Neville Quarry
Neville Quarry AM was an Australian architect, architectural academic, critic and educator.
Early life
Neville Quarry was born in Coburg, Victoria in 1933. He commenced his architectural studies at the University of Melbourne and he graduated in 1956, undertaking his final year of study in New Zealand.Academic career
In 1971 Neville Quarry moved to Lae, Papua New Guinea as the first Head of the School of Architecture at the Papua New Guinea Institute of Technology. He then moved back to Australia in 1976 to take up a position at the NSW Institute of Technology. He became Professor of Architecture and Dean of the Faculty of Design Architecture and Building at UTS. He retired from academia in 1994.Achievements
- In 1991 Quarry was the first Australian Commissioner to the Venice Architecture Biennale with an exhibition titled Architetti Australiani, that featured the work of architects from South East Queensland including Gabriel Poole, Lindsay and Kerry Clare and Rex Addison.
- In 1994 Neville Quarry was awarded the Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal the highest achievement for an individual architect, as a recognition to his contribution to architecture, education and design. He was the first architecture academic to be awarded the medal.
- In 1995 he was made a Member of the Order of Australia.
- In 1996 he chaired the jury for the international architectural design competition for Federation Square in Melbourne. The process selected the winner, Lab Architecture Studio and delivered a successful outcome for the site and the city.
Death