Kooi-Ying Mah
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Kooi-Ying Mah (born 1950) is an Australian architect, designer, and principal Kooi-Ying Architects.[1] She worked in London, Kuala Lumpur, Melbourne and Sydney, before starting her own practice in Sydney.
Early life and education[]
Kooi-Ying Mah was born in Taiping, Malaysia, and migrated to Australia in 1970.[2] She studied at the University of Melbourne, and received her Bachelor of Architecture in 1977.
Career and selected work[]
After studying and graduating in Melbourne, Mah began her professional working life at Denton Corker Marshall. In 1980 she moved to Sydney, where she joined . She has also worked in large commercial architectural practices in London and Kuala Lumpur.[3] In 1993 she established M + N Architects with Berlin Ng.[4] Kooi-Ying Architects was founded in 2004, with a focus on residential work.
Civic Hotel
This project located in the central southern end of Sydney CBD, involved the recycling and adaptive re-use of the 1930s dilapidated four levels corner heritage pub and construction of a new 17-storey hotel addition. The Civic Hotel was originally designed by R. A. Provost in 1940–41 in the art deco style. The site for the hotel consists of the old Civic Hotel and two narrow adjacent shop houses. The hotel includes 166 rooms and reception areas over 17 storeys.[5] The refurbished Civic Hotel won the Royal Australia Institute of Architects 2000 NSW Chapter Commendation Award for Conservation and Adaptive Re-Use.[6][7]
Recent work
The Scarp house, completed in 2007, has gained recognition through the Historic Houses Trust of New South Wales 2008 Sydney Open Focus Tours and was featured in Monument Magazine[8] and the 2010 book 21st Century Houses Down Under.[9] The house is recognised for its inventive structure and its sensitivity to the surrounding environment. Located on a steep incline in the Castlecrag foreshore, it unfolds around a large rock escarpment, embracing part of the rock as a feature to the house.[2]
Pro bono work
One of Mah's more recent projects is Dana Hall, a meditation and giving hall for devotees to a Buddhist monastery in North East Thailand. This was a pro bono project that involved her being actively engaged with the Buddhist monks and their ascetic lifestyle in the rainforest environment.[2]
References[]
- ^ "Profile". www.kooiying.com.
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(help) - ^ a b c "News: Volunteer Profile". Retrieved 18 December 2011.
- ^ "Volunteer Profile: Kooiying Mah". www.architecture.org.au. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
- ^ "Australia Offshore". ArchitectureAU. Retrieved 8 March 2020.
- ^ "Civic Hotel". www.kooiying.com.
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: Missing or empty|url=
(help) - ^ "Archive:RAIA State Awards". Retrieved 7 March 2015.
- ^ "RAIA State Awards". Architecture Australia (89). July 2000.
- ^ Drew, Phillip (February 2009). "House of Calm". Monument (89): 55.
- ^ Cleary, Mark (2010). 21st Century Houses Downunder. Images Publishing. p. 262. ISBN 978-1864704204.
External links[]
- 1950 births
- Living people
- Australian women architects
- 20th-century Australian architects
- 21st-century Australian architects
- University of Melbourne alumni
- Architects from Melbourne
- 20th-century Australian women
- 21st-century Australian women