Publication Date: Feb 2016
RRP: $34.95
ISBN: 9781922235558
Format: Paperback
Size: 148mm x 210mm
Pages: 96
Category: Art, Design & Architecture

Monash Steps / Stawell Steps

Hiroshi Nakao, Nigel Bertram, Virginia Mannering, with Peter Bennetts (Photographer)


This book presents documentation, reflection and critical analysis of two award-winning projects Monash Steps and Stawell Steps. These linked projects were designed and built by Monash Architecture students under the leadership of Hiroshi Nakao and Nigel Bertram. The works were developed in close collaboration with the town of Stawell, through partnership with local brick maker Krause bricks and civil engineers at the Northern Grampians Shire council.

Monash Steps and the associated exhibition were installed at the Monash University Museum of Art in 2012, making a temporary occupiable space using dry-stacked bricks. Stawell Steps is a permanent installation on the banks of Cato Lake in the centre of Stawell. It acts as permanent flood-relief infrastructure for the town, and provides a new type of community space within the park.

The book includes specially commissioned photographic material of the works, significant historic buildings and landscapes in Stawell, and the Krause brickworks. Original drawings and conceptual material are combined with post-occupancy images and texts from a range of different viewpoints.


Hiroshi Nakao, Nigel Bertram, Virginia Mannering, with Peter Bennetts (Photographer)

Nigel Bertram is a Director of NMBW Architecture Studio in Melbourne and Practice Professor of Architecture at Monash University, where his current research projects address urban housing and infrastructure for water-sensitive cities. NMBW’s architectural work has been published and awarded across categories including urban design, housing, small public works, adaptive re-use of existing buildings and peripheral urban design strategies.

Hiroshi Nakao is Professor of Multidisciplinary Design Science at the Shonan Institute of Technology. He studied architecture at the Kyoto Institute of Technology and art at the Tsukuba University, and works across the border between art and architecture, with solo exhibitions in Tokyo, Oslo, London and Hamburg to his credit.