Five projects undertaken by Canterbury-based Clague Architects have been shortlisted in the regional finals of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors [RICS] Social Impact Awards, Locate In Kent has reported.
The awards are held to recognise the positive contribution that buildings make to the communities where they are based and society as a whole.
The five projects are a diverse handful, involving a residential development, a private home, a public building and two historic landmarks.
The housing development, known as the Observatory, is a high-end development situated in an urban extension to Canterbury. Joining it on the residential category shortlist is the Clague design for The Levels, a five-bedroom home on the edge of Ashford which will be built into a slope and surrounded by woodland, taking inspiration from a mid-century American ranch.
Clague's drawing up of the Horam Crematorium, which it carried out for Wealden District Council, also made the shortlist. The design features a chapel, memorial gardens and a series of buildings within a 30-acre site in East Sussex.
The other Clague projects to be shortlisted were its restoration of the Grade II listed railway station in Battle, and improvements made to the National Trust site of the South Foreland Lighthouse, overlooking St. Margaret's Bay near Dover.
Clague successfully designed a new toilet block that was in keeping with the aesthetics of the Grade 1-listed Victorian building and did not detract from its visual impact. All work was carried out in close collaboration with the National Trust and the project has been shortlisted in two awards categories.
Tim Wolfe-Murray, a partner at Clague, said: “We are delighted to have five of our schemes shortlisted for the RICS Social Impact Awards.
"I’m very pleased with what we have created, and the project teams have much to be proud of."
The results of the awards are scheduled to be announced in June, but this could be delayed in the wake of the Covid-19 outbreak.