Grieve Gillett Architects (GGA) has unveiled a imaginative and prescient reimagining the way forward for the Nationwide Aboriginal Cultural Institute, often called Tandanya, on Kaurna Nation in Adelaide.
Established in 1989, the establishment is the oldest First Nations-owned and -run multipurpose centre devoted to supporting Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander artwork and tradition. GGA designed the organisation’s authentic house, containing a 300-seat theatre, a retail house, a restaurant, galleries, workshops and an 850-square-metre exhibition corridor, which is housed inside a state-heritage-listed former energy station on the north-eastern fringe of the Adelaide CBD.
Tandanya was quickly closed in 2023 for constructing enchancment works. In July 2024, the South Australian authorities pledged $780,000 in direction of the work with the purpose of helping Tandanya to reopen in January 2025, noting that additional refurbishment works can be required, nevertheless the house stays closed.
GGA has unveiled early ideas that will see Tandanya revitalised with a sequence of versatile volumes, which, in response to the architect’s assertion, purpose “to deliver new life and cultural expression again into the house, following a interval of restricted activation.”
“Somewhat than proposing definitive outcomes, the design pondering considers how the present constructed material may very well be opened up, peeled again and re-oriented to panorama and Nation, permitting daylight, motion and tradition to circulate by and across the constructing,” the architect’s assertion notes.
A brand new courtyard on the centre of the house is designed to kind the guts of the precinct. GGA’s imaginative and prescient additionally features a reworked entrance from the adjoining japanese parklands and a semi-public “avenue” by the constructing. Collectively, these units assist a conceptual “stitching collectively [of] exterior and inside, foreground and backdrop” with panorama.
In accordance with Tandanya CEO Brenz Saunders, “The early ideas developed by Grieve Gillett Architects invite us to take a look at Tandanya not simply as a constructing, however as a dwelling cultural place grounded on Kaurna Nation. The visualisations reply to the numerous histories held by the constructing and respectfully incorporate Aboriginal tradition, neighborhood and Nation within the coronary heart of the idea.
“By way of considerate design, new landscaped connections, renewed efficiency areas and adaptable areas for making, gathering and storytelling, the idea opens up new potentialities for a way Tandanya can be utilized and shared.
“There’s a deep continuity on this work, given the architects’ function in shaping the location’s authentic transformation within the Nineteen Eighties, and that legacy helps information how we take into consideration its future,” Saunders mentioned.
GGA director Heather Wasley added, “The work acknowledges the location’s layered historical past and considers how Nation, tradition and neighborhood may once more play a extra seen function within the cultural lifetime of SA, with a design method that peels away layers, introduces landscaping, revitalised theatre areas, and versatile environments for working, gathering, exhibitions and occasions.
“Having originated the location’s transformation into an Aboriginal gallery and cultural centre within the Nineteen Eighties, this displays a longstanding connection to the place and is meant to tell future enthusiastic about the location,” Wasley famous.
GGA notes that at this stage, the proposal is exploratory solely and “doesn’t characterize a resolved or funded undertaking, however a thought of architectural reimagining meant to tell future pondering and contribute to ongoing conversations about how Tandanya would possibly proceed to evolve as a cultural and civic coronary heart on Kaurna Nation.”
Future improvement is topic to additional session, funding and improvement processes.













