Amy Muir

Peter Bennetts

Amy Muir is an architect and director of MUIR. The practice engages with a range of projects including those for public and institutional briefs bringing a sympathetic and strategic attitude to the varying contexts that they work within. By investing public work with the language of memory and place, the practice hopes to speculate on a new civic architecture. Holding degrees in Interior Design and Architecture from RMIT University enables Amy to place equal value on the holistic crafting of interior and external form as one. As the immediate past Victorian President of the Australian Institute of Architects and a lecturer at RMIT University, Muir is committed to establishing strong links between teaching, research, practice and public advocacy.

Wominjeka (Welcome). We acknowledge the Yaluk-ut Weelam as the traditional custodians of the land on which we meet. Yaluk-ut Weelam means ‘people of the river camp’ and is connected with the coastal land at the head of Port Phillip Bay, extending from the Werribee River to Mordialloc. The Yaluk-ut Weelam are part of the Boon Wurrung, one of the five major language groups of the greater Kulin Nation. We pay our respects to the land, their ancestors and their elders—past, present and to the future.