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29th Corobrik Architectural Student of the Year Awards – social awareness, technical excellence, innovation & sustainability

Jaco Jonker receives his award as the regional finalist in the Corobrik Architectural Student of the Year competition from Musa Shangase, Corobrik Commercial & Marketing Director. His winning entry is entitled ‘The Plug-In Plantation.’ It is the reforestation and industrialization of the Nasrec Precinct through the implementation of a new timber mill industry.


Innovative thinking is the mark of a fine architect and it will take innovation to meet the architectural challenges of the future. Accompanying innovative thinking is the ever-advancing technology at architects’ disposal which, when fully utilised, can improve efficiency and further expand on individual designs. The many aspects which make up fine design include the principles of sustainability, appropriate built cost and attractive life cycle costs, technical skill and an appreciation of the social context of a structure in its community.

This is particularly evident in South Africa where these various aspects must be deftly incorporated into structures that meet government’s requirements for an ever-expanding urban landscape. However, it is creative flair that sets great architects above their peers as they strive to make exceptional and meaningful contributions to South Africa’s diverse and multi-cultural landscape.

This was evident in the run-up to the 29th Corobrik Architectural Student of the Year Awards, according to Dirk Meyer, managing director of Corobrik.

The competition has been held annually for the past 28 years to reward and advance excellence in the profession nationwide. It starts with regional rounds at eight major universities throughout South Africa. Then, the overall national winner from among the regional finalists is named and presented with a cheque for R50 000 at the 29th Architectural Student of the Year Awards function in Johannesburg in May 2016.

Musa Shangase, Corobrik Commercial & Marketing Director presented prizes to architectural students of the University of Johannesburg. The regional winner of R8 000 was Jaco Jonker, with Lance Ho Hip receiving the R6 500 second prize and three people sharing third place. They are Kirsty Fick, Julian Almond and Lucille Jacobs. Onthatile Magalemela received the prize of R4 500 for the best use of clay.

Jaco Jonker’s thesis is The Plug-In Plantation – Reforestation and industrialization of the Nasrec Precinct through the implementation of a new timber mill industry.

Jonker says his thesis project explores how we can reshape an important part of Johannesburg’s southern reef band, the Nasrec Precinct, to reduce direct and secondary impacts of soil erosion, heavy-metal toxins, and rampart water evaporation from increasingly frequent dust storms along the engineered mine dumps in the area. In order to do this, the project envisioned how existing “thirsty’ Eucalyptus tree groves in the area can be replaced with more sustainable varieties of Conifer tree plantations. In this process, industries based on harvesting this timber will be generated. The final architectural program imagines smaller “villages” along Nasrec road that specialize in the tending, growing, and harvesting of the new conifer tree plantations, accommodating specific tradespeople such as carpenters, tree fellers, and botanists. The project also explored how these “villages” can become educational training workshops for training people how to use cheap, recycled computer parts and program these mechanical components using the Arduino platform to maintain and upgrade the timber-harvesting mills.

Lance Ho Hip’s thesis is a weather station for Zanzibar. It is entitled Square Kilometre Array and is a data collection laboratory on Changuu Island.

Ho Hip says nature has a way of keeping us on our toes due to our constant inaccuracies in predicting what she will do next. Weather (in the sense of how we experience changes in climate) is physical and scientific: changes in atmospheric pressure, barometric pressure, water, convection, currents, etc., all play a role in how we experience and measure wind, water, and landscape, etc. Traditionally and historically, architecture has always viewed weather as the enemy, fighting to keep it out, or at bay. In the SKA: Weather Station, the opposite occurs – the building acts as its own data collector, sensing changes over differing scales and periods of time; through voids, cracks and scientific instruments – inviting weather in. The SKA: Weather Station is a new form of laboratory, a dialogue between two designers: myself and weather. One that works with rather than against weather and one that allows architecture to tell us a different kind of ecological story.

He chose this topic for his thesis is due to an obsession with capturing something that cannot be seen – an intangible presence and translating it into something that everyone can understand by using architectural thinking and principles to impart a tangible presence.

Onthatile Makgalemela incorporated clay bricks into his thesis entitled, Urban Catwalk which is a route along is a route along the beach promenade of Stone Town, Zanzibar. Along this route there are 3 pavilions. Material used includes lace, beads and more stereotypically feminine adornments, all which were secondary to the core material, clay bricks. The pavilions are constructed from bricks as it is very evident in the Zanzibari landscape and the existing brick patterns in Zanzibar inspired the direction of the project.

“The right choice of materials plays a key role in the architectural process, particularly when one considers the sustainability imperative”, said Musa Shangase.