Presenting a solid-looking, fibre cement-clad volume to the street, Corner House by Archier sets up a productive tension between robust finishes and refined timber.
Luke Stanley Architects’ renovation has given fresh but authentic expression to a family bungalow, creating a unified home of understated strength and attentive functionality.
Brunswick Yard sees Carr elevate the storied and layered narrative that is Brunswick and propose a series of homes that respond with fitting refinement.
Stylecraft and StylecraftHOME are excited to introduce Norwegian furniture company Eikund to their collection of leading European furniture and lighting brands.
Techne Studio sees Techne Architecture and Interior Design turn well-honed knowledge into practice in the proposal of the studio’s own dedicated workspace in Carlton.
ArtBank sees Edition Office take cues from the lineage of the site and its purpose storing years of contemporary Australian art to propose an aptly fitting and crafted space.
The Australian community embraced Melbourne Design Week 2021 with enthusiasm, showing an elevated appetite for design as a source of creative inspiration and a meaningful agent of change.
Not yet two years old, interior design studio YSG has already had an outsized impact on Australian design, renowned for interiors that feel like intricate set pieces.
Mr.P Studio sees Ritz & Ghougassian combine a refined consideration in proposing a series of spaces that redefine the needs of the studio, conceived through a crisp and contemporary lens.
Coastal Home sees K.P.D.O. draw on the endearing outdoor spaces as inspiration, focusing on key vistas and natural flows of movement between inside and out.
Alexander House sees an existing residence transformed into a uniquely multi-disciplinary series of zones for Alexander&CO. that bridge preconceived notions of home, work and studio.
Magis’ latest collection Costume is a complete reinvention of the conventional sofa. Informed, sustainable design practices are championed, with design made to last.
Inspired by the rich and diverse Australian landscape, the latest statement pieces to join Ross Gardam’s Breeze Collection speak to earthy tones and bold finishes.
17 new colours added to the Laminex Colour Collection draw on nature as a central point of reference and represent a significant evolution of the Laminex colour offering.
Terrace House 1 sees Dreamer Lab insert a restrained and subtle addition to the rear of a heritage home, opening up to the elements and blanketed by its own warming living native green roof.
Glebe House sees Tribe Studio Architects enliven the heritage home, embedding contemporary purpose and intercepting the journey of movement through the home, extending outward to the rear laneway.
Sunshine Beach House sees Sealand Architects propose a modern homage to the traditional Queenslander home, anchored to its site, through freshly linear gestures.
Prior sees Ritz & Ghougassian brings a signature rigour and rhythmic approach in conjuring a unique and softly muted dining experience, with an emphasis on the elemental.
The Australian Institute of Architects has announced the winners of the annual WA Architecture Awards, acknowledging outstanding contributions to the built environment.
Set within Sydney’s eastern suburb of Bellevue Hill, through a stately, three storey family home, Christina Markham has manifested an elegant slice of New York opulence.
Baker Street House sees Pleysier Perkins use gestures of compression and release to create intimate moments within the home, while simultaneously connecting beyond the built edge.
Conceived from a series of bold and linear gestures, Sussex House sits weighted to its site opens through clean apertures to its surrounding manicured landscape.
Moorooka House sees Maytree Studios devise a series of techniques to create a bold and propose a floating form that sits hovering over the landscape below.
Through a playfully bold approach, Penthouse II by K.P.D.O. captures the spirit and character of its owners, expressing colour and movement through the curation of treasured art and iconic furniture.
In Māori language, the word ‘noho’ means to sit, stay, dwell, live. This word, and the action and intention it embodies, forms the foundation upon which noho move, the furniture brand.
There Café sees Ewert Leaf combine crafted elements with texture and a focus on authentic materiality and details, while connecting to the site and an industrial narrative.
Three House sees John Ellway combine an operable and open approach in proposing a home that embraces its siting and aims to work with the natural elements.
Conservatory Adaptation sees Architecture Associates carefully insert supporting elements to allow an embrace of the unused and bring in meaningful life.
Smash Repair House sees Matt Elkan Architect deliberately turn inward and introspectively open the building with a focus on the experience of being within the home.
Turn House sees Rebecca Naughtin Architect pay homage to the existing and diverse layers of the combined industrial and residential area, to propose a home that fuses sensibilities of both.
In this busy modern world, AHEC’s ‘Ten Minutes With’ podcast is an achievable and engaging addition to the listening lists of any architecture and design professional.
American oak by ASH is reshaping how American Oak is supplied to Australia and, in doing so, reinforcing a longstanding commitment to sustainable timber supply.
House Woollahra sees Carla Middleton Architecture propose a light filled home connected to place through an open engagement with the surrounding gardens.
House Fit sees Panov Scott Architects draw on a progressive approach in imagining spaces that can be combined, joined and separated, all imbued with an enduring relevance.
Princes Hill House sees Atelier Wagner carefully extract and insert elements to transform the restrictive outer shell into a functioning and light filled family abode.
Nestled amid the sand dunes and grasses of Waihi Beach, Bowentown Bach by Edwards White is a dark timber-clad form that gives way to warm, embracing interiors.
AHEC presents the global project Discovered. Three Australian designers have been selected to participate, encompassing the themes of touch, reflection and strength in their designs.
Palm Tree House sees Madeleine Blanchfield Architects combine a considered and light-celebrating approach to optimise views over Sydney Harbour, while continuing the home’s past narrative.
Part of a growing collaboration, Viktoria and Woods Chadstone is the third that Golden has designed for the iconic Australian brand, drawing on a key ethos of simplicity and timelessness.
SJB Sydney Studio sees SJB utilise a layered approach in bringing elements of a more refined grain and domestic approach into the workplace, as an approachable and amenable place to gather and create.
Walkerville sees Williams Burton Leopardi interweave carefully considered contemporary insertions into a historic beauty to expand and open the home while engaging with the landscaped setting.