NEWS POSTS

Think Brick Awards 2025 Winners Announcement!
8/09/2025
20 years of the Think Brick Awards
Since 2005, the Think Brick Awards have celebrated the creative possibilities of clay brick, concrete masonry, pavers, and roof tiles in contemporary Australian design. What began as a concept-driven design competition has evolved into Australia’s richest awards program for built projects, reflecting the ongoing relevance and innovation of masonry materials in architecture and landscape design.
The theme for this year’s awards, Continuity, marks two decades of recognising exceptional design — and the enduring role of bricks, blocks and roof tiles in shaping beautiful, resilient, and sustainable places. From the very first conceptual entries to the first built project entered in 2008 — The Mornington Centre by Lyons — to now over 3,000 entries later, the awards have continued to evolve. Today, they include six categories: the Horbury Hunt Commercial and Residential Awards, the Kevin Borland Masonry Award, the Bruce Mackenzie Landscape Award, the Robin Dods Roof Tile Award, and the New Entrant Award.
Continuity – Think Brick Awards 2025
The winners of the 2025 Think Brick Awards have been announced, celebrating architects that demonstrated continuity through innovative and thoughtful use of bricks, blocks, pavers, and roof tiles in their projects.
The awards Jury included Michael Heenan (AJC Architects), Laura McConaghy (Studio Bright), Elizabeth Carpenter (fjcstudio), Tone Wheeler (Environa Studio) and Cathy Inglis AM (Think Brick Australia).
The winners were unveiled across six categories at the prestigious Gala Lunch, held at the Art Gallery of NSW on Friday, 5th September 2025. From 146 entries, 6 winners, 5 high commendations and 25 finalists were celebrated amongst designers and masonry and roof tile manufacturers.
Head Juror – Michael Heenan (AJC Architects)
No other material tells a story of continuity quite like the brick. It has endured not by standing still, but by evolving — adapting to new technologies, new aesthetics, and new demands, while retaining its essence of strength, simplicity, and craft.
During the judging process, it was remarkable to witness the quality of submissions across the board. The innovation was undeniable, but more than that, we sensed a shift — a quiet evolution in how projects are conceived and delivered. Year by year, we’re seeing concrete masonry, bricks, pavers, and roof tiles being used with greater intent and sophistication. This isn’t just a credit to architects; it reflects a growing collaboration with the manufacturing industry, which is increasingly investing in research, testing, and design support.
The awarded projects represent more than just design excellence — they signal an enduring commitment to building with integrity, care and creativity. They remind us that continuity is not about repetition, but about relevance — the ability of a material and a profession to stay meaningful through change.
As we celebrate 20 years of the Think Brick Awards, we also look forward — with confidence — to the continued presence of brick, block, paver and tile in shaping the next generation of Australian architecture.
Horbury Hunt Commercial Award
Winner
Plant Futures Facility - The University of Queensland– m3architecture – PGH Bricks & Pavers, Austral Bricks, Bowral Bricks and Leviat
Functionally, the Plant Futures Facility is a container for plants and their research conditions, accommodating an array of highly technical, controlled environments.
The concept embraces the project’s typology by defining the building as a “walled garden”. The wall is then given context with nine different bricks, each one similar to a brick found in the array of neighbouring buildings. The brick detailing and forms also reference the local context. The brickwork steps around in large-scale pixels, the pattern reflecting the cross section of Queensland’s geological profile.
This is a highly technical, flexible, research facility that in contextual terms is of its place.
“This building takes a really complex technical brief into a harsh environment in this section of the university and creates a really special moment for the campus and the students.” ~ Awards Jury 2025
High Commendations
Tan Tat – SJB – Robertson’s Building Products
Yarrila Place– BVN – Austral Bricks
Crows Nest Sydney Metro Station – Woods Baggot – Namoi Valley Bricks, PGH Bricks & Pavers, Robertson’s Building Products
Finalists
Carnegie Memorial Swimming Pool – CO.OPStudio – Bowral Bricks
Hale Memorial Hall and Stow Precinct – KHA – Bowral Bricks
Redfern Street – Aileen Sage, Jean Rice Architect, Djinjama and De Noni Boyd – LOHAS
Shiel Street North Melbourne Community Housing Project – Clare Cousins Architects – PGH Bricks & Pavers
Horbury Hunt Residential Award
Winner
Hotham – Austin Maynard Architects – Krause Bricks
Embedded within lush foliage on an established suburban street, Hotham is the considered retention and extension of an Inter-War brick bungalow that seeks to slow-down and consider Canberra’s past, present and future built environment.
