Bayview Tree House was inspired by a desire to be responsive and immersed within the surrounding setting, seeing Woodward Architects create a restful family home.
As a refurbishment of an existing house for a landscape architect, Redfern House by Anthony Gill Architects is a carefully considered study on living within a garden.
Expressing time and marking a point in the life of its inhabitant, Darling Point sees Studio ZAWA rework a 1960s-era apartment and endow it a new chapter.
Inspired by the brutalist architectural styles of Brazil, Kyle Bay House sees Greg Natale combine layers of warmth through natural materiality and an animated colour palette to invigorate the home.
With a careful sense of cohesion between its past and present identity, Rozelle Workers Cottage by architects Klaus Carson and interior designers Studio Soleil combines contemporary design.
Balmoral House sees Potter and Wilson consider the orientation and existing heat loads, redirecting unwanted energy capture and overlaying a newfound direction and identity.
Born from a love of mid-century modernism, Little Manly House sees CHROFI offer a crisp and linear addition to coastal surrounds, stretching upward to engage in views of the ocean beyond.
Using a contrasted approach, Litera Trotta Architecture combines a dark encasing external condition with a light-filled and illuminated interior to maximise the narrowness of the site.
Paddington Terrace sees Trias focus on inserting the energy and vibrancy of the young couple and their growing family, enlivening spaces through warm textures and artisanal craft.
Grove House sees Clayton Orszaczky use concrete as a sculptural agent to carve the new additional form, guided by movement, functionality, and orientation.
Sitting concealed behind its original heritage façade, Paddington Terrace sees MCK Architecture and Juicy Design breathe new life into an existing heritage home.
Consciously preserving the home’s Victorian charm, Roth Architecture has successfully transformed Magney St, a cramped cottage in Sydney’s eastern suburbs, into a spacious, light-filled home.
Paddington House II sees Tribe Studio Architects extrude the existing roofline and silhouette to reach deeper into the site and create a voluminous living area.
As its name rightfully suggests, Hidden Garden House by TRIAS is the ultimate oasis, drawing on Japanese design principles to prioritise the garden at every turn.
Oyster Bay sees MCK Architects ensure a continued legacy between owners and the surrounds with the form engaging with the elements through a simplified approach.
Stable House sees Sibling Architecture combine a familiar vernacular with the existing narrative on site, forming an arrangement of dwellings that intercept and support one another.