Gallery and minster win top architecture prizes

Hayley Coyle
BBC News, Yorkshire
RIBA Wonderlab: The Bramall Gallery, new interactive gallery in YorkRIBA
Wonderlab: The Bramall Gallery is a new interactive gallery at the National Railway Museum in York

A converted hospice, a city's revamped 700-year-old landmark church and an interactive gallery are among several projects in Yorkshire to have been awarded prestigious architectural awards for 2025.

The Royal Institute of British Architects (Riba) has recognised Wonderlab: The Bramall Gallery at York's National Railway Museum as its Building of the Year in its Yorkshire Awards, while its creator De Matos Ryan was named Project Architect of the Year.

Meanwhile, the regeneration of Hull Minster and the refurbishment of two Victorian buildings in South and North Yorkshire were also recognised.

All the projects were praised by Riba for their "quiet ambition" and how they "inspired and uplifted".

A Riba spokesperson said this year's winners, chosen from a shortlist of seven, "exemplify architecture's power to transform - turning spaces into places of connection, creativity, and care".

RIBA A timber building in the background, with trees and a lawn in the foreground
RIBA
The purpose-built Young People's Space facility at St Gemma's Hospice provides a social space and a counselling room

Wonderlab: The Bramall Gallery was described by Riba as "light and spacious", offering a STEM-focused learning experience for young people.

The jury praised the architects' "design interventions" as "controlled and considered", celebrating "the creative process and language of railway engineering principles".

Meanwhile, the Young People's Space - a timber pavilion at St Gemma's Hospice in Leeds, providing "home from home" accommodation and support spaces for children and young people affected by serious illness or a family member's death - was named by Riba as its Small Project of the Year in its Yorkshire Awards.

RIBA The image shows one of the rooms behind a glass front. A dining table, chairs and lamps can be seen through the floor-length windows.RIBA
The transformation of Petronella House, a Victorian villa in a Sheffield conservation area, has been praised by Riba

The "careful regeneration" of the Grade I listed Hull Minster by Bauman Lyons Architects Ltd was also recognised.

Awarding it a Yorkshire Award 2025, Riba said its jury had been "impressed with the new-found possibilities of the building, as a place of worship, cultural and civic centre, gallery, marketplace as well as a warm space and place of refuge".

Other winners were the refurbishment of Petronella House, a Victorian villa in a Sheffield conservation area, by Chiles Evans + Care Architect, and the transformation of the Duncan Place Library & Community Hub by EDable Architecture in Loftus, North Yorkshire, into a youth and community facility, a family base and a library.

RIBA A bird's view of Hull Minster at night. It shows a t-shaped building illuminated by lights.RIBA
The historic Hull Minster was another award winner

Presenting the awards at a ceremony on Thursday, Gayle Appleyard, Riba Yorkshire jury chair, said: "Amid these varied contexts, this year's Yorkshire award-winning projects stood out for their quiet ambition - many having been realised during the challenges of the Covid pandemic, yet they managed to do a lot with a little. 

"These buildings don't shout. Instead, they quietly improve, enhance, and bring joy to the lives of the people who use them.

"Individually these projects inspire and uplift, but collectively, they remind us that architects do far more than design buildings, they shape the way we live, work and connect."

RIBA A woman and a child sit on a bench shaped into a tree. Books can be seen on the left wall and arranged on shelves at the back of the room.RIBA
The regeneration of Duncan Place, in Loftus, also won one of Riba's Yorkshire Awards 2025

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