At the core of Hotham is the original brick cottage, with two pavilion ‘wings’ extending either side, connected by glass links. Though the addition forms match the cottage in height and roof pitch, the external materiality is deliberately different to the original red brick, intended to pose the question of age and chronology, to celebrate old and new rather than blend or disguise.
“Hotham is an exciting project because it shows how brick can be used with restraint and a quiet humbleness for a family home.” ~ Awards Jury 2025
High Commendation
Clique – WOWOWA Architecture – Bowral Bricks
Finalists
Woollahra Village House – Tobias Partners – Robertson’s Building Products
Fairholme House – Marc & Co – Nubrik
Brise House – Taylor Renolds Architects – Robertson’s Building Products
The Don – Mihaly Slocombe – Bowral Bricks
Kevin Borland Masonry Award
Winner
Bondi Breeze – Panov-Scott – Austral Masonry
Bondi Breeze is a house reduction that establishes a great breeze-block screened garden, outside and enclosed, to rewild a suburban lot. The built form adopts this contextual pattern and is an aggregation of the humble grey concrete block, laid in two ways.
The simplicity of form and material belies a clever construction methodology and structural solution. The construction methodology allows uninterrupted repetition and the magical effect in which the mass of the block aggregates to become a filigree screen. A compressive member somehow made tensile, as beautiful inside as it is outside.
“Every experience of the light in this home is part of the breeze. It’s almost as if the house isn’t there — as if it’s the air, the landscape, the smell of Bondi Beach, the salt coming in. It feels like it’s all part of that.”~ Awards Jury 2025
Finalists
Monument – K2LD Architects – GB Masonry
Cross Street – Aphora Architects – GB Masonry
Boulevard House – Albert Mo Architects – GB Masonry
Templeton Primary School – Kosloff Architecture – GB Masonry
Project Rosshire – Ali Kaddour Architects – Adbri Masonry
Kooyong House – A for Architecture – National Masonry
Bruce Mackenzie Landscape Award
Winner
Kalgoorlie City Centre Redevelopment – ASPECT Studios – Urbanstone
The Kal City Centre Redevelopment is an ambitious revitalisation of Kalgoorlie’s civic heart through a collection of site and city specific narratives that reveal the unique qualities of Kalgoorlie–Boulder.
The design thoughtfully integrates four coloured pavers in custom patterns, and Western Australian granite in sculptural elements, seating, and water features, grounding the space in its local context. The use of masonry pavers has played an important role in unifying the precinct, bringing a civic character to the square, addressing technical and servicing issues and providing a canvas to tell the design narratives of the project.
“Every regional town in Australia needs an intervention like this, and this landscape response has really looked at what Kalgoorlie is as a town. The paving picks up from the striations of the long shops along the main road, and it then breaks up into a fragmented pattern in the more open area. They have had a lot of fun with the paving in this project.” ~ Awards Jury 2025
Finalists
The Boot factory – ASPECT Studios, Archer Office and Matt Devine & Co – Bowral Bricks
Denman Village Park Amenities – Carter Williamson Architects – Bowral Bricks
Prospect Road Regeneration – WAX Design – Littlehampton Bricks & Pavers, Adbri Masonry
Saltbush on Bellarine – Phillip Withers – Natural Brick Co
Robin Dods Roof Tiles Award
Winner
Clubbe Hall – First Class Slate Roofing and TKD Architects– Bristile Roofing
Clubbe Hall sits in the grounds of Frensham School in Mittagong and was built in 1963 to celebrate the school’s 50th birthday.
