Anthony Browell
Many of Australia's surf clubs were built more than a century ago and efforts are underway to renovate a number of these unique pieces of architecture. North Bondi Surf Life Saving Club is one of the nation's oldest clubs and its recent award-wining renovation was designed to reflect the waves of Sydney's iconic Bondi Beach.
Natalie Walsh
The new club won a public architecture commendation in the 2014 Australian National Architecture Awards. "Its organic curves attempt to give an eroded quality of having been shaped by the waves," says one of the architects involved in the new clubhouse design, Peter Colquhoun. The club was designed by Durbach, Block, Jaggers Architects in association with Colquhoun, along with a fund raising and building consultancy team led by Ben Griffiths of Eley Griffiths Group and volunteer members of the surf club.
Jeannette Lloyd Jones
"The sweeping curves of the top parapet echo the curves of Bondi and the movement of the ocean. The external cladding are mosaic tiles that reflect day light, which is ever changing season to season," says Colquhoun.
Douglas Mark Black
City Beach Surf Life Saving Club in Perth, Australia, designed by Christou Design Group, won a 2016 Western Australian Architecture award.
Just Gravity
"City Beach Surf Club is located on a breathtaking coastline. Clear blue water matched by stunning skies. The architecture of clean lines responds to the characteristics of the breathtaking coastline," says James Christou, the architect who lead the club's design and managing director of Christou Design Group.
Douglas Mark Black
"The coast plays an important role in the Australian lifestyle. The surf club culture -- a culture of volunteering -- is synonymous with the Australian lifestyle," says Christou.
Brett Boardman
The award-winning Devonport Surf Life Saving Club in Tasmania also took the waves of the ocean as inspiration and was designed to blend in with its dynamic coastal environment, according to the architects, JAWS Architects.
Brett Boardman
"Seen from all angles, the building is treated as a sculptural element carefully placed in the manicured coastal environment," say JAWS Architects.
Brett Boardman
To facilitate separate identities, the development is composed of two distinct pavilions sharing a common foyer space. One houses the surf club and the other incorporates restaurant and cafe facilities to serve local beach users.
Brett Boardman
The interior of Devonport Surf Club provides sweeping views across the ocean while incorporating strong sculptural elements into the design.
John Gollings
The Seaford Life Saving Club, designed by Robert Simeoni, won the 2010 World Architecture News (WAN) World Civic Building of the year award for its design, as well as a Victorian and Australian architecture award.
John Gollings
"The contemporary timber building used in the Seaford Life Saving Club renovation salutes the materials used in early surf club design," says Colquhoun.
Brett Boardman Photography
Replacing a dilapidated old structure, Kempsey Crescent Head Surf Life Saving Club, designed by Neeson Murcutt Architects, won the 2016 Sulman Medal for Public Architecture at the NSW Architecture Awards.
Brett Boardman Photography
"The building belongs to a landscape -- it is designed in the round. Its pitched roof and cut-away walls produce a sculpted form with a unique appearance on each side, reinforced by color," says project architect, Tamas Jones, from Neeson Murcutt Architects.
Brett Boardman Photography
"A beachy, sparkly skin in soft pipi shell pastels wraps the building. Materials selection was critical due to its location 40 meters from breaking surf. The external walls are glazed brick and the membrane roof is clad in matching floor tiles. Internally the palette is deliberately raw -- concrete, concrete block, plywood, terrazzo," says Jones.
Rob Burnett Images
This beautiful but extraordinarily simple club in Tasmania won the 2014 Australian Institute of Architects National Small Project Architecture Award. Built adjacent to an old 1960s toilet block, the building was originally going to be a tin shed, but the wooden-slatted structure, designed by local firm Birrelli art+design+architecture, proved to be a cheaper and more aesthetically pleasing alternative.
Rob Burnett Images
"It's a little bit, psychologically speaking, a bit like a church a village used to build, that's what comes to my mind...the village...sees that building with that perspective," Bicheno's ex-mayor, Betrand Cadart, has said of the town's SLSC.
Ryan Pierse/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Swimmers prepare to enter the water during the Bondi to Bronte Ocean Swim at Bondi Beach in Sydney, Australia. This annual event is swum over a 2.5 kilometer course between the first two Surf Life Saving clubs in the world.
WILLIAM WEST/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Although not technically a surf club, Bondi Icebergs, located on the southern end of Sydney's Bondi Beach, is one of country's largest and best-known swimming clubs. It boasts more than 1,000 members, 400-500 of whom compete every weekend -- including in winter -- in a stunning outdoor ocean pool perched below a cliff.
Gordon Scammell/LOOP IMAGES/Corbis Documentary/Getty Images
This beautiful clubhouse, on Cottesloe Beach in Perth, was established in 1909 and is Western Australia's oldest surf life saving club.
Brendon Thorne/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Coogee SLSC volunteer, Julien Vincent poses in the damaged Coogee Surf clubhouse. The first clubhouse -- a wooden shack -- was built in 1910. The current clubhouse suffered extensive damage during a violent storm that hit Sydney in June 2016.
AFP/AFP/AFP/Getty Images
Surf Life Saving Clubs across the nation have to be built to withstand extremes of weather, from searing heat to huge storms. Here, a wave washes over a flipped car near the Currumbin Surf Club building along a stretch of Gold Coast beach in the Australian state of Queensland following a severe storm.
Ezra Shaw/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Many of Australia's surf clubs have surf boat rowing teams, a highly dangerous sport that originated with the vessels that were used to rescue swimmers before the introduction of motorboats.

