Punchbowl Mosque

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner

PUNCHBOWL MOSQUE

Candalepas Associates

 PHOTOGRAPHS
Rory Gardiner

YEAR
2017

AREA
549 m²

MANUFACTURERS
SIMES, Austral Bricks, Bega, Bentley, Boral, Erco, Glennon Tiles, Lysaght, Caroma, Kleeman, WK Marble & Granite

BUILDER
Infinity Constructions

GEOTECH
JK Geotechnics

ACOUSTIC 
Marshall Day Acoustics

STORMWATER
Neil Lowry & Associates

STRUCTURAL
Taylor Thomson Whitting, Wood & Grieve Engineers

DESIGN TEAM
Jeremy Loblay, Rachel Yabsley, David Bulter, Ivan Jeldrez, Claudia Takada, Andrew Scott, Christian Natterodt

DESIGN TEAM
 Clancy Mears, David Tordoff, Nichole Drake

PLANNER
SJB Planning

LANDSCAPE
Taylor Brammer

CLIENTS
Australian Islamic Mission

BCA/PCA
Blackett Maguire + Goldsmith

HYDRAULIC
Jones Nicholson

MECHANICAL/ ELECTRICAL
Jones Nicholson

QS
Napier Blakeley

ACCESS
Accessibility Solutions

FIRE ENGINEER 
Innova Services LTD

SURVEYORS
Geometra Consulting

CATEGORY
Worship

LOCATION
Punchbowl, Australia

Text description provided by architect.

The project seeks to establish a new home for the Australian Islamic Mission and provide a complex of buildings to facilitate learning and religious worship for local community members that follow the Muslim faith. The development is to be constructed in two stages, with Stage 1 being the construction of the Mosque accommodating approximately 300 worshippers and Stage 2 being the construction of community buildings.

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner
Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner

The buildings are arranged around a quadrangle partially open to one side, which provides an internal outlook and affords privacy to students and community members. This configuration creates two adjoining but separate courtyards, providing the separation of the primary daytime functions required by the client brief.

The first more public of the two courtyards, is accessed directly from the street and abuts the Mosque. This courtyard is used primarily as an orientation and congregation space for worshippers entering and exiting the Mosque.

The second courtyard is larger and more private, accessed through, but physically separated from the first courtyard.

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner
Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner

Around the second courtyard, the Stage 2 Mosque administration building and community classrooms are located.

The second courtyard also has the ability to be opened up to the Mosque for large religious festivals and events.

The design allows the flexibility such that the physical connection between courtyards can be widened, allowing the whole campus to be used for religious teaching and other community activities outside school hours.

The architectural expression of the Mosque is intentionally separate and distant from the remainder of the future community buildings.

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner
Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner

Entry to the Mosque is via the first courtyard, with male and female worshippers separating to perform ablutions, or ‘wudu’ before prayer.

Male worshippers diverge right as they approach the Mosque, into the raking triangular form of the male ablutions area at ground level before passing back out below the compressed entry awning which opens out into the main prayer hall.

Female worshippers pass under the minaret to the left of the entry courtyard and into the female ablutions area before continuing up through the minaret to prayer galleries on level 1 and 2 of the Mosque.

These prayer galleries extend out under the timber lined dome and oculus into the main prayer space below, placing the female worshippers at the heart of the Mosque.

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner
Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner

The sculptural off-form concrete raking ceiling to the Mosque main prayer space references ornamental vaulting of ‘muqarnas’ in traditional Islamic architecture, with each of the 102 off-form concrete ‘muqarnas’ containing a 30mm diameter hole at its centre.

Shafts of daylight are drawn into the main prayer space through the ‘muqarnas’, illuminating the space as the sun moves around from dawn prayer through mid-day and mid-afternoon prayer, prior to sunset and evening prayers.

A splayed off-form concrete wall springs from the Mosque entry doors, breaking the orthogonal geometry of the main prayer space floor plan and orientating worshippers towards Mecca.

The design creates a centre for religious teaching and community activities to meet an existing and rapidly expanding community based congregation, now and into the future.

Punchbowl Mosque
© Rory Gardiner


Punchbowl Mosque
Level 1 plan
Punchbowl Mosque
Level 2 plan
Punchbowl Mosque
Ground floor plan
Punchbowl Mosque
Roof plan


Punchbowl Mosque
Section A
Punchbowl Mosque
Section B


Punchbowl Mosque
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Punchbowl Mosque
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Punchbowl Mosque
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Punchbowl Mosque
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