This Pandanus home of Spark Architect provides multitude of different indoor and outdoor spaces to suit all seasons and mix of family and private activities.
The Blackbird house by Rogan Nash Architects is an elegant gable which peers through the surrounding urban landscape whilst being modern and design-driven.
Rogan Nash Architect design plays on the Frank Lloyd Wright concept of Compression and Release which in this de-sign is imagined as The Stage and The Cave.
The Infinity House by CplusC Architectural Workshop in Sydney’s northern beaches suburb of Curl Curl was an exercise in material, time, and cost efficiency.
Our design response was informed by the clients’ unique approach to retirement, downsizing from a house to not one, but three apartments, for a life of seasonal travel.
The brief called for a large program and a desire for the building to maximise the sites amenity and views whilst reflecting the clients respective cultural aesthetics.
Our clients approached us to reinvigorate life and light into their existing workers' cottage on a heavily constrained site in the inner Sydney suburb of Birchgrove.
This sensitively designed group of four three-level townhouses by Mancini Made stands at the end of a quiet residential street bordered by abundant native parkland.
A material palette of American Oak with terrazzo & brick tiles praises these robust characteristics, while leather detailing & custom carpets off a soft touch.
While the space has the interest of some spatial dramatisation, the design's prosperity is measured by the nature of the atmosphere and intimacy of the inside.
As part of their continuing renewal of Victoria Harbour, Lendlease ordered Technē Architecture + ID to produce a novel state-of- the art sales & leasing centre.
Within the architecture there is a focus on texture; white paint reduces this palette of timber, steel, brickwork and roughcast render to texture alone.
Building crafts used are rough-cast render, detailed carpentry, shingles, metal-work & joinery where the craft of the trades is seen through expressive design.
The task in designing this house was to accommodate a family on a sloping site – long and relatively narrow and incorporating an existing Victorian house.
A courtyard typology ensures privacy and access to northern winter sun, yet in this straight forward plan a number of ‘in-between’ spaces have been considered.
An alteration and addition to a post-war brick veneer house with a restrained palette. Living spaces are brightly & visually connected by large areas of glazing
KN's architectural approach illustrates the trajectory of the site – it is an adaptive re-use which clarifies & intensifies the perception of its change of use.
Designed with the desire to facilitate meetings, interactions and communication between people while also providing a space for quiet work and conversations.