
Support • Advocacy • Community
A network of regional practitioners supporting one another to collectively strengthen the practice of architecture, advocate for a better built environment and connect members to communities, industry and decision makers.
Australian Sustainable Timbers forest - Worimi/Gringai Country - Image: Marcus Piper
Upcoming RAA Events
Creative Directors Bobbie Bayley, Owen Kelly and Tonielle Dempers set out to provide an experience that examines the complexity of the arid and remote places of Central Australia.
Over three days in Mparntwe (Alice Springs) and surrounds this gathering will invite delegates to gain a deeper understanding of local complexities.
“Code of Conduct Bingo” is an interactive workshop designed to engage architects with the NSW Architects Code of Professional Conduct and refresh everyone’s memory of the various provisions of the Code.
RAA Newscast
So Rhiannon, the administrative powerhouse behind RAA, has kindly asked if I could provide an event wrap of “Vital- Questions of Resilience” held recently in Dungog.. To be fair she did ask me prior to the event if I could and I kindly obliged…. Even knowing full well I wouldn’t be taking a single note as I didn’t need the CPD points. Which brings me to my first point - RAA events are worth far more than CPD; the points are just a nice bonus. Sure, CPD points can be obtained at will online, cost effectively and certificate of attendance obtained, but CPD should be more than just ticking off some learning outcomes to satisfy an annual commitment. And I think that is where CPD generally misses the mark, and events such as VITAL…..well are very much their namesake, vital. I didn’t need the points.. But I needed a connection, I needed inspiration and I needed to put the tools down for a couple of days and see some friends.
The Australian Standards are a set of documents that provide guidelines, specifications, and procedures to ensure products, services, and systems are safe, reliable, and consistent. They cover a vast range of industries, from building and construction to consumer goods, and are crucial for maintaining quality, promoting innovation, and protecting the public and environment.
While Australian Standards are currently funded through a user-pays model, making them freely accessible would have significant positive impacts, particularly for those related to public safety and essential industries. As RAA president, I have established a working group to support an advocacy approach to this issue which we feel is a barrier to positive outcomes in the built environments of regional communities in Australia.
Brent Dunn of Takt Studio for Architecture was part of the Founding Committee of the Regional Architecture Association (RAA) in 2021. Ideas about it had been circulating for a number of years prior to it starting, but it took the bushfires, floods, and pandemic to really show that it was time to reach out and connect regional architects.
WE ARE GOING TO PRINT!
The long-awaited RAA journal is finally happening. After months of discussions and planning, we’ve assembled an experienced publishing team to work with us in creating a yearly publication that showcases our live events, our members and the regions we work in. It's a big step, but with membership ticking over the 200 mark this year, there’s plenty to celebrate.
To find out more or get involved, read the fully story.
RAA is also pleased to welcome Lysaght as a Technical Member for the new financial year.
Entries are now open for the 2025 Lysaght Inspirations Design Awards—an annual celebration of creative, innovative, and impactful design using LYSAGHT® products.
Whether you're an experienced architect or a passionate student, this is your chance to showcase your work, gain national recognition, and win incredible prizes.
Top Prize: A trip to the World Architecture Festival in Miami
Entries close: 07 September 2025
RAA is pleased to welcome No.1 Roofing & Building Supplies as their newest Technical Member. No.1 Roofing& Building Supplies is keen to invite the RAA audience to join them for a complimentary CPD-certified session examining the 2025 updates to metal roofing and cladding in contemporary architectural design.
This will be presented by Marcio Da Silva, General Manager – Architectural Specifications, No.1 Roofing, and Jason Voglis, Architectural Sales Manager, Inspire Architectural.
