Chris Brisbin

Dr Chris Brisbin

Senior Lecturer

School of Architecture and Built Environment

College of Creative Arts, Design and Humanities

Eligible to supervise Masters and PhD - email supervisor to discuss availability.

Available For Media Comment.


Chris Brisbin is the Program Director of the Bachelor of Architectural Studies and the Master of Architecture at the University of South Australia. He is an award-winning educator and internationally recognised researcher whose work explores regional benchmarking of architectural curriculum and multi-disciplinary approaches to criticism, critique, and criticality across the fields of art, architecture, and design. His research has been widely published in books, journals, and conference proceedings.
Chris is a national educational leader as a standing panel member of the Architects Accreditation Council of Australia (AACA) and as Honorary Treasurer of the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia (AASA). He has co-convened symposia and conferences on criticism and criticality since 2012, facilitating interdisciplinary dialogue across art, architecture, and design. These events have informed a body of work including essays, invited talks, and magazine articles, particularly focusing on architectural copyright and the philosophical implications of counterfeiting in China. He is co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Criticality in Art, Architecture, and Design (Routledge, 2018), with Dr Myra Thiessen.
Research Interests
Chris’s research spans several interrelated areas, including:

Australasian benchmarking of architectural design philosophy and studio teaching in higher education;
The activation of street life and community engagement through architectural elements such as verandahs and thresholds;
Urban place-making and the activation of public space;
Contemporary architecture and architectural copying in China;
Questions of authorship, originality, and copyright in architecture;
The interplay of image and space in contemporary architectural design; 

Key Research Projects
Australasian Architecture Education Longitudinal Study (AAELS)
Since 2022, the AAELS dashboard has become the primary external benchmarking tool used for national benchmarking of architectural programs. By shifting the focus from anecdotal insights to data-driven evaluation, the AAELS has established a framework for continuous improvement in architectural education. The longitudinal dataset tracks student experience, graduate outcomes, diversity indicators, and alignment with the 2021 National Standard of Competency for Architects (NSCA). Each participating school receives a comparative dashboard, enabling Deans and program leaders to identify areas of underperformance—such as in QILT, CEQ, or ERA results—and strategically reallocate resources to strengthen program quality and graduate outcomes.
Architectural Counterfeiting and Criticality in China
Chris’ research seeks to understand the philosophical and legal implications of creative authorship and architectural counterfeiting in China. His work explores how Western architectural icons are appropriated in Chinese developments as symbols of modernity and status, raising questions about authorship, originality, and cultural identity. This research includes comparative studies of buildings such as Zaha Hadid’s SOHO complex in Beijing and its unauthorised replica, the Meiquan 22nd Century in Chongqing.
Chris has presented on these issues at major conferences, including critic|all in Madrid and Architecture, Law and the Senses in Sydney. His work critiques the limitations of Western copyright law when applied in cross-cultural architectural partnerships and argues for greater engagement with Chinese academics to enrich this discourse.
Visuality to Visualistic : Architecture as Image
This project investigates the shifting relationship between space, representation, and the viewer—tracing key moments in visual culture from the invention of linear perspective to contemporary virtual reality. Chris examines how contemporary architecture is increasingly visualised and conceived as image, and how this affects its spatial and cultural reception. The project aims to provide architects and educators with strategies for designing façade systems that use emerging image technologies in meaningful, contextually responsive ways.
The Anatomy of the Edge : Verandahs as Social and Spatial Thresholds
This long-term design-research project focuses on the cultural and environmental value of verandahs in Australian architecture. Through measured drawings, fieldwork, and literature-based research, Chris investigates how verandahs operate as liminal spaces that mediate climate, privacy, and social interaction. His research argues for the importance of verandahs in fostering sustainable, connected urban and suburban life, particularly in the context of climate change and growing cities.

