The Island Design Excellence Awards (IDEA) spotlights the creative forces shaping Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands by highlighting the products, projects and people whose excellence is achieved through design. 

From design thinking to visual design, the awards celebrate the role design plays in shaping successful places, products, experiences, and interactions.

A panel of judges narrowed the field to five finalists in each category. From interiors to products to community design — the shortlist highlights the best of Island creativity and innovation.

→ Scroll down to explore the shortlist and see the winners

THE CEREMONY

The Island Design Excellence Awards Ceremony was held on Thursday, November 6.

The star-studded evening put a spotlight on the creative forces shaping Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands.

Much like the unforgettable Design Victoria launch party, this wasn't just another industry event — it was a high-energy celebration where our creative community came together to honour the products, projects, and people whose excellence is achieved through design.

Thank you to everyone who attended the sold-out event!

Congratulations to all the finalists and winners who are raising the bar for design excellence in our region.

AwardS

Architecture: Responding to Local Vernacular

Celebrating architecture that reflects the distinct cultural, environmental, and material character of Vancouver Island and the Gulf Islands. These are buildings that are thoughtfully integrated into the surrounding environment, community, culture and vernacular.

Shortlisted projects: Arbour House by Patkau Architects; The Beachlands by The office of mcfarlane biggar architects + designers (omb); Mt. Tuam by Trace Design (with MDRN built); Saturna Residence Landscapes by Andrew Van Egmond; Shoreline House by Splyce Design and Shoreline House Landscapes by Andrew Van Egmond.

WINNER: Arbour House by Patkau Architects

Interior Design: Interiors that tell a Story

Honouring interiors that are thoughtfully designed to relay a unique, powerful and compelling narrative that underpins the project.

Residential Shortlisted Projects: Brentwood Bay Residence by Little Giant; Jade Lake Cabin by Bidgood; Norra Hem by Hanne by Design; Shoreline House by Splyce Design; St. Charles by Rothschild West Design.

WINNER: Jade Lake Cabins by Bidgood

Mixed-Use Shortlisted Projects: Heritage Office by Kwi Design; Nutsumaat Education Centre by Studio Roslyn; Queenswood Childcare by Western Design + Build; Rudi by Bidgood; Softer Drink Shop by Saksun Studio.

WINNER: Softer Drink Shop by Saksun Studio

Product Design: Made on the Islands

From handcrafted objects to manufactured goods, this award highlights products designed and created on the Island.

Shortlisted Projects: Luma by Mike Randall Design; Measure Me by ANCORD Design Co; Phone Couch by JC Scott; Handmade Lighting by A Light Studio; The Xylotheque Cabinet – Canadian Woods Edition by Oficina Espacial.

WINNER: Handmade Lighting by A Light Studio

Urban Design: People-Forward Urban Spaces

Recognizing public or urban spaces that prioritize people, accessibility, and community—designs that support social life and shared experience.

Shortlisted Projects: The Beachlands by Oasis Landscape Design; The Clayoquot Sound Community Theatre by Mallory Stuckel Architecture + Design (MSA+D); Crosstown Mixed-Use Affordable Housing Development by Low Hammond Rowe; The Royal Canadian Legion, Langford Branch #91 by Western Design+Build; Victoria Scottish Community Centre by DAU Studio.

WINNERS (TIE): Victoria Scottish Community Centre by DAU Studio & The Beachlands by Oasis Landscape Design

Scrappy Design: Projects That Punch Above Their Weight

This category celebrates bold, impactful work created with limited resources—proof that great design doesn’t require big budgets.

Shortlisted Projects: The Clayoquot Sound Community Theatre by Mallory Stuckel Architecture + Design (MSA+D); Pining Furniture Collection by Jonathan Chow; Ship Point Picnic Site by The City of Victoria; Secondhand Hope by Western Design+Build; Ugly Duckling by EDDA.

WINNER: Ugly Duckling by EDDA

Unlikely Collaboration: Opposites Attract

Honouring partnerships that cross disciplines, perspectives, or sectors to produce creative and unexpected design solutions.

Shortlisted Projects: A Lifetime by Pamela Billinghurst Interior Design and Renske Werner; Dimo Daybed by Atelier Dimo and Montauk Sofa; Mt. Tuam by MDRN built and team; Penelope Lamp by Caitlin Prince Ceramics and JMS Projects & Design; Urban Grocer by Becoming with Lydia Beauregard.

WINNER: Dimo Daybed by Atelier Dimo and Montauk Sofa

Sustainability Standout: Driving Sustainable Innovation

Recognizing work that integrates sustainability into its core—design that reduces impact, supports regeneration, or rethinks systems for good.

