Erskine River House by Kerstin Thompson Architects is a tailored response to client and context, reflecting a meaningful rapport between inhabitant and architect.
In the backstreets of Melbourne’s bustling inner north, 388 Barkly Street is designed by DREAMER in collaboration with Breathe and developed by OUTsideIN.
Gosford will soon be home to Central Coast Quarter – the area’s first residential and retail precinct, designed by DKO Architecture and developed by St Hilliers.
Sandiland by Studio John Irving Architects takes inspiration from the client’s generous nature and the surrounding natural beauty, an ode to the joy of both company and seclusion.
Fisher & Paykel’s Trade Resources offers industry professionals and detail-focused clients the extensive tools and resources required for design and installation.
Fisher & Paykel’s Touch Screen Ovens are a range of premium cooking products controlled by a beautifully designed touchscreen interface with intuitive guided cooking capability.
Designed around the twin ideals of ‘kitchen perfection’ and ‘design freedom’, Fisher & Paykel’s latest Minimal Range of cooking and companion appliances is a marriage of form and function.
Fisher & Paykel’s new Integrated Column Wine Cabinet has been designed to create the optimal conditions for wine storage and enhance the experience of curating a personal wine collection.
Fisher & Paykel’s design and development process is strongly informed by dialogue with architects and designers, and the Future Design Workshop has been integral to broadening this discussion.
Franklin Road by Jack McKinney Architects and Katie Lockhart Studio begins as a traditional Edwardian villa and concludes as a small yet perfectly formed new addition.
The Malvern home of interior designer Sarah Reid effortlessly manages all the requirements of a family with three young children while also exemplifying its inhabitants’ love of contemporary art.
The second project completed under the Nightingale Model, Nightingale 2 by Six Degrees Architects and HIP V. HYPE represents the growth of a thriving local community coming to fruition.
Harry and Viv’s House by Ha Architecture is a small Victorian that questions expected relationships while maintaining the integrity of the detailed heritage façade.
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.
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.
Rebecca Judd’s Forever Home sees Biasol engage with the idea of a ‘forever home’ to create a contemporary response to the original Spanish Colonial house, and a home that truly befits the family.
The kitchen is the heart of the home and Fisher & Paykel’s new Classic Freestanding Range captures the timeless presence of the traditional range with a contemporary twist.
Surrounded by bush yet gesturing toward the city, Slow Beam is informed by its rare position at the intersection of urban life and rugged native bushland.
Representing a meeting of minds, the Ridgeway House saw Ha Architecture work closely with fellow architect Steve Coster to design a compact charred timber extension to a Victorian weatherboard.
Nestled deferentially behind a double-storey Victorian terrace, the Chamfer House by Ha Architecture gracefully addresses the inherent challenges of its restricted site and heritage context.
With a new range of black appliances designed to match, Fisher & Paykel has drawn on insights from architects and designers to introduce a new level of design freedom.
Defined by the interplay of lightness and weight, the Paddington House creates an industrial, urban aesthetic that is unexpectedly resonant with the original Georgian architecture.
A kitchen that challenges all expectations, the space is a haven of tranquility, more a place of quiet retreat than typical busy work zone, finding the balance between minimalism and functionality.
The architectural embodiment of a relaxed, elegant coastal lifestyle, the Sorrento home carefully balances luxury and simplicity to create a tranquil retreat.
No ordinary heritage renovation, the project is a testament to the designers’ ability to work with old and new, finding a new design language while respecting the building’s history.
We speak to interior designer Sarah Wolfendale of Techne about designing her own apartment, creating a small, beautiful family home in a historical building in Kew, Melbourne.
Designer Nicholas Gurney’s latest project combines aesthetic simplicity with intelligent functionality. We speak with him about his approach to creating compact, efficient design.
We speak with architect Brad Swartz about why he sees the project as a response to technology-driven change and his approach to designing beautiful small spaces.
Kitchen customisation reaches new heights with the release of Fisher & Paykel’s new Column refrigeration range, created in collaboration with leading architects and designers.
Fisher & Paykel’s mission is ‘to be the world’s most human centred appliance brand’, a principle that seemed perfectly encapsulated in the Future Design Workshop.
Doherty Design transform a heritage former church into a contemporary family home. Taking inspiration from the church's original purpose as a space of tranquility, the home becomes a peaceful retreat.
The Terrarium House is a truly unique home, whose design responding to many constraints, reinterpreting them as architectural features and blurring the distinction between indoor and outdoor.
Whiting Architects’ Pocket House is a perfect example of quality over quantity. On just 96m2, the light-filled project proves it is the design approach, not the amount of space, that matters most.
We spent a day in Milan with designer Carole Whiting exploring the best of Design Week, from the lavish Palazzo Serbelloni to Rosanna Orlandi's contemporary design collection, and EuroCucina.
Jean-Pierre, founder of award-winning Australian studio Biasol, lived in Italy for 8 years, so he knows the city like a local. We caught up during Salone de Mobile to discover Jean-Pierre's Milan.
It's an exciting moment when an Antipodean brand makes an impression on the world stage. For iconic New Zealand brand Fisher & Paykel, today marks the beginning of their first exhibit at EuroCucina.
While technology has exponentially advanced since Mark began working with F&P 30 years ago, it is his focus on people & how they live & use their products, that is at the heart of his design process.
This project tackles everything from bringing contemporary passive solar principles into a west-facing, 1920s brick house, to designing a minimalist kitchen for the clients who love to entertain.