  • multi-generational living for an ageing population in the Chinese shiheyuan (courtyard house) and Australian villa
  • History and Theory of Architecture and Interior Architecture (concepts ofVisuality—Medieval to Contemporary)
  • Generative pattern in contemporary Architecture
  • Ontology: bringing into being of ideas through drawing/making/thinking
  • Edge/Threshold conditions in vernacular Chinese and Australian architecture
  • Effects of the Bologna Accord on Higher Education practices in architectural education in Australia
  • Design Criticism
  • Post-critical theory
  • Architectural copying in China

Year Citation
2019 Brisbin, C. (2019). (The crisis of) Chinese Whispers: consumption, assemblage aesthetics, and the globalisation of meaning in China. In A. Acciavatti (Ed.), Source details - Title: From crisis to crisis: reading, writing and criticism in architecture. US: ACTAR.
2019 Thiessen, M., & Brisbin, C. (2019). Less woe, more wow! Shifting disciplinary viewpoints to make a critical cultural difference . . .. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 419-421). UK: Routledge.
DOI
2019 Thiessen, M., & Brisbin, C. (2019). Don't take this the wrong way, but . . .: the changing nature of media, medium, and message in art, architecture, and design criticism. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 295-297). UK: Routledge.
Scopus1
2019 Brisbin, C., & Thiessen, M. (2019). Looks aren't everything, except when they are: the critical aesthetics of un-critical and post-critical artefacts. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 149-150). UK: Routledge.
DOI
2019 Brisbin, C., & Thiessen, M. (2019). You, me, I, or we: criticality through situated creative practice/s. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 11-13). UK: Routledge.
DOI
2019 Brisbin, C. (2019). Horse horse tiger tiger: the critical functioning of Chinese copying and assemblage aesthetics. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 179-205). London: Routledge.
DOI
2019 Brisbin, C., & Thiessen, M. (2019). Criticality; or woe is me, what is it good for!. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Source details - Title: The Routledge companion to criticality in art, architecture, and design (pp. 3-8). UK: Routledge.
DOI Scopus1
2014 Brisbin, C. A. (2014). What's in a name? The in-between-ness of the verandah's public faces and threshold spaces. In A. Chatterjee (Ed.), Source details - Title: Surface and deep histories: critiques and practices in art, architecture and design (pp. 87-109). UK: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
2011 Brisbin, C. (2011). Optical follies: dazzle shed and Brisbane Girls Grammar School. In A. McNamara (Ed.), Source details - Title: Sweat : the subtropical imaginary (pp. 144-159). Brisbane, Australia: IMA Publications.

