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Haworth Tompkins crowned AJ100 Practice of the Year 2020

Haworth Tompkins has won the prestigious AJ100 Practice of the Year 2020 title

The practice was chosen ahead of eight other practices on a shortlist including last year’s winner Grimshaw, the UK’s largest employer of architects Foster + Partners, and fellow previous RIBA Stirling Prize-winners, including AHMM and Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios.

Architype was given a highly commended in the category, with one of the judges saying the firm had earned itself a 'well-deserved seat among the first tier of UK practices’.

Sponsored again by Schlüter-Systems, the award is based on business and quality of design output and takes into account both key business data from the main AJ100 research and findings from the employee satisfaction survey.

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The winner of the much-coveted prize was formally announced on the penultimate day of the virtual, week-long, free-to-watch AJ100 Festival, which concludes later today (18 September).

Earlier in the week Haworth Tompkins was also named AJ100 New Member of the Year – awarded to a practice that is new to the league table of the UK's largest practices or has returned to the rankings for the first time in five years or more – for its business success and the quality of its work.

Placed joint 59th in the AJ100 table with 43 UK architects, the practice was the highest of seven new entrants to the AJ100.

The judges for the AJ100 Practice of the Year 2020 award were: Marion Baeli, partner at PDP London;  John McElgun, partner at RSHP; Naila Yousuf, partner at Wright & Wright; and Will Hurst, managing editor at The Architects’ Journal.

Photos fish island6

Neptune Wharf at Fish Island by Haworth Tompkins [phase 2]

Why Haworth Tompkins was named AJ100 Practice of the year - Will Hurst

The AJ100 judges were bowled over by the achievements of Haworth Tompkins in a competitive field of nominees. The Stirling Prize-winning practice itself began its presentation by describing 2019 as the ‘most significant year’ of its 30-year history and it quickly became clear this was no exaggeration.

As well as achieving steady growth in profit and turnover (architecture fees totalled £7 million in 2019), Haworth Tompkins diversified into new sectors, such as retirement living and industrial buildings and gained 16 significant new clients over the course of the year.

It also completed a string of significant projects, including a major retrofit for Kingston University, the Fish Island project for Peabody, and The Den theatre auditorium in Manchester.

Co-founder Steve Tompkins was named the most influential person in British theatre by The Stage magazine and the practice won 19 awards, including the most RIBA National Awards for any architect that year. It underlined its forward-thinking attitude by investing 12 per cent of its turnover in R&D.

Haworth Tompkins also found time to spearhead the globally influential Architects Declare movement, putting its money where its mouth is by placing social and climate justice at the heart of its purpose as a company. It did this by transforming itself into an Employee Ownership Trust, signing up to the RIBA 2030 Challenge and upping its game on things such as in-house embodied carbon assessments and post-occupancy evaluation and focusing further on retrofitting.

When Covid-19 hit, the studio helped the hard-hit world of theatre by offering its services to a number of theatre organisations pro bono.

‘Haworth Tompkins is setting the standard for architectural practice in today’s world,’ one judge said. ‘They are challenging themselves to improve on every front and succeeding, working incredibly hard to promote architecture and create diversity within the profession and their own leadership team. While universally applying new, higher sustainability standards on all projects, they also share vast amounts of knowledge through open-source publications.’

Other judges admired the practice’s ‘truly democratic studio environment’ as well as its commitment to environmental sustainability. One remarked: ‘They have gone through a series of deep reflections, which have engaged the whole studio. They have redefined their leadership structure by rebalancing age, gender and ethnicity among the group and laying out a clear path to succession. That is so rare.’

In 2020, Haworth Tompkins has set the bar for AJ100 Practice of the Year very high indeed.

The AJ100 Practice of the Year shortlist

  • (Winner) Haworth Tompkins
  • (Highly commended) Architype
  • AHMM
  • BDP
  • Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios
  • Foster + Partners
  • Grimshaw
  • Levitt Bernstein
  • Perkins and Will

The award is sponsored by

 

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