Caruso St John is an architectural firm established in 1990 by Adam Caruso and Peter St John.
They were shortlisted for the Stirling Prize in 2000 and 2006 for Walsall Art Gallery and Brick House respectively, before winning in 2016 for Newport Street Gallery, which was built to house the private art collection of artist Damien Hirst.
Caruso St John have gained an international reputation for excellence in designing contemporary projects in the public realm. The practice came to public attention with The New Art Gallery Walsall, a commission won in an international competition in 1995. From these origins in the visual arts, where a sensitivity to experience and context is required, the practice has extended its expertise and now works on a broad range of projects in the public and private realms. Current and past clients include Tate Britain, the V&A,English Heritage and the Arts Council of England, as well as European housing developers Trudo, the SBB (Swiss National Railways) and the Gagosian Gallery. Caruso St John aims to have a wide range of work at a variety of scales and want to resist the trend of increased size and specialisation that dominates contemporary architecture.
The practice is interested in the emotional potential and physical qualities of construction. This attitude has developed out a fascination for materials, backed up with an involvement in academic and office based research. Built projects incorporate this research and respond to their physical context and brief in unexpected ways. The projects stand out by resisting off the peg construction. Both the New Art Gallery, Walsall (2000) and the Brick House, London (2006) have been short listed for the Stirling Prize, the UK’s most prestigious architecture award, in recognition of this ambition.