Year Citation
2019 Liao, P., Gu, N., Brisbin, C., & Rofe, M. (2019). Discovering the spatial properties of Chinese historic towns through mathematical means: an evidence-based approach. In Proceedings of the 12th Space Syntax Symposium (pp. 1-16). China: Beijing Jiaotong University.
Scopus1
2019 Liao, P., Gu, N., Brisbin, C., Rofe, M., & Soltani, S. (2019). Computationally mapping spatial properties of Chinese historic towns using space syntax. In Proceedings of the 24th International Conference of the Association for Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (CAADRIA 2019) Vol. 1 (pp. 362-370). Hong Kong: The Association for Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (CAADRIA).
2019 Liao, P., Gu, N., Brisbin, C., Rofe, M., & Soltani, S. (2019). Computationally mapping spatial properties of Chinese historic towns using space syntax. In Intelligent and Informed Proceedings of the 24th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia Caadria 2019 Vol. 1 (pp. 361-370).
Scopus3
2018 Liao, P., Rofe, M., Brisbin, C., & Gu, N. (2018). Towards a new computational approach to conserving the spatial authenticity of historic towns within a heritage tourism framework. In R. Amoêda, & S. Pinheiro (Eds.), Heritage 2018: proceedings of the 6th international conference on heritage and sustainable development Vol. 2 (pp. 1769-1780). Portugal: Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development.
2015 Brisbin, C. A. (2015). 'I hate cheap knock-offs!' : morphogenetic transformations of the 'culture of the copy' and Chinese identity. In T. Thornton, & K. Katharine (Eds.), Unmaking waste : transforming production and consumption in time and place (pp. 365-374). Adelaide, South Australia: Zero Waste SA Research Centre for Sustainable Design and Behaviour.
2014 Brisbin, C. A. (2014). Post-critical China: there is no author, just content!. In Critic/all international conference on architectural design & criticism (pp. 225-237). Madrid: Critical Press.
2013 Brisbin, C. (2013). The post-critical U-turn: a return to criticality through the consumptive affirmation of glamour and affect in Michael Zavros and Rem Koolhaas. In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Critique 2013 : 2013 conference proceedings (pp. 31-43). South Australia: University of South Australia.
2013 Brisbin, C., & Thiessen, M. (2013). Critique 2013: welcoming reflections at the end of the beginning .... In C. Brisbin, & M. Thiessen (Eds.), Critique 2013 : 2013 conference proceedings (pp. 5-8). South Australia: University of South Australia.
2013 Brisbin, C., & Thiessen, M. (Eds.) (2013). Critique 2013 conference proceedings. In Critique 2013: An International Conference Reflecting on Creative Practice in Art, Architecture, and Design. Australia: University of South Australia.
2011 Brisbin, C. (2011). Drawing out the 'anatomy of the edge': in-between-ness in the verandas of South-East Queensland. In K. Elkadi, L. Xu, L. Leilei, & J. Coulson (Eds.), Architecture @ the Edge: Proceedings of the 2011 International Conference of the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia (pp. 163-170). Australia: Deakin University.
2008 Brisbin, C. A. (2008). Optical Surfaces: The Emergence of Embodied Affect & Surface Disturbance in Architecture. In Alpha Alpha Alpha November Zulu Annual Conference of the AAANZ Art Association of Australia and New Zealand. Brisbane, Australia.
2008 Brisbin, C. A., & Raxworthy, J. (2008). Veranda Urbanism: projecting the veranda edge onto the city. In Alpha Alpha Alpha November Zulu Annual Conference of the AAANZ Art Association of Australia and New Zealand. Brisbane, Australia.
2007 Brisbin, C. A. (2007). Cracks in the Glass: New Image Typology from the Spatio-temporal Schisms of the `Filmic¿ Virtual Reality Panorama. In L. Loo, S. S., B. Batrsch, & K. K. (Eds.), PANORAMA TO PARADISE: The 24th annual conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. Adelaide, Australia.
2007 Brisbin, C. A. (2007). Spatial Transfiguration: Anamorphic Mixed- Reality in the Virtual Reality Panorama. In L. Loo, S. S., B. Batrsch, & K. K. (Eds.), PANORAMA TO PARADISE: The annual conference of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand. Adelaide, Australia.
  • Australasia Architecture Program Provider Longitudinal Study of Student, Staffing, and Coursework (2019-2029), Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia, 08/03/2024 - 31/12/2026

Courses I teach

  • ARCH 2021 Contemporary Design Theory (2025)
  • ARCH 2021 Contemporary Design Theory (2024)
  • ARCH 3050 Architectural Design Studio (Integrated) (2024)

Programs I'm associated with

  • DBAE - Bachelor of Architectural Studies
  • DMAE - Master of Architecture

Date Role Research Topic Program Degree Type Student Load Student Name
2024 Co-Supervisor Repatriation of Aboriginal ancestral remains from the South Australian Museum: analysing a cultural model of governance with sector-wide significance Doctor of Philosophy Doctorate Full Time Ms Annamaria Russo
  • Position: Senior Lecturer
  • Email: chris.brisbin@adelaide.edu.au
  • Alternative Contact: ACADEMIA.EDU web page RESEARCHGATE.NET web page @UNISA.ARCHITECTURE instragramsite that aims to promote the architectural design culture of our Archtiecture programs in UniSA Creative

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