WHEN: August 20, 2025 2PM
WHERE: Midnight Hotel, 1 Elouera St, Braddon ACT
VITAL left me with a renewed sense of belonging—to a network of like-minded professionals scattered across regional Australia, and to a profession that is accepting its broader responsibilities. The event challenged, inspired, and grounded me. Most importantly, it reminded me that resilience isn’t a static trait—it’s a commitment. A practice. Something we cultivate not just in buildings, but in relationships, ecosystems, and ideas. I'm grateful to the RAA and the event organisers for curating a program that embraced depth, diversity, and dialogue. It won’t be my last.
Katharina Hendel of Takt Studio for Architecture joined the Regional Architecture Association (RAA) committee at its inception in 2021, driven by a passion for advocacy, networking, and improving support for regional practitioners. Having relocated to a regional area herself in 2010 to establish an architectural practice together with her partner and co-director, Katharina recognised a significant gap in the resources and professional networks available to architects outside metropolitan centres. She currently holds the role of vice president.
WE WANT TO KNOW WHAT YOU THINK!
The ACA, in collaboration with the Regional Architecture Association (RAA), is conducting a critical survey to gather your feedback on two key regulatory frameworks affecting architectural practice in NSW: the Design & Building Practitioners (DBP) Act and the NSW Planning Portal. Please share your insights to help improve these systems!
Trent Woods is a founding director of Officer Woods, an architectural practice based in Fremantle, Western Australia. ‘Integrity’ is a common phrase colleagues use to describe Officer Woods. This sensibility is evident in projects in both urban and remote contexts, where they ask not just what architecture should be—but what else it can do. Their work in places like Newman and South Hedland demonstrates a commitment to quality design regardless of locality, climate and the complexities of culture.
8 Hele Cres is a thriving creative hub that Mparntwe delegates will visit as part of the Thursday afternoon program. Once a light industrial block, it has been transformed into an oasis for native flora and fauna by Mike Gillam and Maria Giacon.
Located along the bustling Todd Mall in central Mparntwe (Alice Springs), John Flynn Memorial Church sits where movement meets pause in the main pedestrian spine —where cultures connect.
Rooted in the community, the church will be the main venue for the Mparntwe Conference. It’s just next door to Adelaide House, another arid-zone design landmark, which will also host morning tea.
Kwartatuma, nestled within the West MacDonnell Ranges, is a place of raw desert beauty and deep ecological and cultural significance. Its soaring red walls, permanent waterhole (up to 14 metres deep), and rare, relict plant and animal species—including the once-lost Central Rock Rat—make it a true desert sanctuary.
Michael Klerck and Vanessa Napaltjari Davis have worked in partnership for many years through the Tangentyere Council Research Division, focusing on the critical intersections of housing, health, energy insecurity, and essential services in Mparntwe’s Town Camps.
Their deep expertise and trusted relationships within the Mparntwe community stem from decades of respectful, on-the-ground work—producing influential research the right way, that drives change and challenges systems.
Kumalie Riley Kngwarraye will officially Welcome delegates to Mparntwe. She will lead a session on local language and cultural protocols, sharing the importance of cultural awareness and respectful engagement with Country.
Kumalie has helped shape the conference ideas with her deep knowledge of Mparntwe’s history and culture. In a place where knowledge is often lost through transience, Kumalie's lived experience offers delegates a rare and vital perspective of Mparntwe's past, present and future, and working respectfully on Country.
Troy Casey is a proud Kamilaroi man and the Managing Director of Blaklash, a collective of Meanjin-based First Nations designers, curators and placemakers who offer a unique approach to working in the built environment - one that is Country-led and embedded in people, places and traditional knowledge.
Guided by community and grounded in story, their practice is shaped by reciprocity — translating First Nations perspectives into public spaces, art, master plans, and cultural design.
On the western edge of Mparntwe (Alice Springs), overlooking the molten red hills of Tjoritja (West MacDonnell Ranges) sits a house designed to work with the extreme climate of the central desert. The Desert House by DunnHillam Architects was built in 2015 as a commitment from the clients to Mparntwe. An investment in place through design.
