Kerstin Thompson is an Australian architect, born in Melbourne in 1965. She is the principal of Kerstin Thompson Architects (KTA), a Melbourne-based architecture, landscape and urban design practice with projects in Australia and New Zealand. She is also Professor of Design at the School of Architecture at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, and adjunct professor at RMIT University and Monash University.

Career

Kerstin Thompson's career as an architect commenced with studies at Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) where she earned her Bachelor of Architecture degree in 1989. During her undergraduate studies she worked in the Milan-based studio of Matteo Thun[1] (1987) and the Melbourne-based practice of Robinson Chen (1988–89). In 1990 she worked for Perrott Lyon Mathieson Pty Ltd as an Assistant Site Architect for the Telecom Corporate Tower project. From 1990 to 1994 she was a lecturer in architectural design at RMIT. In 1998, Kerstin completed a master's degree in Architecture at RMIT.

In the decade from 2000 to 2010, Kerstin's projects broadened to include civic projects. The first of many emergency /community services buildings received recognition including local, national, and international shortlisting's. During this decade, Kerstin's design thinking was the subject of exhibitions, and a significant body of critique, ‘New Trends of Architecture in Europe and Asia-Pacific’,[2]‘Living in the Modern: Australian Architecture’.[3] The National Portrait Gallery's inclusion of KTA in “Thinking about Architecture and Portraiture” by Dr Christopher Chapman, in 2009.[4]

In 2005, Kerstin was appointed as the Creative Director for the RAIA National Conference [5] and one of the Creative Directors for Australia's 2008 Venice Biennale exhibition, Abundant Australia.[6] Her contribution to education was recognised by her appointment as an adjunct professor in architecture at RMIT in 2009. Thompson was appointed as a member of the Federal Government's BEIIC Advisory Committee in 2008.

In years from 2010 to 2020, Kerstin's academic contribution was recognised by appointments to Monash University as an adjunct professor in architecture (2012-) and to Victoria University Wellington as Professor of Design in Architecture (2010–18). Her contribution to the profession was recognised by appointment as a Life Fellow by the Australian Institute of Architects (2017-) Kerstin's design leadership was also recognised by her appointment as a panel member of the Victorian Design Review Panel (VDRP) with the Office of the Victorian Government Architect (2012-). Kerstin has also curated multiple exhibitions, including ’Architectural Urbanism: Melbourne/Seoul’,[7] “Diverse Practice” Exhibition and Symposium at Victoria University of Wellington [8] and ‘Repair: Australian Pavilion’ at the Venice Biennale 2018.[9]

As part of her ongoing engagement in the industry, Kerstin continues to write and deliberate on ethics and design, Assemble Papers ‘Beach house vernacular & Boyd: Kerstin Thompson’ [10] and more recently; Spatial Continuums: Linear, Radial, and Clustered Architectures in Practice’ [11] ‘The Burden of Landscape’, Architect Victoria, ‘Feeling Climate’ Architecture Australia and ‘Museum as Place-maker’.[12] Her commitment also extends to various speaking opportunities including Keynote Speaker, Heritage Address Open House Melbourne,[13] Symposium Contributor, RMIT ‘Edmond and Corrigan + Peter Corrigan: INFLUENCE’ [14] and Robin Boyd Foundation: Ethics of Architecture.[15]

Notable projects

Publications

  • Architecture and Angels: Shifting Grounds’, Exedra – Architecture, Art & Design, vol. 5, no. 2, 1994.
  • ‘Architecture and Angels’, Kerb Journal, RMIT University, Melbourne, 1996.
  • ‘Detail in the Work of Guilford Bell: A Problem of Evidence’, in L van Schaik (ed.), Bell: The Life and Work of Guilford Bell, Architect 1912–1992, Bookman Press, Melbourne, 1999.
  • ‘Interstitial Practices’, in L van Schaik (ed.), Interstitial Modernism, RMIT University Press, Melbourne, 2000.
  • ‘Gradient Architectures’, Architecture Australia, vol. 90, no. 3, May/June 2001.‘House-street-relationship-house-street-district-city (smithsons)’, in G London & S Anderson (eds), Take 7: Housing Australia: How Architects Can Make a Difference, The Royal Australian Institute of Architects, Canberra, 2008.
  • ‘Affinities’, in R Boyd, Living in Australia, revised edition, Thames & Hudson, Melbourne, 2013.
  • ‘More Than’, Architectural Review Asia Pacific, Issue 131, 2013.
  • ‘10 Lessons’, Parlour, 14 March 2014, <archiparlour.org/10-lessons/2014>.
  • ‘Beyoncé or Barak: Is It a Real Choice?’ ArchitectureAU, 1 September 2015,<architectureau.com/articles/beyonce-or- barak-is-it-a-real-choice>.
  • ‘Design Negotiations’, in D Bates, V Mitsogianni & D Ramírez-Lovering (eds), Studio Futures: Changing Trajectories in Architectural Education, Uro Publications, Melbourne, 2015.
  • ‘Single House – No Future?’ Architecture Australia, vol. 105, no. 1, Jan/Feb 2016.
  • ‘The Burden of Landscape’, Architect Victoria, Summer 2017.
  • ‘Spatial Continuums: Linear, Radial, and Clustered Architectures in Practice’, in P Sparke, P Brown, P Lara-Betancourt, G Lee & M Taylor (eds), Flow: Interior, Landscape and Architecture in the Era of Liquid Modernity, Bloomsbury Visual Arts, London, 2018.
  • ‘Dignity with a Modesty of Means’, in V Mitsogianni & P Macasaet (eds), Influence: Edmond & Corrigan + Peter Corrigan, Uro Publications, Melbourne, 2019.
  • ‘Feeling Climate’, Architect Victoria, Autumn 2020. ‘Museum as Place-maker’, in G Lindsay (ed.), Contemporary Museum Architecture and Design: Theory and Practice of Place, Routledge, New York, 2020.
  • ‘Small Public: Relativities’, Architecture Australia, vol. 109, no. 4, Jul/Aug 2020.

References

  1. Matteo Thun
  2. New Trends of Architecture in Europe and Asia-Pacific. Lille, Cork, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Melbourne. 2004-2005.
  3. Living in the Modern: Australian Architecture, Berlin Germany, DAZ (Deutsches Architektur Zentrum), featuring 25 Australian Architects. 2007
  4. Thinking about Architecture and Portraiture
  5. Creative Director of ‘Exchange’, 2005 AIA National Conference. Melbourne.
  6. "RAIA - Abundant Australia, Venice Biennale". The Loop: Frost Group. Retrieved 6 November 2014
  7. Architectural Urbanism: Melbourne/Seoul, curated by Melanie Dodd. 2012/2013.
  8. “Diverse Practice” Exhibition and Symposium at Victoria University of Wellington.
  9. Repair: Australian Pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2018
  10. https://assemblepapers.com.au/2014/02/27/beach-vernacular-boyd-kerstin-thompson/
  11. Spatial Continuums: Linear, Radial, and Clustered
  12. ‘Museum as Place-maker’, in G Lindsay (ed.), Contemporary Museum Architecture and Design: Theory and Practice of Place, Routledge, New York, 2020.
  13. 2019 Keynote Speaker, Heritage Address Open House Melbourne
  14. 2017Symposium Contributor, RMIT Edmond and Corrigan + Peter Corrigan: INFLUENCE
  15. 2016 Keynote Speaker, Robin Boyd Foundation: Ethics of Architecture
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