Malvern Residence sees Preston Lane Architects combine a nature-inspired and warm series of gestures, binding the various eras within and creating a connected family home in the process.
Lindisfarne House sees Preston Lane Architects navigate the non-traditional site arrangement to fit the lifestyle of its inhabitants and how they wanted to engage with the surrounds.
West Hobart House sees Preston Lane Architects contain the additions and amendments to a similar and respectful scale of its previous chapter, aptly readying the home for the chapter to come.
Preston Lane has collaborated with James Hardie to extend on a classic Victorian terrace, using Hardie Fine Texture Cladding to create an unexpected scene in a suburban Melbourne laneway.
Box Hill South House talks to family ideals and values, with Preston Lane creating an energy efficient home with articulated volumes and consolidated approach.
Pirie Street sees Preston Lane add generous volumes to the original weatherboard home that allow it to become bathed in light and connect to the mountains beyond.
Preston Lane Architects’ Point View House instead carves into the sloping embankment the original home sits upon, creating a true connection to the earth.
Tasked with transforming an existing 1980s extension to an original post-war bungalow into a contemporary home, Preston Lane utilised the existing bones of Parnell Façade House as the foundation.
The Lansdowne Project by Preston Lane Architects plays with volume, geometry and materials to transform a 1920s semi-detached house into a private inward-focused world.