Pringle Richards Sharratt

British architectural firm

  • John Pringle
  • Penny Richards
  • Ian Sharratt
FoundedApril 1996;
28 years ago
 (1996-04)LocationLondon, United KingdomWebsiteprsarchitects.com

Pringle Richards Sharratt is an architectural firm that was formed in 1996 by John Pringle, Penny Richards and Ian Sharratt. Based in London, the practice has worked on public buildings, art galleries, museums, libraries, archives, university and transport buildings. Before forming PRS, John Pringle and Ian Sharratt were partners at Michael Hopkins and Partners and Penny Richards had her own practice that specialised in museum and gallery projects[clarification needed][citation needed].

Notable projects

  • Winter Garden & Millennium Galleries, Sheffield (2002)[1][2][3]
  • Gallery Oldham, Oldham (2002)[4][5][6]
  • Oldham Library & Lifelong Learning Centre (2005)
  • Herbert Art Gallery & Museum, Coventry (2008) [7]
  • Shrewsbury School Music School (2001)[8]
  • Pitt Rivers Museum Research Centre and Balfour Library, Oxford University (2006)[9]
  • Radcliffe Science Library, Oxford University (2007)
  • Victoria and Albert Museum Grand Entrance,[10] Glass Gallery, Contemporary Glass Gallery,[11] Textile Reference Collection, Temporary Exhibition Galleries (1996–2006)
  • Real Tennis Court, Middlesex University (1999)
  • Carlisle Lane Flats (2005)[12][13]
  • Hull History Centre[14]
  • West Ham Bus Garage for Transport for London (2009)
  • Fit out of the Palestra Building and installation of UK's largest internal Fuel Cell [(Transport For London)] (2006–10)
  • Black Cultural Archives, Brixton, London (2014)

Awards

2001
  • RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) Award, Shrewsbury School Music School & Auditorium
  • British Construction Industry Awards (Shortlisting), Shrewsbury School Music School & Auditorium and Millennium Galleries, Sheffield
  • Wood Award (Shortlisting), Shrewsbury School Music School & Auditorium
  • Shrewsbury & Atcham Design & Heritage Award, Shrewsbury School Music School & Auditorium
2002
  • Civic Trust Award, Sheffield Millennium Galleries
  • RIBA (Royal Institute of British Architects) Award, Gallery Oldham
  • Concrete Society Award, Sheffield Millennium Galleries
  • Kensington & Chelsea Environment Award Scheme, Victoria & Albert Museum
  • Brick Award Commendation, Shrewsbury School Music School & Auditorium
  • Manchester Civic Society Design Award, Gallery Oldham
2003
2004
  • Civic Trust Awards, Gallery Oldham & Sheffield Winter Garden
  • ECSN European Award for Excellence in Concrete, Sheffield Millennium Galleries
  • European Federation of Interior Landscaping Groups Gold Award, Winter Garden
2005
  • Wood Award Commendation, Carlisle Lane Flats
2007
  • Prime Minister's Better Public Building Award (Shortlisting), Oldham Library & Lifelong Learning Centre
  • Academy of Urbanism, The Great Place Award, Winter Garden
  • British Construction Industry Awards (Shortlisting), Oldham Library & Lifelong Learning Centre
  • Landscape Institute Awards - President's Award, Sheffield Winter Garden

Notes

  1. ^ Jonathon Glacney (2003). "Underneath the Arches". The Guardian.
  2. ^ Jay Merrick (2003). "How Steel City Became Well Heeled". The Independent.[dead link]
  3. ^ Giles Worsley (2003). "Giving Heart To The City". The Telegraph.[dead link]
  4. ^ Giles Worsley, "Confidence in a brighter world"[dead link], Daily Telegraph, 21 February 2002.
  5. ^ Hugh Pearman, "Art and science in Sheffield" Archived 27 April 2001 at the Wayback Machine, Sunday Times, 8 April 2001.
  6. ^ CABE Case Study Gallery Oldham, Oldham
  7. ^ Jay Merrick, "Coventry's architectural revival", The Independent, 7 January 2009.
  8. ^ CABE Case Study Shrewsbury School Auditorium and Music School
  9. ^ Pitt Rivers Museum website New extension for the Pitt Rivers Museum
  10. ^ V&A website, Grand Entrance Archived 29 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Cromwell Road.
  11. ^ V&A website, Märit Rausing Gallery Archived 29 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Financial Times, 7 January 2006
  13. ^ Evening Standard, 11 January 2006.
  14. ^ Hull History Centre website, Hull History Centre
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