Shortlisted Projects: Climbing Rope Belts by StokedWorks; Mt. Tuam by Trace Design (with MDRN built); Pontoon Cove Eco House by ONE SEED Architecture + Interiors; Sligo Chair by Kerfwork; Secondhand Hope by Western Design+Build.

WINNER: Sligo Chair by Kerfwork

IDEAted on the Island: Designed Here, Delivered Elsewhere

Celebrating ideas developed on Vancouver Island that have found life and relevance beyond it—locally born, globally shared/produced/distributed.

Shortlisted Projects: Bird’s Wing Passivhaus Duplex by ONE SEED Architecture + Interiors; The Centro dos Saberes da Floresta (Forest Knowledge Center) by Oficina Espacial; New Neighbour by Man & Son Design; The Nieves Collection by Autonomous Furniture; West Side Clerestory by ONE SEED Architecture + Interiors.

WINNER: New Neighbour by Man & Son Design

People’s Choice Awards
(By Nomination Only)

Community Champion: Building Connections

Honouring an individual who strengthens the local design ecosystem through mentorship, advocacy, and generosity.

FINALISTS: Suzanne Bradbury, Fort Properties; Sarah Reid, Creative Director; Ann Squires Ferguson, Western Design+Build

WINNER:
Suzanne Bradbury

Creative Leadership: Inspiring Through Design

Whether running a studio, leading a project, or shaping policy, this person embodies the values of innovation, empathy, and impact. The Creative Leadership award celebrates those who inspire others, push boundaries, and lead with clarity and imagination.

FINALISTS: Mandy Farmer, Accent Inns; Bronté Freeman, Freeman Fabrication; Carrie Smart, Smart Design Studio

WINNER:
Bronté Freeman

JUDGES

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Cristina Belmonte is a Vancouver-based communications strategist with over 20 years of international experience in public relations, media relations, and brand positioning across architecture, design, real estate, hospitality, and lifestyle sectors. Before relocating to Canada, she spent more than a decade in London leading global communications initiatives for luxury brands and high-profile creative clients.

Throughout her career, Cristina has developed and executed international PR campaigns for architects, developers, hotels, designers, and cultural projects, helping elevate brands and generate global visibility for projects spanning North America, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. She is known for building strong relationships with leading journalists, editors, and media outlets across business, design, culture, and lifestyle publications worldwide. Her work has secured editorial coverage in all major international media. She brings a global perspective, deep media expertise, and a strong understanding of how to position brands and projects in today’s highly competitive communications landscape.

Cristina Belmonte is a Vancouver-based communications strategist with over 20 years of international experience in public relations, media relations, and brand positioning across architecture, design, real estate, hospitality, and lifestyle sectors. Before relocating to Canada, she spent more than a decade in London leading global communications initiatives for luxury brands and high-profile creative clients.

Cristina Belmonte

Communications Strategist

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Andy Chong is a Professional Engineer and Partner at Focal, a boutique Victoria-based building performance consultancy. He has a particular obsession with how built environments feel to the people inside them – and what it costs the planet to get them there. That conviction has shaped two decades of work behind spaces ranging from prominent Greater Victoria developments – Uptown, the Rotunda, Capital Park, TELUS Ocean – to local eateries, community spaces, small business storefronts, and non-profit organizations closest to Victoria's streetscape and soul.

 Andy is known for translating complex technical decisions into clear design principles, and for his belief that storytelling is as essential a tool in building design as any specification or calculation. His goal, in every project, is the same: aligning purpose, longevity, and the human experience of the built environment – for this generation and the ones that follow.

 Andy's face may be familiar in the Design Victoria community as the originator and past host of Pecha Kucha at the 2024 and 2025 festivals. When not at a drafting table or job site, he can be found chasing a frisbee, overplanning home carpentry projects, indulging his coffee ritual, and raising two small humans.

Andy Chong is a Professional Engineer and Partner at Focal, a boutique Victoria-based building performance consultancy. He has a particular obsession with how built environments feel to the people inside them – and what it costs the planet to get them there. That conviction has shaped two decades of work behind spaces ranging from prominent Greater Victoria developments – Uptown, the Rotunda, Capital Park, TELUS Ocean – to local eateries, community spaces, small business storefronts, and non-profit organizations closest to Victoria's streetscape and soul.