The Roofing team was approached in 2023 by the building’s architect to enquire about a suitable terracotta tile that could be used to replace the old roof tiles. A suitable profile was put forward as an option to match existing Spanish Mission style tiles.
The building holds great historical value in the community so getting it right was very important. The end result proves that the architects made the right choice.
“Sometimes, simplicity rules. Two beautifully organised pitched roofs come down, and then you add the texture and colour of those roof tiles. So elegant, so simple — there are big lessons in that.” ~ Awards Jury 2025
High Commendation
Green House – R Architecture – Bristile Roofing
Finalists
Ku-ring-gai Town Hall – Michael Peel Roofing – Bristile Roofing
Mahogany House – R Architecture and Victoria Roofing – Other
Riverside Girls School – APT Roofing – Other
New Entrant Award
Winner
Truganina Community Centre – JASMAX – Daniel Robertson
Situated in Melbourne’s western growth front, the Truganina Community provides this fledgling community with informal access to books and programs, responding to this community’s expressed desire for cultural literacy, competency and inclusivity.
Seeking balance between the physical and cultural context of this site, the building adopts the material language of the surrounding housing estate while embracing a formal language and material formatting that looks beyond the singular representation of the estate.
The bricklayer’s 'hand', necessary to find a median line between the temporal edges of the rugged bricks, reveals a new, less familiar expression of this material—one that holds beauty in the navigation of imperfection.
“Truganina Community Centre demonstrates something truly important in its brief and something remarkably sophisticated in its material composition. The design responds to a strong community-focused brief, delivering meaningful spaces for the people it serves, while the brickwork is executed in a way that feels warm, inviting, soft, and welcoming.” ~ Awards Jury 2025
Finalists
Easy Street Commercial – DFJ Architects – Krause Bricks and Bowral Bricks
Solis – Integrated Design Group – Natural Brick Co
Dalgety Lane – Chamberlain Architects – Krause Bricks
Marrickville House – Chris Rogers Architect – Bowral Bricks

Notice of AGM - Concrete Masonry Association of Australia
13/08/2025
Please click here to view the Annual General Meeting (AGM) notice for 2025 for the Concrete Masonry Association of Australia (CMAA).

CMAA-Annual General Meeting 2024 Minutes
13/08/2025
Please click here to view the 2024 Concrete Masonry Association of Australia (CMAA) minutes for the 2024 Annual General Meeting (AGM.

Think Brick Awards 2024 - Winners Revealed!
8/09/2024
The winners of the 2024 Think Brick Awards have been announced, celebrating architects that demonstrated resilience through innovative and thoughtful use of bricks, blocks, pavers, and roof tiles in their projects.
The awards Jury included Bob Nation AM LFRAIA (Nation Architects), Tamara Donnellan (ASPECT Studios), Adrian Iredale (Iredale Pederson Hook Architects), Jessica Spresser (SPRESSER) and Cathy Inglis AM (Think Brick Australia).
The winners were unveiled across six categories at the prestigious Gala Lunch held at the Art Gallery of NSW on Friday, 6th September 2024. From over 200 entries, 6 winners, 11 high commendations and 28 finalists were celebrated amongst designers and masonry and roof tile manufacturers.
Horbury Hunt Commercial Award
Winner
Melbourne Holocaust Museum – Kerstin Thompson Architects – PGH Bricks & Pavers
Light was a central driver for the Melbourne Holocaust Museum. Unlike the bunker-like appearance often associated with Holocaust Museums, MHM establishes visual and physical connections to activities, daylight, and the community. The façade is variegated through a combination of clay and solid glass bricks, calibrated according to light sensitivity and the nature of internal activities and spaces it encloses.
The integration of the original heritage building reinforces MHM's role as a cultural repository, treating it as a significant artifact. The visually most open parts, formed by glass bricks in a hit and miss formation, are adjacent to the elevated memorial garden and central circulation spine that encompasses the stairs and breakout areas designed to provide some relief for visitors affected by the difficult museum content.
