Capturing the enviable site aspects, Megowan Architectural’s Three Angle House is born from a place of immersion. Sunken into its hillside locale, the architecture stands as a response to its site.
Black and White House sees Studio John Irving propose a home of contrasts, where the old and new are defined by each end of the spectrum of the monochromatic scale.
With its apex pointing northward, Studio John Irving’s The Dart is set on a dramatic and windswept hillside, anchored to the site by the strength and simplicity of the form.
Reinstating the original Arts and Crafts nuances of the home’s origins, CO-AP’s Orange Grove Cottage sees the previously tired home enriched through injections of colour and textural materiality.
Vaucluse House sees Luis Gomez-Siu bring a refined and considered approach to the extension of an existing semi-detached house through detailing and restraint conceived around ideas of framing.
MRTN Architects Good Life House references the surrounding early 20th-century housing and creates a generous, energy-efficient new family home that speaks to the clients connection their community.
A mid-century home nestled into a secluded bushland setting in Sydney’s Sugarloaf Bay, The Quarterdeck by Studio Gorman responds to the client’s relaxed playful personality.
Working within the constraints of the existing solid brick building, Solid House stands true to its name. Through its renovated bones, Coy Yiontis offers a nod to its past life that forms the literal.
Celebrating, extending and subverting the design language of an original brown brick 1960s walk up in St Kilda, Melbourne, Modo Pento is bestowed with a vibrant new interior by WOWOWA.
Restoring and adapting an original Queenslander home in Brisbane, Nielson Jenkins combines a sense of enveloping warmth and sensitivity to context through the expression of the original details.
A reconfiguration and extension a modest bungalow, MCK Architects’ Strong Arm House is a bold response to a demanding brief for a flexible and practical home for a busy family of seven.
Developed by ICON Developments, Inkerman & Nelson is a series of design-led homes that reaffirms ICON’s tradition of creating highly considered spaces.
Within its restricted envelope, O’Grady by Whiting Architects proposes a balanced play on concealing and revealing through the intersection of deliberately scaled volumes.
With references paying homage to its coastal location, South Coogee House by Partridge Daniels exhibits a strong modernist aesthetic fitting of its beachside surrounds.
Carefully crafting an atmosphere of relaxation and comfort, Carole Whiting Interiors’ Sage House employs neutral tones and organic materiality to fuse familiarity with elegance.
Family, work and creativity converge within the walls of Rob Kennon Architects’ Northcote House. Drawing on the warm robust materiality of red brick, the project encompassing family home, art studio.
An extension and renovation of an Edwardian home, Northcote Residence by Melanie Beynon Architecture & Interior Design is a warm and generous home for a young family of six.
Beaumont Building Design is an award-winning design and construction studio committed to achieving the perfect balance of aesthetics and functionality.
Studio Prineas’ Longwood Apartment occupies a wing of a 1960s apartment building in Darling Point, Sydney, resulting in a perimeter that has unobstructed views to Sydney Harbour.
Set amongst the treetops on New Zealand’s Waiheke Island, Vaughn McQuarrie Architects Palm Beach House is a contemporary interpretation of New Zealand’s traditional bach vernacular.
Design and socially led urban developers Neometro and Milieu are pleased to announce their first collaboration – One Wilson Ave, Brunswick – an integrated residential and commercial project.
Tom Robertson Architects’ Chapter House is so-named for its division into two distinct chapters. Behind the Victorian terrace, which was once the client’s childhood home.
Blue Balmoral sees Esoteriko Interiors bring a highly detailed and refreshingly contemporary approach to the design, expressed through bold, timeless and enduring gestures.
Inspired the original weatherboard bungalow that occupies the site, Michael Ong Design Offices Outside In House is an exercise in preserving character and history while injecting contemporary program.
Glebe Studio is a secondary dwelling located at the end of a laneway in Sydney’s Inner West, transforming existing underutilised space at the rear of a residential property.
Darling Vista House by Stafford Architecture brings a refined confidence to the outreaching aspects of the home, combining an awareness of materiality with a sensibility to place.
Through a creative exploration of materiality and a curious dissection of the inner-city site, Kats Cocktail by Meaghan White Architects sees the creation of two dwellings.
The spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Driven by an appreciation of textural materiality, Travis Walton Architecture’s Caulfield Residence is designed to around a considered and curated collection of adored fine art and objects.
The Cornerstone House references the quarries that originally occupied the area. Splinter Society plays with contrast to capture the layered and storied history of the site.
Seamlessly merging the architectural features of the historic home with contemporary design, Austin Design Associates’ Dutch Gable House is a boldly monochromatic, sophisticated renovation.
An enterprising home in North Melbourne for a retired couple downsizing, Dan Gayfer’s Melrose Terrace, a small-statured home whose functionality belies its single-fronted terrace origins.
For Chamberlain Architects, the first Ruum collection marked a radical departure from their usual practice of design. Yet with inherent challenges came the rare opportunity to explore a new approach
Moat’s Corner is an interactive haven designed by Vibe Design Group, and features a completely customised, boundary-pushing window and doors specification by Thermeco.
As generous as it is unexpected, Austin Maynard Architects’ King Bill House is an impassioned offering from the clients and architects to the suburb of Fitzroy.
Lighthouse is a home of simplicity, with architects Room 11 focusing on form and functionality to create a small, beautifully detailed home for a retired couple in Hobart.
Taking heed from its rugged west-coast location, Kaipara Harbour House by Crosson Architects is inspired by the burial ground of ships it sits upon. Akin to upturned hulls in the sand.
JJ House sees Bokey Grant Architects maintain the modest scale of the original workers cottage and meticulously stitch together the old and the new within the existing footprint.
Sitting as its own bird-like form to the rear of a Victorian home, Retallack Thompson’s Erskineville Creature proposes a solution to the issues of inner-urban densification and housing affordability.
Palmer Street rises to meet its many challenges. Brad Swartz Architects’ respectful sensitivity to the home’s context and history creates a retrained layering of heritage and contemporary elements.
Composed as a series of courtyards and pavilions, Lake Wendouree House by John Wardle Architects pays homage to the gardens of the regional Victorian city of Ballarat.
Envisioned as a marriage of old and new, Toorak House by Rosanna Ceravolo takes inspiration from its owners to propose a generous and robust, yet stylish renovation of a heritage-era home.
Crafted through the discerning lens of Bates Smart, Living Edge’s new Melbourne showroom is a considered, immersive and timeless space dedicated to celebrating the brand’s curated collection.
Stepping behind the Victorian façade of Sanders & King’s South Melbourne House, one discovers an interior that, inspired by the clients’ love of contemporary European design.
Embracing its location and identity within one of Melbourne’s most envied residential postcodes, Heyington Place by Carr combines refinement and elevated restraint in its approach.
Archer Office’s Camperdown Warehouse sees an artful approach to adaptive re-use result in the design of a three-bedroom residence with no internal walls.
Crosson Architects’ Kawau Island House combines the familiar with a sense of endurance and creates a place of disconnection from the hectic pace of everyday life.