Editor’s Note: Peter Colquhoun is a Sydney-based architect, host of Great Australian Sandcastles – a television show that features the best of Australian beach architecture – and a specialist architect presenter on Better Homes and Gardens. Colquhoun, in association with Durbach, Block, Jaggers Architects, received a national Architectural commendation for the new clubhouse at Sydney’s North Bondi.

Story highlights

Australia's surf clubs are some of the most egalitarian -- and beautiful -- architecture in a nation that worships the ocean

The ongoing renovation of these aging "cultural cathedrals" has produced some uniquely spectacular architecture

Sydney, Australia CNN  — 

From my house I can see the waves breaking on Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach, where people from all walks of life duck and weave between the surf and board riders dance on the water.

Australia’s beaches are the most egalitarian of public spaces and the hundreds of surf life saving clubs that punctuate their shores reflect this community.

These remarkable pieces of national architecture – many of which were built more than a century ago by volunteer labor – save lives, bridge age and social divides and bring communities together through a love of the ocean and a cold beer.

For many Australians surf clubs have become modern day cathedrals at the center of coastal town squares.

Ryan Pierse/Getty Images AsiaPac/Getty Images
Sydney's iconic Bondi Beach

But as time and the elements take their toll, a number of these buildings are falling apart, prompting a resurgence in renovation that is bringing fresh life – and beautiful design – to many of these communities by the sea.

Egalitarian life-savers

The Australian surf club is a unique beast. They welcome anyone as a member – as long as they are willing to give up weekends to volunteer, patrolling the local beach and rescuing distressed swimmers from the sea.

North Bondi Surf Life Saving Club, where I have been a member for more than 30 years, is one of the founding clubs in this surf lifesaving movement.

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Its illustrious alumni include Olympians, judges, barristers and the current Prime Minister, all of whom rub shoulders with tradesmen, council workers, and even humble architects.

These clubs literally save lives, providing the training and coordination that ensures Australia’s treacherous beaches remain patrolled, and – through the Nippers program – give young Australians the skills and respect for mother nature they need to thrive and survive in the waves.

They also provide a community service by offering amenities for swimmers and surfers, storage for life saving equipment and a place for a drink or meal with your mates.

All done on minimal government funding and a lot of volunteer fundraising.

Voluntary design principals

This voluntary nature of the clubs is critical, and when it came time to re-build North Bondi’s own surf club, it was an issue top of my mind. Our clubhouse also sits on one of the most prominent and expensive pieces of real estate on the east coast of Australia, making the redesign a terrifying prospect for the architectural team we put together.

Jeannette Lloyd Jones
"The sweeping curves of the top parapet echo the curves of Bondi," says Colquhoun.

Given this, we developed five key design principles that every development sketch was weighed against.

First, it had to stay true to its purpose and serve as a house of Australian surf lifesaving with practical, open spaces – and at least one bar. As there was no dominant surrounding architectural style, the design was driven by nature’s ever-changing moods and the natural sweeping curves of Bondi.

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World champion surfer catches some waves

The building also needed to be “future proof”, so that it would hopefully stand for 200 years and have a layout that included entertainment areas to provide a stream of income to finance the building into the future.

It also had to be on budget – we were designing this building during the height of the Global Financial Crisis and while surf clubs receive local, state and sometimes federal funding, the majority of rebuild costs were coming from the pockets of its volunteer members.

Lastly, the new building had to have an “X factor”. Given that it sits on one of the most recognized beaches in the world, it had to make a statement.

Rebuilding an icon

The team of architects, engineers and fundraisers that came together for the rebuild all shared a grand vision for the new North Bondi Surf Club, and – like the builders of the original wooden clubhouse constructed at the turn of the 20th century – we all worked on ‘mates’ rates’ or for free.

In this way, the North Bondi redesign is indicative of what makes the rebuilding of Australian surf clubs truly unique.

Great architecture through the ages has usually been the domain of either the church, state or big business in association with philanthropy.

Douglas Mark Black
City Beach Surf Life Saving Club in Perth, Australia, designed by Christou Design Group, won a 2016 Western Australian Architecture award.

But the rebuilding of many clubs in recent years – and the voluntary fundraising that has helped drive many of them – demonstrates this does not always have to be the case.

Great community architecture can be achieved if necessity demands it.

Given their locations and place in society, Australian surf clubs are the cultural cathedrals of a nation that worships the ocean. Through architecture they should aim to encapsulate the age and imbue the egalitarian spirit of Australia.

Scroll through the gallery above for some of Colquhoun’s favorite surf club designs.