“The Melbourne Holocaust Museum is an extraordinary project. The use of brick in a single plane, the interface with the heritage building and the detailing, combined with the textural and painterly qualities that are evoked from a single material are extraordinary. It was just a joy for us to look at. Both the external appearance and internal experience of the light and the way brick has been used as a light shaping material is extraordinary.” ~ Awards Jury
High Commendations
Berninneit Cultural and Community Centre – Jackson Clements Burrows Architects – Nubrik
The Round – BKK Architects & Kerstin Thompson Architects – PGH Bricks & Pavers
Finalists
Boronggook Drysdale Library – antarctica : architects & Architecture Associates – Krause Bricks
Darlington Public School – fjcstudio – Bowral Bricks
East Sydney Collection – MHN Design Union – PGH Bricks & Pavers
Goodhope – Those Architects – Krause Bricks
Iglu Melbourne Central – Bates Smart – Austral Bricks
Victoria House – MJA Studio & FINESPUN Architecture with PLACE Lab and Palassis Architects – Midland Brick
Horbury Hunt Residential Award
Winner
Burnt Earth Beach House – Wardle – Krause Bricks
Burnt Earth Beach House replaces a dilapidated beach shack at the end of its operational life in the coastal town of Anglesea in Victoria. It’s a multi-generational home that utilizes terracotta in two primary forms - through the exterior brickwork, internally to line walls and floors and joinery elements.
The colour and tonality of the cliff edges in Anglesea are expressed in the use of an invented brick. The extensive and evolving brick making process involved extrusion and hand tearing the brick surface prior to cutting which exposes a raw, rough-hewn texture. A series of glazing experiments applied to raw clay before single firing are revealed in different sections of the building.
“The colouration of the bricks was developed to reference the local environment of the Anglesea area. The cliff colours, but also the flora and fauna have come under consideration and shaped the colouration that has been used on the glazes. Burnt Earth Beach House is an amazing kind of experimentation in expressing brickwork in a totally fresh and individual way.” ~ Awards Jury 2024
High Commendation
Naples Street House – Edition Office – Bowral Bricks
Finalists
Glen Iris House – Pandolfini Architects
High Street – Lineburg Wang – Bowral Bricks
Mygunyah by the Circus – Matt Gibson Architecture + Design – Daniel Robertson & Austral Bricks
Peak House – Emma Tulloch Architects – LOHAS
Sandringham House – Tonkin Zulaikha Greer – Krause Bricks
Kevin Borland Masonry Award
Winner
The Warehouses – J. AR Office – National Masonry
Located in a Currumbin industrial estate, The Warehouses reformulates the light industrial building, guided by strong civic ambitions with aspirations to persist for generations.
The resulting brief was driven by the client's desire to produce a socially conscious precinct that ultimately asked, 'How can a 'commercial building adapt to the evolving community's needs? Pragmatically, the site required a robust, low maintenance, thermally comfortable and flood-resilient structure that can persevere through future adverse weather events.
Character and expression are achieved through geometry, not decoration. The extensive use of blockwork offers the fortitude and resilience required for The Warehouses to persist for generations of the Currumbin community.
"The Warehouses creates a true social setting and creates this through the use of an off-the-shelf product, the grey concrete block, but then develops it with a sense of sensitivity and softness, creating the places to meet and congregate for both occupants and guests.” ~ Awards Jury 2024
High Commendation
Casa Piva – B.E Architecture – National Masonry
Finalists
Brunswick West House – NARDEL Architects – Adbri Masonry
Eyrie House – Matt Williams Architects – GB Masonry
Merricks House – Aktis Architects – Adbri Masonry
Latimer House – Tobias Partners – GB Masonry
Bruce Mackenzie Landscape Award
Winner
Boronggook Drysdale Library – antarctica : architects & Architecture Associates – Krause Bricks
The Boronggook Drysdale Library is a new public building and community hub on the Bellarine Peninsula town High Street. The façades use three types of bricks produced or sourced in Victoria. The outstanding bricklayers laid the bricks internally and externally on several curved radii and in mixed patterns. The reds were laid in a broken Flemish bond. They set a complex parapet which contained the planted green roof, as well as corbelled columns and slips over concrete beams.
