Patrick Kelly, a New Zealand architect working in Naarm Melbourne, Australia, has been awarded the 2024 F. Gordon Wilson Fellowship for Public Housing to undertake research into Bluefields, an urban infill housing model, and how it might transform existing state-housing stock in Aotearoa.
Developed by Australian architectural academic Damian Madigan, Bluefields is a way to densify older, low-rise housing, where the dwellings typically occupy only 20-25 percent of the land. Kelly will research how additional one- and two-bedroomed homes can be added to existing state-owned sections in cities around the country. The additional dwellings will be designed according to the constraints of the site and placed around shared gardens and other communal facilities. The idea is to achieve a greater quantity of smaller homes for social housing, without subdividing land.
“Bluefield developments offer a way to modify and develop around existing infrastructure to better reflect the current needs of public housing in Aotearoa,” explains Kelly. “With some of the highest construction costs in the world and an increasing demand for public housing, there is an urgent need to rethink possible housing development strategies. This model of development could offer the opportunity to unlock Aotearoa’s public housing potential.
“Receiving this fellowship reinforces my belief in the opportunity that architecture can bring to community and will enable me to refine my ideas, conduct essential research, and develop practical strategies to implement these innovative solutions effectively,” says Kelly, who works at Breathe Architecture, a Naarm Melbourne studio with a specific focus on sustainable and affordable housing. “With the support of this fellowship, I am more empowered than ever to advocate for and advance the potential of public housing in our society.”
Julia Mandell, granddaughter of the renowned architect F. Gordon Wilson, says her family is “very pleased with this year’s winning fellow. Patrick’s proposal offers an actionable, pragmatic approach of incremental densification. His ideas are grounded in what is, for a young designer, an impressive depth of experience with the design and maintenance of New Zealand’s public housing stock. We’re confident that the results will be useful and thought-provoking.”
Created in memory of F. Gordon Wilson, the eponymous fellowship is designed to generate architectural research into Aotearoa’s unmet housing needs. The 2024 Fellowship jury members were Huia Reriti, perehitini president of Te Kāhui Whaihanga New Zealand Institute of Architects; Dr Kay Saville-Smith, HUD Chief Science Advisor for the Ministry of Housing and Urban Development and Research Director, Centre for Research, Evaluation and Social Assessment; Marko den Breems, CEO of Isthmus Group; Peter McPherson, Head of School, School of Architecture, Te Whare Wānanga o Wairaka Unitec; and Julia Mandell.
Kelly, who spent three years working on an extensive retrofit programme of Kāinga Ora houses at Jerram Tocker Barron Architects and led a project at architecture+ that examined how Medium Density Residential Standards could be used by community housing providers to densify existing sites, will embark on the fellowship early in 2025. His was one of three proposals shortlisted for this year’s fellowship.
The inaugural recipients of the F. Gordon Wilson Fellowship, Third Studio, recently completed their research into ways to increase climate change resilience in existing state housing in Te Awa Kairangi ki Tai Lower Hutt.