Modern Thai House sees CLO Studios and Chris Clout Design combine to propose an elevated and refined contemporary residence that connects meaningfully to the natural elements.
The Stella Collective has reimagined the privately-owned suites at Port Douglas’s Club Tropical Resort and the resulting design reflects the free and easy atmosphere of Far North Queensland.
Studio Yugen collaborates with architects and builders to seamlessly deliver high end residential interiors in south-east Queensland, in this case working alongside local experts Reece Keil Design.
Horizon sees Shaun Lockyer Architects use clearly defined rectilinear forms to ensure the home has a defined presence with extensive glazing to soften the overall resolve.
Noosa Residence sees Tim Ditchfield Architects balance open and closed elements through a timeless lens to ensure a lasting resolve and appropriate response to the surrounding sub-tropical climate.
Following the fall of the terrain, Toowoomba House sees Nielsen Jenkins navigate the landscape to create a restful and disconnected home integrated into the surrounds.
Timbin House sees Conrad Gargett emphasise the outward direction of movement and flow, cloaking the exterior with operable façade features that encourage light and ventilation.
Designed by Annabel Kerr Interior Design, the latest store for luxury womenswear brand Viktoria & Woods takes inspiration from its seaside surroundings.
The Museum of Small Things sits beneath the luxurious Calile Hotel in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley. With architecture and interior design by Richards & Spence.
Navigating its steeply sloping site with ease, Amiri sees Residence Studio and Kelder Architects work together, stacking multiple levels upward to optimise on views outward and align functionality.
The Sushi Room’s interior – designed by the team at Richards & Spence – possesses a kind of pared-back minimalism that could have come straight out of Tokyo.
Meta Description: Through a reorientation of its volumes, Bardon Gully House sees Myers Ellyett re-sculpt the Queensland home to embrace an outdoor lifestyle.
East Brisbane Residence sees Greg Natale draw from the drama and opulence of traditional Italian estate residences to form a riverfront home of a similar grandeur.
Conceived as a prototype for flexible and sustainable housing, LiveWorkShare House by Bligh Graham Architects offers creative, long-term solutions to combat suburb densification.
Sitting concealed behind a traditional Queenslander frontage, Glyn sees DAHA open the existing home graciously to the rear to reveal a generously scaled addition that welcomes an engagement with light
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.
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.
Pinjarra Hills House sees Sullivan Skinner utilise the site to directly respond to context, opening to the landscape and overlaying moments of privacy.
Coorparoo House by Brisbane architecture firm Nielsen Jenkins references the typical vernacular of a Queenslander with a refined yet entirely unpretentious minimalism.
Freihaus Gatehouse follows the fall of the sloping site in opening the existing volumes to the northern aspect and the surrounding landscape, seeing Gockel Architects recast an existing pre-war home.
Bulimba Residence sees CG Design Studio work within the existing outer shell of the family home to craft a considered and elevated interior to suit its current owners and their stage in life.
Brookes Street by Hogg and Lamb, James Russell Architect and Heath Williams is part adaptive re-use and a complete reimagining of the potential of the unused public space.
Set in Brisbane’s leafy western suburb of Bardon, Gully House by nicholas harvey architect. navigates a narrow hillside to access a verdant backyard gully below.
Cottonwood Residence sees Shaun Lockyer Architects enhance the recently completed home, folding in a nuanced finishing that further celebrates its Noosa locale.
K2 sees Joe Adsett Architects and Elm Interiors propose and optimise opportunities for flow, dissolving thresholds and creating an interconnected home that feels calm and serene.
Onyx sees Story Design Collective create a unique and defining home of dark materiality and texture as a contrasting offering among the surrounding natural context.
Bank Road sees Shaun Lockyer Architects acknowledge the rich history and prominence of its original architect in sculpting its next chapter and extending a legacy.
Created by designer, stylist and maker Jacqueline Kaytar in the comfort of her own home studio, Repose’s purpose-driven collection encompasses ethically-made organic hemp textiles.
Lee Mathews clothing is at once stylish, timeless and functional. It is this ethos that also underlies Fiona Lynch’s interpretation of the brand’s Brisbane retail store in Fortitude Valley.
Encompassing three immaculately curated residences, Glasshouse Burleigh Heads by development firm Spyre Group represents the ultimate in high-end residential living.
Highvale House sees Alexandra Buchanan Architecture propose an aptly fitting addition among the surrounding vernacular of singular buildings and dwellings as a nod to the rural Australian shed.
SAOIR sees REFRESH* draw inspiration from the traditional early timber homes of the area, allowing the contemporary structure to fuse both past and present.
Winship Shed by Reddog Architects focuses on the idea of creating a ‘jewellery box’, seeing a protective inner layer shielded by a hardened and encasing outer sleeve.
Engawa sees Arcke focus on the experience of the spaces and their ability to be opened and closed as needed, emphasising a sense of both connection and separation.
The home of architect Shaun Locker, Lockyer Residence sees carefully staged restoration and additions to an existing heritage house, combining modernist and traditional Queenslander references.
Together with CLO Studios, Sealand Architects proposes an enveloping home in Australis, which openly connects to the surrounds, cocooning from the inside out.
Annie Street sees Lockyer Architects combine a regularity and linear approach to form together with a restrained and textural palette to ensure a natural connection between old and new.
James Bond House sees Studio LMD, Epoch Architecture and Robert Eyres Building Design propose a calming retreat, where neutral tones and open apertures connect beyond the home.
Clay Fern House sees Paul Butterworth Architect overlay a cohesive framework to elevate everyday functionality and reinforce key connections internally, between inside and out.
Resembling a modern sculptural pinecone, Norfolk Burleigh Heads is shaped with overlapping organic balcony forms that jut out and form a soft edge to an otherwise unanimated building.
Biànca by Richards & Spence draws inspiration from the vernacular of cherished Italian trattorias and the breezy outdoor spirit of Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley.
Ascot Garden House sees Nicholas Harvey Architect and Rhea Jeffrey combine to further ground the existing home and create key conduits that optimise the site and its extents.
Conceived as an urban oasis in Brisbane’s Fortitude Valley, The Calile Hotel designed by local firm Richards & Spence is a catalyst for indulgence and discovery.
One Five Six sees Conrad Architects look beyond the typical Queenslander style in designing this New Farm development, bringing together the elegance and timelessness of an international city.
While the warmth and texture of timber has seen it remain popular in architectural applications for centuries, it can be difficult and time-consuming to maintain that initial glow. Enter Knotwood.