Marcus Piper is a founding committee member of RAA, on board from the moment he received a call from then-president Cameron Anderson back in 2021. As a non-architect, his initial motivations for joining the committee were the people, the professional and social engagement in the regions and his belief that design plays an important role in the way our regions are evolving.
After close to five years of investing his time in the establishment and growth of RAA, Marcus is stepping down from the committee at the end of June 2025. On behalf of members, committee and the broader RAA network, we would like to thank him for his immense contribution to the organisation on all levels and wish him well for the future.
Arriving as a new RAA member, after my flight from Melbourne (via Saigon earlier that day) at Assembly The People’s Pub provided an initially daunting experience. Finding a quiet spot for the bag that had been home for the previous 10 days, I was almost immediately offered a cold drink and so the introductions and conversations began.
Renee McGuinn of LocalArchitect South Coast has been a RAA committee member since December 2023. Her initial motivation for joining came from her history of involvement in industry committees which she always found to be fantastic platforms for creating meaningful change. Renee says “they also offer a strong sense of community—something that can be hard to come by when you're practicing in regional areas. At the time, there was limited support for regional architects from existing organisations, and the RAA felt like a promising step toward filling that gap. I wanted to be part of building that support network from the ground up.”
For the final fringe event on the VITAL program, join James Felton-Taylor and Anabel Kater of Australian Sustainable Timbers for an insightful discussion on regenerative forestry and the silvicultural practices that support sustainable timber production.
Integrated Design Group director Andrew Elia joined the RAA committee at the 2023 AGM. Having been involved with the Country Division of the AIA since 2008, Andrew has really appreciated the RAA’s continued position giving a voice to regional architects, but also as an industry body, advocating for good outcomes for local communities.
Sue Dugdale and Miriam Wallace work in arguably one of Australia's toughest places to run an architecture practice, Mparntwe (Alice Springs). An extreme climate, transient work force and political tug-of-wars are some of the forces they work with and against. After 30 years of they still finds more questions than answers: what is the best climatic response for buildings in Australia’s vast interior? Why do living environments for many Aboriginal people continue to fall short? What is the best way to give form to the cultural complexity and environment of the region?
Delegates will start their MPARNTWE experience with a sunrise tour at the Olive Pink Botanic Gardens on Thursday 11th September, day one of the event. HERE, the landscape is the starting point. It’s a constant, shaping presence - defining how people live, move, and connect with the place. IT is a starting point for the MPARNTWE experience.
Warren Haasnoot will present high-street renewal through the lens of a commercial site in Dungog. This freestanding corner shop on Dungog’s high street received DA approval for extension and modification that proposes different modes of occupation, through a singular intervention (a new rear building) and a light-handed upgrade of the original building.
Caroline Pidcock will present ideas around VITAL resilience in architecture through a conceptual and cultural lens. Adjunct Professor of Practice at University of Newcastle and recipient of the 2024 Emerald Green Award, Caroline believes that design is our human superpower and that architects hold a unique responsibility (and opportunity) to reimagine the spaces where we live, work, and play in a regenerative, low-carbon future. Our built environments can either deepen the crisis or become powerful resilient solutions.
The Royal Hotel Dungog will host us for the Thursday Community Dinner (buy your own) followed by Maitland musician Dave Wells taking the stage.
Emily Knight of Sydney based Emily Knight Design has been a RAA committee member since November 2023, having been inspired to give back to an organisation that made her feel very welcome and whose events she particularly enjoyed attending. It follows that Emily’s biggest achievement in her time on the committee has been her contribution to the planning and smooth running of in person events.
Sarah Aldridge of Byron Bay practice SPACEstudio is currently in the role of secretary and has been on the committee since the RAA’s inception in 2021. As a committed regionalist, Sarah strongly believed there was a desperate need for a representative body for regional practitioners, recognising that advocacy on behalf of regional practitioners at governance level is essential to the sustainability of regional practice.
