Issue No. 17 now available to order
Issue No.17 Order now.
x

Habitats: City, Coast and Forest

Book Flatlay Cover Front Transparent Trio[1] Frame 83

A collectable trio of hardcover books

$85.00 + SHIPPING
Issue No. 1 - 3
These three issues of The Local Project showcase exceptional works from leading Australian and international architects, including Peter Stutchbury Architecture, Kennon+, Herbst and many more. Featured projects from renowned firms such as Ritz&Ghougassian, Fearon Hay, Breathe Architecture, Tom Robertson Architects, Chenchow Little and CHROFI Architects offer an inspiring look at contemporary design across the globe.

Each issue spans over 300 pages of meticulously curated content, with in-depth articles, exclusive interviews and stunning photography. Profiles of influential creatives like Sarah Ellison, Nick McDonald (Made by Morgen), David Flack (Flack Studio), Adam Lynch and Dale Hardiman (Dowel Jones), Scott Henderson (Concrete Collective) and Georgina Jeffries provide a rare, behind-the-scenes glimpse into their processes and innovative practices.

With insights from an esteemed collection of architects and designers, these issues are a must-have for anyone seeking to explore the forefront of modern architecture and design.
$85.00 + Shipping
Inside Issue No. 1

Denison Rivulet
Taylor and Hinds Architects

On a bend of the Denison Rivulet, Taylor and Hinds Architects have placed several humble timber-clad structures. The studied simplicity of these elevations exemplifies the architects’ focus inward to create spaces that cannot be read from the exterior but which must be experienced from within.

Chamfer House
Ha Architecture

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.

Bluff House
Rob Kennon Architects

Emerging from amongst coastal sheoaks and banksias, the reflective glass facade of the Bluff House by Rob Kennon Architects mirrors the surrounding vegetation yet instantly marks the structure as foreign to the natural environment.
AND MORE
Inside Issue No. 2

Cabbage Tree House
Peter Stutchbury Architecture

Emerging from the hillside, Cabbage Tree House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture is a built manifestation of place, whose purpose is to heighten the understanding and emotional experience of the land that informs the architecture.

Wanaka House
Fearon Hay

Ringed by the mountains surrounding the Lake Wanaka basin, encircled by a concrete perimeter wall, and cloaked by perforated steel shutters, Fearon Hay’s Wanaka House is defined by the layered interaction between a series of concentric forms and spaces.

Edgars Creek
Breathe Architecture

In an urban context, connection between the land, people, and the buildings they inhabit is often lost. Edgars Creek House by Breathe Architecture is a rare example of a home whose design offers a reconnection with the essential qualities of a landscape almost entirely superseded by the encroaching built environment.
AND MORE
Inside Issue No. 3

Redwood
Chenchow Little Architects

Redwood encompasses two primary buildings that occupy the site in Balmain, above Sydney Harbour. One, a 19th-century sandstone cottage, is the clients’ family home. The other, a lithe yet structured new contemporary addition, is dedicated to hosting formal gatherings. Though deliberately separate, the two share a rapport that creates a full and rounded experience of the site, the architecture, and the view.

Waiheke House
Cheshire Architects

A stone wall emerges from the ridge to become the central spine between two pavilions, one open, the other closed. Just as the wall seems almost to have been excavated from the ground, Cheshire Architects’ Waiheke House was conceived less as the outcome of a design process and more as a discovery, arrived at through heuristic exploration.

Toorak Residence
Workroom

Conceived as a solid mass from which spaces have been carved out, Workroom’s Toorak Residence is a family home crafted from concrete – the robust nature of the concrete form representing the clients’ brief for an enduring and tactile home.
AND MORE
Published three times a year
Get The Local Project delivered straight to you with an annual subscription.
Published three times a year, The Local Project print periodical is a curated insight into the latest architecture and design in Australia, New Zealand and North America.
Get The Local Project delivered straight to you with an annual subscription.
Published three times a year, The Local Project print periodical is a curated insight into the latest architecture and design in Australia, New Zealand and North America.
Back Issues
This website uses cookies to improve your browsing experience. Please accept to continue. Accept Cookies