Andy Chong

Partner, Focal Engineering

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Katharine Logan is an award-winning writer on design, sustainability, and well-being in the built environment. She writes regularly for Architectural Record (where she is a contributing editor and where her work formed part of the magazine's Jesse H. Neal Award-winning portfolio) and Landscape Architecture Magazine (where her work won the Bradford Williams Medal from the American Society of Landscape Architects). Architecturally trained, she has provided leadership to a varied set of building types and scales, including a Green Building of the Year Award winner from the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and the Canada Green Building Council.

Katharine Logan is an award-winning writer on design, sustainability, and well-being in the built environment. She writes regularly for Architectural Record (where she is a contributing editor and where her work formed part of the magazine's Jesse H. Neal Award-winning portfolio) and Landscape Architecture Magazine (where her work won the Bradford Williams Medal from the American Society of Landscape Architects).

Katherine Logan

Design Writer & Contributing Editor, Architectural Record

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Siavash Madani is an interior designer and partner at Gabriel Ross, one of Canada’s premier design showrooms. With over a decade of experience in the industry, Siavash brings a wealth of expertise across residential, workplace, retail, and restaurant design projects throughout Canada. His portfolio reflects his unwavering commitment to creating functional, innovative, and visually captivating spaces tailored to the unique needs of each client. Siavash’s educational journey began with a degree in Interior Design from Montreal, followed by a Master's degree in Florence, Italy, where he honed his global perspective on design.

As a certified interior designer with the prestigious NCIDQ certification, Siavash is dedicated to advancing the profession and continuously enhancing his craft.Throughout his career, Siavash has earned a reputation for his meticulous attention to detail and his ability to transform client visions into exceptional realities. His work has garnered several accolades, including the VODA Award (2018) and the AMAC Award (2019), underscoring his dedication to design excellence and client satisfaction.An active leader in the design community, Siavash has served on the APDIQ Board of Directors from 2018 to 2021 and has been a member of the CIDQ Board of Directors since 2021, currently serving as President. He is also a member of IDIBC and VISID, advocating for the future of interior design on both national and international platforms.

Outside of his professional work, Siavash’s interests include Formula 1, motorcycles, gaming, and cooking—passions that inspire his creativity and drive.

Siavash Madani

Partner, Gabriel Ross

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Natalie Rollins is an interdisciplinary artist and emerging curator whose work spans visual, media, and performing arts. Guided by her family lineage —Cree from Driftpile Cree Nation through her father, and English, Irish, and Scottish through her mother—her practice is grounded in relational, place-based ways of learning, walking, and being. Through her artistic and curatorial work, she explores questions of belonging, responsibility, and Indigenous laws as they enact through art, culture, and performance.

Her curatorial approach is a collaborative, and a grounds for a practice in community-centered methodologies that center Indigenous perspectives while creating space for reflection on how we live with and care for the lands, relationships, and the communities we cohabitate.

Natalie serves on the board of directors of the Vancouver Island Visual Arts Society (VIVAS) and is Coordinator of the Taqsiqtuut Indigenous Research-Creation Lab in the Visual Arts Department at the University of Victoria where she supports research and creation rooted in Indigenous knowledge systems, ethics of care, and meaningful collaboration across disciplines.

Natalie Rollins is an interdisciplinary artist and emerging curator whose work spans visual, media, and performing arts. Guided by her family lineage —Cree from Driftpile Cree Nation through her father, and English, Irish, and Scottish through her mother—her practice is grounded in relational, place-based ways of learning, walking, and being. Through her artistic and curatorial work, she explores questions of belonging, responsibility, and Indigenous laws as they enact through art, culture, and performance.

Natalie Rollins

Interdisciplinary Artist

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With a background in architecture, Sydney Shilling brings an editorial lens to the cultural, social and professional forces shaping the built environment. As an award-winning writer and editor at Azure Magazine, she has written critically acclaimed features on topics ranging from unionization and architectural criticism to parenthood and caregiving in the profession. In 2025, she received a Gold National Magazine Award for Best Feature Article for her reporting on how the profession can better engage the mainstream.

With a background in architecture, Sydney Shilling brings an editorial lens to the cultural, social and professional forces shaping the built environment. As an award-winning writer and editor at Azure Magazine, she has written critically acclaimed features on topics ranging from unionization and architectural criticism to parenthood and caregiving in the profession. In 2025, she received a Gold National Magazine Award for Best Feature Article for her reporting on how the profession can better engage the mainstream.

Sydney Shilling

Associate Editor, Azure

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Will Sorrell

National Director, IDS

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Nick Van Buren

Co-Founder, HAVN

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Kelsey Wilkinson

Architect Intern and Board Member, AFBC