Dr Sarah Breen Lovett will present the FAST SLOW project, for personal and planetary wellbeing. The University of Newcastle, and Industry Partner Mudtec are working on this innovative housing solution, bringing together a FAST prefabricated structural system to facilitate SLOW DIY earth building. This project utilises the efficiency of prefabrication, with low carbon reused site materials to create high performing eco-homes that are more affordable and more mindfully created. The first FAST SLOW house is now in planning for the Narara Ecovillage on the NSW Central Coast.
Technical Members
Our Technical Members are experts in their fields working alongside regional practice; they are key supporters of architecture in the regions. A directory of these members is available here.
Acknowledgement of Country
The Regional Architecture Association acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.
Understanding our ancient landscape as a fine-grained regional tapestry informs the need for nuanced regional thinking for the future.
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RAA Founding Members
RAA Founding Members are those who wished to make a significant contribution to the foundation of RAA in its inaugural year.
Sarah Aldridge - Space Studio • Cameron Anderson - Cameron Anderson Architects • Joshua Andren - Integrated Design Group • Lindy Atkin - Bark Design • John Baker - BKA Architecture • David Brown - Wentworth Brown • Nicholas Brown - Studio Two Architecture • Scott Carpenter - Create Architecture • Matthew Cooper - Aspect Architecture • James Davidson - JDA Co • Michael Davies - Michael Davies Architecture • John de Manincor - Possible Studio • Shane Denman - Shane Denman Architects • Brent Dunn - Takt | Studio for Architecture • Andrew Elia - Integrated Design Group • Jason Elsley - Derive Architecture and Design • Dominic Finlay-Jones - DFJ Architects • Philip Follent - Philip Follent Architects • Andrew Forsyth - Aphora • Oliver Gee - g2 Architects • Ann Gee - g2 Architects • Ray Gillis - Gillis Architects • Harley Graham - Harley Graham Architects • Stephen Guthrie - Bark Architects • Mahalath Halperin - Mahalath Halperin Architects + HELP • Tricia Helyar - Tricia Helyar Architect • Katharina Hendel - Takt | Studio for Architecture • Tammi Hill - 6 sides architecture • Wesley Hindmarch - LocalArchitect South Coast • Brad Hooper - Brad Hooper Architect • Chris Jenkins - Chris Jenkins Design • Stephen Johansson - Facility Design Group • Tim Lee - Tim Lee Architects • Alan Logan - Logan Architecture • Tony McBurney - Integrated Design Group • Carolyn McFarland - Austin McFarland Architects • Russell McFarland - Austin McFarland Architects • Renee McGuinn - MAAD Studio • Malcolm McNeil - McNeil Architects • Aaron Nicholls - Regional Design Service • Marcus Piper - Marcus Piper Studio • Alan Rudge - Alan Rudge Architects • Martin Schmidt - Raum Studio • Ian Sercombe - Ian Sercombe Architect • Lisa Strudwick - Zugai Strudwick Architects • Colin Strydom - Colin Strydom Design+Architecture • David Sutherland - Source Architects • Sally Sutherland - Source Architects • Noel Thomson - Noel Thomson Architecture • Simon Thorne - Integrated Design Group • Alejandro Urena Sandoval - Alex Urena Design Studio • Christian Webb - Facility Design Group • Rebecca Whan - Patternshop* • Andrew Wilson - Design Studio 22 • Adriaan Winton - IDA Design Group • Virginia Wong See - architecture @ altitude • Dominique Wong-See - Student Foundation Member • Melanie Zugai - Zugai Strudwick Architects
RAA Founding TECHNICAL Members
RAA Founding Technical Members are a group of companies who wished to make a significant contribution to the foundation of RAA and technical support of its members in its inaugural year.
Adbri Masonry • Arcpanel • AWS • Evoheat • Nolan Group • Safetyline Jalousie • Stormtech • Weathertex