Excludes Class 1 Building & Industrial, Warehouses and Sheds
State winners of the Steel Excellence Awards will be nominated for the Australian Steel Institute’s National Australian Steel Excellence Awards, presented at the 2024 Australian Steel Excellence Awards Gala Dinner in Sydney.
The application fee of $450 is payable at the point of submitting your entry. You may enter the same project in multiple categories for only one entry fee. Please ensure that you use the same project name and email address for each entry and you will only be charged for the first submission.
Select the state where the project is located to start your entry. Entries can be saved and edited before submitting.
The closing date is Friday 28 June 2024, 11:59pm.
Gratton Street Facade - Winner - Innovative Cold Formed Steel Building 2022
ASI’s Steel Excellence Awards highlight the remarkable quality and innovation throughout the entire supply chain. Entries will be judged according to the criteria outlined below.
The application should address innovation in design, using predominantly Australian steel, efficient use of materials, substantial engineering or architectural merit.
This criteria covers demonstration of the advantages of Australian steel, speed of construction, safety and containment of overall project costs. The application needs to demonstrate that the project was examined for the long-term corrosion environment and that a fit-for-purpose corrosion and maintenance system was chosen.
The award entry should demonstrate the use of predominantly sustainable steel. This can be for example, obtaining a longer life out of the construction by future proofing, designing for repurposing or deconstruction or dematerialisation by use of high strength Australian steels. The use of sustainable Australian steel suppliers, Australian steel processors and fabricators (refer to the ASI Steel Sustainability Australia scheme). Awareness and consideration of LCA and the AGIC or GBCA, use of steel with Responsible Steel® certification schemes would also be valued.
Practicality for fabrication and erection, effective documentation for tendering and throughout the building process. Effective use of data transfer technology such as construction BIM. Effective engagement of design teams with construction teams. Working with the fabricator/erector to ensure selection of standard members, penetrations, optimisation of costs using standardised connections, bolted connections and provision for shop welding rather than on-site and practicality and safety of erection. Note this criterion should reference the issues associated with providing sufficient standard of design detail for efficient transfer of data without reliance on RFIs. Reference can be made to the Australian Construction Modellers Association (ACMA) design document checklists for architects and engineers regarding documentation. Refer to www.austcma.org.au