King has been at the forefront of Australian furniture design for nearly five decades, and its ethos surrounding sustainability is the bedrock of the company’s varied pursuits.
Spring Hill House sees Owen Architecture focus on an efficiency in planning and optimisation, proposing the encasing green veil to embed a sense of personality amongst the streetscape.
Australian transdisciplinary artist Ian Strange began his practice in Western Australia exploring architecture, space and notions of home and challenging the very nature of their existence.
In crafting her own home, Lani Fixler has created a place that is at once private and personal while also engaging in an open conversation with the streetscape.
Rosewood House sees Madeleine Blanchfield Architects propose a home of crafted proportions, focussing on a passive and actively engaged series of spaces that respond to context.
Giving depth to the approach, Luigi Rosselli Architects carefully weaves old and new, preserving the heritage stylings among a contemporary occupation of Paddo Pool Terrace.
Hunters Hill Residence sees POCO Designs uplift an existing Federation era home, animating details, incorporating curious moments and emphasising a contemporary and muted sensibility throughout.
With origins dating back to a modest suburban Adelaide factory in 1947, Oliveri has been at the forefront of Australian design and manufacturing for 75 years.
Aligned with the brand’s core pillars of enduring quality and timelessness, Claybrook prevails as a star of Rogerseller’s carefully curated European portfolio.
Honouring the heritage of the existing mansion the residence sits within, Danmark Point Piper sees Michiru Higginbotham fuse an enduring respect for the previous with an optimistic outlook.
Lightly engaging with the site it respectfully shares with the existing landscape, PaperBark Pod forms sees Bark Architects propose the first stage of a larger master-planned development.
Offering an evolving selection of furniture, lighting, accessories and joinery, Collective is devoted to tailoring unique design and furniture solutions for discerning clientele.
Aligning with its coastal positioning, Bayside Blue combines linear and curved approaches, seeing My Architect and Skulptur Architecture collaborate to propose a sense of balance.
Delivering a conscientious refinement that is the hallmark of its reputation, Euroluce’s application of visually impeccable solutions deftly communicates the brand’s passion for quality lighting.
Inspired by the natural tones of the surrounding Australian bush, Longwood by Cantilever Interiors is a tasteful renovation of an original stone structure on Broodmare farm in the Strathbogie Ranges.
After three-and-a-half years of collaboration, the work of architects Noxon Giffen and landscape designers McGregor Coxall has culminated in a sensitive series of shelters along the Grampians Peaks.
Showcased in the 24th exhibition of Sculpture by the Sea, Array 8 by Benjamin Jay Shand aims to capture and bend light with its unique cubic shape and use of materials.
Melbourne based designer Christopher Boots’s crystal adorned lighting is just one part of his evolving creative practice driven by intuition and necessity.
As a commercial FF&E program, MCM Workshop offers full-service resolutions for an array of projects, focusing on functionality, aesthetics and durability.
Australian furniture, accessories and homewares brand Papaya has been quietly supplying its signature aesthetic to residential projects from their serene showrooms in Melbourne and Sydney.
Weeroona House – a Queen Anne villa in Melbourne’s Hawthorn – features a noteworthy copper-clad extension by Neil Architecture and spirited touches by Simone Haag.
Pinjarra Hills House sees Sullivan Skinner utilise the site to directly respond to context, opening to the landscape and overlaying moments of privacy.
Refining the built environment, Brickworks is a leading manufacturer of sustainable building materials, championing brick as the means to environmentally-friendly, elevated design.
The Frame Bedroom and Frame Office collections expand on the success of the Kett Frame Living collection, representing a complete storage solution for the home.
Head Street in Brighton by Architecton is a large family home which takes cues from its bayside location through appealing spatial and material qualities.
Connecting people and places with its sleek design, the ZETR 25 series promotes a seamless and sustainable option that aims to revolutionise the workplace and public spaces.
Tongue & Groove launches a new brand identity and expanded product range, alongside a suite of innovative resources developed to support Australia’s architecture and design community.
Park House sees Pleysier Perkins and Mimi Design combine to carefully craft a home that respects its origins, while extruding the essence of the home into a new addition.
The Seat House sees Atlas Architects blur the lines between inside and out, ensuring a direct connection to place while creating a cohesive and functioning family home.
Matthews House sees Kennedy Nolan transform an existing late-modernist home into an allied and intentional series of spaces, enriched through texture and tonality, focusing on an outward connection.
Externally, Wimbledon Avenue is an audacious statement of artfully arranged brickwork. Sculptural exploration continues within, culminating in the conjunctive centrepiece – a staircase by S&A Stairs.
AKM Apartment Richmond sees the reshaping of a piece of local history, where Melanie Beynon Architects recognise nods to industry with a more contemporary occupation.
Carlotta + Gee and Nadia Fairfax-Wayne’s new springtime napery collection stars multifunctional tableware, napkins and placemats that celebrate form and function.
Coorparoo House by Brisbane architecture firm Nielsen Jenkins references the typical vernacular of a Queenslander with a refined yet entirely unpretentious minimalism.
ForestOne is committed to providing responsibly sourced, premium materials to the Australian market, and is driven by a forward-thinking mindset and sustainability-focused philosophy.
Silver Back sees an addition clad in silver tones sit to the rear of the existing, Goodwin Scarfone Belgiorno-Nettis combine a functional resilience with nods to the familiar.
Coinciding with the brand’s 20th anniversary, HAY brings its vibrancy and flair for design to the heart of Melbourne with the opening of its second Australian store.
Combining state-of-the-art production processes, premium timber and expert installation, Kustom Timber creates flooring to enjoy for generations to come.
The refreshing haven of Lighting Collective’s new Byron Bay showroom reveals an ease and sophistication that underlies the company, now in its 11th year.
Spanning 30 dedicated years in the industry, Forté has solidified its footing as one of New Zealand’s leading providers of architectural timber products.
Available in Australia exclusively through Stylecraft, Karimoku New Standard fuses contemporary design with traditional Japanese craftmanship to produce timeless furniture collections for the home.
Visitors to interior designer Wendy Holland’s Mount Martha house are drawn to the central feature in her open-plan living room – a suspended JC Bordelet Eva 992 fireplace from Sculpt.
Thomson House sees C. Kairouz Architects rework the existing Edwardian-era home, expanding on the original footprint to create a connected series of spaces that open to the newly introduced garden.
Spurred by the desire to disrupt the typical flooring landscape, FYBER premium carpets elevate spaces by offering enduring quality, sustainability and innovation.