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The Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has named Dublin-born architect Niall McLaughlin the recipient of the 2026 Royal Gold Medal, the institute announced on Jan. 29, 2026.
RIBA’s honours jury praised McLaughlin for work “shaped by a deep sensitivity to place,” citing a consistent, human-centred approach across diverse projects.
Notable works referenced include the Bandstand at Bexhill (2001), the Alzheimer’s Respite Centre in Dublin (2011), Bishop Edward King Chapel in Oxford (2013) and the New Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge (2021), which won the 2022 Stirling Prize.
McLaughlin, born in Geneva in 1962 and educated at University College Dublin, has taught at The Bartlett for more than 25 years and held posts at UCLA and Yale.
The jury highlighted his Darbishire Place housing revival for Peabody (2014) as particularly relevant to future social housing design.
McLaughlin, who received an honorary MBE in 2020, has also advocated for transparency in hours and pay and for mental-health openness within the profession.
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Irish IndependentIrish NewsDubliner Niall McLaughlin awarded Royal Gold Medal for architecture: ‘I am delighted and honoured’08:58
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