
Galaxy Australia recognised with iAwards
Galaxy Australia won three trophies at the Australian Information Industry Association’s (AIIA) Queensland state iAwards on Tuesday, 4 June, including the top prize, the Queensland Premier’s iAward for Public Sector Innovation.
Galaxy Australia also won iAwards in the Infrastructure and Platforms Innovation of the Year, and Community Service Markets categories.
The AIIA iAwards is the nation’s leading awards program that helps to recognise, celebrate and elevate Australian digital innovation.
Galaxy Australia is a free, web-accessible platform to enable genetic scientists across the globe to test, evaluate and peer review their work, making the next cure for chronic disease within reach of anyone with the dedication and skills to look for it.
The University of Melbourne’s Melbourne Bioinformatics, Queensland Cyber Infrastructure Foundation (QCIF) and the University of Queensland’s Research Computing Centre jointly built and operate Galaxy Australia.
Galaxy Australia Service Manager Dr Gareth Price is very proud that his team’s work has been recognised with not just one, but three iAwards.
“Personally, I was humbled by the calibre of entrants. We are proud to be honoured with these awards that reflect our contribution to Australian research by linking researchers and their data to national compute power and the analytical tools required to maximise research value,” he said.
“Galaxy Australia exists to benefit its users — it helps life science researchers and clinicians analyse data without having to train in data science. The outcomes from this are massive: Galaxy Australia helps research groups better understand cancer and infectious diseases, and enables collaboration nationally and internationally.”
Melbourne University molecular biologist and computer scientist Associate Professor Andrew Lonie was always convinced of Galaxy’s potential when the project started in 2011. “It is now a mature platform for both analysing complex data and teaching the new generation of biologists how to do this new kind of research. We’re all very proud to celebrate these awards”.
Galaxy Australia is jointly supported by the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC), the Australian Bioinformatics Commons and EMBL Australia Bioinformatics Resource, with funding from Bioplatforms Australia as part of the federal Government’s 12-year commitment to the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS).
As a Queensland iAward winner, Galaxy Australia will be a finalist in the national iAwards on Thursday, 29 August in Melbourne.

The Queensland component of the Galaxy Australia team with their three state iAwards. L–R: Dr Igor Makunin (QFAB/RCC), Dr Gareth Price (QFAB) and Nick Rhodes (QFAB)).(Photo: Dr Nick Hamilton.)