zealand, Justine now lives in Melbourne. She is co-author, with Dr Paul Walker, of the book Looking for the Local: Architecture and the New Zealand Modern (2000)

Craig Moller

Craig Moller is a Director at Moller Architects. With over 25 years experience in practice, his work varies in scale from the very small to the very large, and embraces both the private and public.

Craig has a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Auckland and a Master of Architecture from Yale University and teaches studio part time at the University of Auckland’s School of Architecture and Planning.

He has contributed to the profession of architecture in a number of ways with involvement on various design juries including the NZIA awards program, review panels for schools of architecture, and delivering the graduate development program on behalf of the institute. He is an assessor for the New Zealand Registered Architects Board and has been involved in the local community through his participation as a trustee on local school boards.

Craig has been a long time supporter of A+W NZ and Moller Architects is the sole sponsor of A+W NZ Father’s Forum events. Craig is also a longstanding mentor at the A+W NZ Speed Mentoring events.

Craig considers education to be of fundamental importance. He draws in his spare time and rides a bike.

Dr. Sarah Treadwell

Dr. Sarah Treadwell has worked as an architect and academic and currently practices as a painter and writer. She trained at Auckland University School of Architecture, gaining her registration as an Architect in 1978. She has practiced in New Zealand and overseas. In 1981, Sarah joined the Auckland University School of Architecture as the first woman on permanent staff.

Sarah’s research considers operations of grounding and foundation in contemporary and historic images of Aotearoa Oceania. She has published in various books and journals including Architectural Theory Review, Architectural Design, Space and Culture and Interstices. She has publications on gender, motels, interiority and on the work of contemporary artists including Barbara Tuck, Pauline Rhodes, Maureen Lander and Joanna Margaret Paul.

She received the 2013 NZIA President’s Award for services to architecture. She is a founding member of Architecture + Women and led the 2013 A+W symposium “Architecture in an Expanded Field”. Sarah was also the recipient of the Chrystall Excellence Award at the 2017 A+W•NZ Dulux awards.

Sarah’s visual work has been exhibited at Te Tuhi, Pakuranga, the Gus Fisher Gallery, University of Auckland and the Adam Art Gallery, Te Pātaka Toi, Wellington, New Zealand.

Carinnya Feaunati

Carinnya Feaunati is a New Zealand-born Samoan from the villages of Fasito’o-uta, Moata’a and Solosolo. She holds a tulafale-ali'i chief title of Ti'afelelea'i from her father's village, Fasito'o-uta. Growing up as a Samoan family in an undiversified region of New Zealand has impacted Carinnya’s advocacy for diversity and equality in design within her career.

Alongside her professional role as a senior associate within DesignGroup Stapleton Elliott, Carinnya is the Wellington Director on the Te Kāhui Whaihanga New Zealand Institute of Architects Board.

Carinnya’s experience covers sectors of Government, Community, Transport, and more recently Housing. This work has drawn on her strengths in the cultural design space and co-design with Tangata Whenua and Tangata Moana (Pacific) communities. Working with indigenous communities as clients and project partners has developed her strong advocacy for indigenous rights through care and respect in every stage of the design and construction process.

Continuing from her graduate dissertation, Carinnya is interested in exploring what architecture can do beyond the tangible build. This has created opportunities for her to be involved in Young Pacific Leaders Forums in Hawaii and Fiji as well as presenting research at COP21 in Paris.

Jury Convenor 2023

Selena Sager (A+W NZ Core team member)