THE Edinburgh Futures Institute has been honoured with the Special Prize for an Interior at the Prix Versailles’ 2024 World Titles.
An internationally-recognised series of awards presented by the United Nations agency for Education, Sciences, and Culture (UNESCO), the Prix Versailles celebrates the best contemporary architecture and design projects across the world.
The Edinburgh Futures Institute was announced as a winner at the awards ceremony at UNESCO’s Paris headquarters on December 2. Occupying a pivotal position in Edinburgh’s Old Town, the building was built in 1879 and housed Edinburgh’s main hospital – once being described by The Illustrated London News as the ‘best planned hospital’ in Britain.
The 20,000 sqm development is now home to the Edinburgh Futures Institute, one of the largest institutes for interdisciplinary learning, research and innovation in Europe. The Institute brings together students, researchers, partners and civic society to focus on the responsible use of data to address global challenges including ethics of artificial intelligence, social inequality and climate change.
The building officially reopened in June 2024, following a seven-year, multi-million-pound restoration. Working with a project design team led by Atkins Realis, including architects Bennetts Associates and construction partner Balfour Beatty, the University of Edinburgh carried out the extensive project to sensitively repair, redevelop and reimagine the way the building could be used.
The design team has made use of the former hospital’s large, airy Nightingale wards and corridors with flexible teaching areas and workspaces. The restoration work also preserved much of the building’s historical architecture, which is now united with more than 6,000 sqm of modern construction.
Ensuring it lives up to the inscription above the building’s entrance: ‘Patet Omnibus’, meaning ‘Open to All’, the building is open to the public with breakout spaces, a café, an outdoor square, and a new 400-seater purpose-built space to host public events.
Since opening, the institute has already hosted a range of high-profile events, including the annual Edinburgh International Book Festival in August.
Professor Sir Peter Mathieson, vice chancellor and principal of the University of Edinburgh, said, “From the beginning of this hugely ambitious project to transform the near-dilapidated Victorian hospital, our mission was to create an inspiring space that enables collaboration and interdisciplinary thinking to flourish.
“The painstaking work to ensure that we achieved this for our students, staff and wider community – while preserving the beauty of the historic building for the city – has surpassed all expectations, and it is incredibly gratifying to be recognised at an international level. Through its innovative and creative design, the Edinburgh Futures Institute will help nurture some of the world’s much-needed future pioneers via world-leading innovative programmes of interdisciplinary teaching and research directed at solving the great challenges facing the human race and the planet which we inhabit.”
Rab Bennetts, founder of Bennetts Associates, added, “We are thrilled alongside our client the University of Edinburgh to be presented with such a prestigious award by the Prix Versailles jury, which is vindication of a strategy based on creative design interventions and interpretation of an important historic building for the university and my home city of Edinburgh.
“The building had been empty for nearly 20 years and was in very poor condition before we started, so the effort put in over the past nine years by our practice and wider team of conservation architects, engineers, project managers, contractors and many others was truly exceptional. The award also shows that the re-use of an existing building is a highly stimulating way of achieving low carbon emissions, pointing the way to limiting climate change – the greatest challenge of our time.”
Project Scotland recently visited the Edinburgh Futures Institute to speak to some of the project team. To read the article, click here.