The HDR-designed Western Sydney University Bankstown City Campus refreshes the vertical campus ecosystem and employs a hybrid “omniverse” model that will propel tertiary education architecture for years to come.
Occupied by the next generation of researchers, educators and students, the collaboration project between Western Sydney University and Walker Corporation brings up to 10,000 students, 1,000 staff and various industry partners together in a highly accessible, technology-rich learning and research environment that promotes universal collaboration and has transformed Western Sydney’s transformation into a thriving academic, innovation and research precinct.
The 18-storey campus, comprising nine levels for education and nine levels for industry collaborators, features 32 agnostic, scalable learning and research studios and 25 different teaching modes that have been conceived using modular and highly adaptable data-driven design processes.
A series of semi-enclosed cabins, cocoon-like reading spaces and reflection huts enable focused or collaborative work, while the staff cabanas deliver the benefits of an open plan office in a more personalised space that caters to their workplace needs. In addition, the experimental and computational labs provide students with work-integrated, collaborative partnership opportunities with industry and enterprise.
Located on the traditional land of the Dharug people, the design of the campus is also a reflection and celebration of the cultural heritage of the diverse student population; past, present and emerging. The existing Milperra campus’ Wall of Hands, a 5-metre brick wall of Indigenous graduates’ painted handprints over the past 40 years, has been reimagined and transformed into a digitally manipulated, steel artwork in collaboration with industrial artists.
The re-envisioned Wall of Hands, with space to continue this tradition, is located within the beating heart of the new campus’ Student Hub, and the original wall now exists as a recycled sculptural seating arrangement at the Badanami Centre for Indigenous Education’s Yarning Circle. The design and implementation of these features were guided by the Western Sydney University’s Indigenous Elders Advisory Committee to ensure they respectfully aligned with Indigenous cultural protocols. The Badanami Centre Yarning Circle is a significant space for Indigenous students and the community to connect with culture.
Hundreds of hand-woven light pendants throughout the building, facilitated and collated by Koskela in collaboration with Indigenous artists, further connects the campus to Country and community.
With a 6 Star Green Star rating, the sustainable campus design features an innovative thermal and rainwater system; Interface carpet made from ocean waste and recycled fishing nets; upholstery with recycled PET bottle fabrics; and Cradle-to-Cradle certified furniture and finishes.
We Design Solutions to the World's Greatest Challenges
With 11,000 employees across more than 250 locations, HDR is an award-winning integrated architecture, engineering, and planning firm with a history of challenging conventional practices and innovating across disciplines and geographies. Our interconnected, global knowledge exchange and borderless approach means that we have real-time access to research, data and technology that enables us to design solutions to the world’s greatest challenges.
Australia’s Architecture practice specialises in Health, Education, Science, Civic and Defence – and we design and deliver projects across a multitude of sectors at every scale, whether that be state-of-the-art laboratories, paradigm-shifting hospitals or healthy cities that act as antidotes to loneliness.
We have transformed hospitals from conventionally monolithic, closed systems; designed major infrastructure and precincts that impact context and communities; delivered highly adaptable education and laboratory research facilities that cultivate knowledge transfer; and built justice and defence facilities that intersect health, community and sustainability.
Key projects include Westmead Health Precinct Redevelopment; University of Sydney and Health Infrastructure NSW’s Sydney Biomedical Accelerator; CSIRO’s Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness; Chris O’Brien Lifehouse; Sunshine Coast University Hospital; University of Sydney’s Life, Earth & Environmental Sciences Building; Ed.Square Town Centre; Wollongong Central; and the Australian Defence Force Academy Redevelopment.
HDR is currently ranked No. 2 in the World Architecture Survey of Top 100 Global Architecture Practices, with six of our market sectors in the top 10.