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Environment Jun 19, 2026

St Kilda Pier Wins Top Victorian Architecture Award for Playful, Civic Design

The reimagined St Kilda pier has won multiple prestigious architecture awards, including the Victor…
Award-Winning Pier Balances Multiple User NeedsThe reimagined St Kilda pier has added more accolades to its burgeoning trophy cabinet, taking out some of the top gongs at the 2026 Australian Institute of Architects' Victorian awards. The $53m Victorian government project redesigned by Jackson Clements Burrows Architects, alongside Site Office Landscape Architecture and AW Maritime, took home the Victorian architecture medal on Friday, the award given to the most outstanding project of the year.It also won the Dimity Reed Melbourne prize and the Joseph Reed award for urban design. In March, it was the co-winner in the built outcomes category at the national Urban Design awards.Design Success in Balancing Competing InterestsThe project has weathered its share of controversy, including an aborted attempt by Parks Victoria to introduce pay-per-view access to the pier's resident penguin colony. On Friday, the Victorian jury panel praised the project for succeeding in balancing the competing demands of tourists, locals, fishers, ferries, marina users – and even the penguins."The project demonstrates how complex infrastructure can also become playful, social and deeply civic," the judges said.Community-Centric Design Takes Center StageBuilding on recent national and New South Wales awards, sustainability, resource efficiency and community-minded public design took centre stage at the Victorian awards. Jury chair, architect and academic Simon Knott said this year's standout projects were defined by their ability to transcend purely utilitarian briefs and prioritise human interaction."[They] feature beloved landmarks that have transcended their function as a piece of infrastructure," he said in a statement. "We saw multiple community projects that are delightful sites of human congregation where community-centric design has been at the forefront, taking prosaic pieces of existing architecture and making them a place of recreation."Transformation of Historic SitesEven sites with a "grim history" had been "utterly transformed with deft hands," Knott said. One example is the former Sunbury Lunatic Asylum, built in 1879, which has been transformed into the Sunbury community arts and cultural precinct. The project won a clutch of gongs, including the John George Knight award for heritage and the award for interior architecture.The judges praised the design by Architecture Associates with Openwork as an adaptive reuse of an institutional complex that had previously been defined by human containment. "A fine balance is required when a building designed to restrict and remove persons from society becomes one that celebrates community coming together," the judges' statement said.
#St Kilda pier #Victorian architecture awards #Jackson Clements Burrows Architects
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Entertainment May 11, 2026

The Silent Screens: Inside America’s Wave of Abandoned Movie Theatres

U.S. movie theatres are rapidly turning into empty shells as streaming, rising costs, and shifting …
Across the United States, once‑bustling picture palaces now sit dark, their marquees silent and interiors echoing with the ghosts of past crowds. This surge of closures reflects a convergence of streaming dominance, escalating operational costs, and changing leisure preferences, reshaping the cultural landscape of American towns and cities.The Rise and Fall of American Cinema HallsFrom the golden age of Hollywood to the multiplex boom of the 1990s, movie theatres have long been social hubs. In the past decade, however, the industry has faced unprecedented headwinds:2019: Peak annual box‑office revenue of $11.4 billion in the U.S.2020‑2022: COVID‑19 lockdowns shuttered 30% of venues, accelerating financial strain.2023‑2025: Major chains announced the closure of over 1,200 locations, many of them historic single‑screen theatres.Numbers Behind the Empty SeatsData from the National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) and real‑estate analysts illustrate the scale of the decline:Average attendance fell from 1,200 patrons per screen per week (2018) to 720 (2025), a 40% drop.Operating margins shrank from 12% to 4% as concession sales faltered.Vacancy rates for theatre‑specific real estate rose to 18% in 2025, up from 5% in 2019.What Closed Theatres Mean For CommunitiesThe loss of a cinema extends beyond entertainment:Economic ripple: Adjacent restaurants and retail stores report revenue declines of up to 15% after nearby theatres close.Cultural impact: Small towns lose a gathering place that historically hosted film festivals, community events, and educational screenings.Urban decay: Abandoned auditoriums become eyesores, contributing to lower property values and increased municipal maintenance costs.Future of the Physical Cinema ExperienceIndustry insiders suggest several pathways forward:Hybrid models: Integrating streaming lounges, live‑event broadcasting, and premium dining to diversify revenue.Adaptive reuse: Converting spaces into co‑working hubs, boutique gyms, or cultural centers while preserving architectural heritage.Policy incentives: Municipal tax breaks and historic preservation grants aimed at revitalizing landmark theatres.While the era of the traditional single‑screen cinema may be waning, the underlying demand for shared, immersive experiences could spark a new generation of reimagined venues.
#U.S. cinema closures #movie theatre real estate #urban decay
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