Brick gradations run vertically from aqueous to earthy to foliage, acknowledging Boronggook as a natural gathering watering hole. Glazed bricks merge into the roof foliage and hold rosette patterns sampled from the gothic revival church nearby.
“The library seamlessly integrates brickwork with the surrounding landscape, using a graphic approach that is deeply informed by the understanding of the local environment and its immediate context. Overtime this landscape will continue to mature and evolve, and in many ways, consume the architecture that will eventually merge as one.” ~ Awards Jury 2024
High Commendations
Naples Street House – Edition Office – Bowral Bricks
The Nursery on Brunswick – Clare Cousins Architects
Finalists
Armadale House – Taylor Knights - LOHAS
Aru House – Curious Practice – Namoi Valley Bricks
Casa Piva – B.E Architecture – National Masonry
Robin Dods Roof Tiles Award
Winner
John XXIII College – TRCB – Bristile Roofing
The completion of Stage 1 of the campus master plan at John XXIII College marks significant developments to the institution's infrastructure. Noteworthy enhancements include a reimagined entrance, strategically relocated buildings, and state-of-the-art administrative facilities designed to foster staff development and well-being.
A consistently applied material palette of blockwork and terracotta tiled roofs, consistently detailed, affords the campus a valued uniformity. The architects reimagined the use of these materials for the new and refurbished buildings of this project, to provide a new fine-grain to the College’s infrastructure.
“John XXIII College demonstrates the diversity of the one product in the many different ways it can be used. It also looks at the way in which tiles can become precise elements where the material can become not only a roof but also a wall.” ~ Awards Jury 2024
High Commendation
Bellevue Hill House – Tribe Studio Architects - Bristile Roofing
Finalists
Beatrice Road House – Springate Homes – Midland Brick Roof Tiles (formerly Harmony Roof Tiles)
Point Piper – Giles Tribe – Bristile Roofing
Spanish Retreat – Gembrook Roofing – Bristile Roofing
New Entrant Award
Winner
Darlington Public School – fjcstudio – Bowral Bricks
The design concepts for Darlington encapsulate the school's core values, celebrating its industrial context and fostering strong connections to the Aboriginal Community.
The use of brick facades and sawtooth roofs responds to the industrial character of Everleigh and Darlington. Bricks in a standard stretcher bond are used for ground level structures and boundary walls that respond to the predominant urban form by holding the street edge, providing protection and controlled views into the school campus through designated openings.
The project effectively uses brick in a careful dialogue with the other building materials to provide solidarity, enclosure, performance and a long lasting, low maintenance facade.
“The use of refined brick detailing in a public school context is fascinating. It is also being used in a really interesting way across the diagram of the building. The three parts are all quite different, but all speak to the external elements or celebrating elements of the diagram of how the school use and functions come together.” ~ Awards Jury 2024
High Commendations
Boronggook Drysdale Library – antarctica : architects & Architecture Associates – Krause Bricks
Glen Iris House – Pandolfini Architects
Tarakan Street Social Housing – NH Architecture, Bird de la Coeur Architects, Openwork & Tract
The Warehouses – J. AR Office – National Masonry
Finalists
Brunswick West House – NARDEL Architects – Adbri Masonry
Eyrie House – Matt Williams Architects – GB Masonry
Gable Park – Weaver+Co Architects – Krause Bricks
Harriet’s House – So. Architecture – Austral Bricks
Latimer House – Tobias Partners – GB Masonry
Liverpool Civic Tower – fjcstudio – Bowral Bricks
Peak House – Emma Tulloch Architects – LOHAS

CMAA - Annual General Meeting 2023 Minutes
12/08/2024
Please click here to view the 2023 Concrete Masonry Association of Australia (CMAA) minutes for the 2023 Annual General Meeting (AGM)

Notice of AGM - Concrete Masonry Association of Australia
12/08/2024
Please click here to view the Annual General Meeting (AGM) notice for 2024 for the Concrete Masonry Association of Australia (CMAA).