8 Beautifully Brutalist Residential Interiors
Born of the perennially popular modernist movement, only to be hijacked by public infrastructure; brutalism is something of an enigma when it comes to residential interiors.
Born of the perennially popular modernist movement, only to be hijacked by public infrastructure; brutalism is something of an enigma when it comes to residential interiors.
The concept of hygge is most simply described as the Danish design philosophy for creating atmospheres that cultivate comfort, contentment and wellbeing.
House with a Tree Room by Studio Bright is the heart-warming renovation of a family’s heritage-listed property in Northcote, Melbourne.
To find a terrace house any larger than small is a hard task, to find two side-by-side is harder still. But the clients of Rae House by Austin Maynard Architects had just such luck.
Designed by LAYAN and The Flaming Beacon, an illuminated façade screen transforms the interior of Light House with ever-changing light and shadows dependent on the seasons and time of day.
An unobtrusive and self-sufficient weekender by MRTN Architects offers rural solitude and an opportunity to work the land.
A couple living separately have joined forces under the one roof, engaging FMD Architects who they both worked with independently for a number of years before this latest renovation.
Five Australian architects and designers are embracing the centuries-old traditional Japanese technique of Shou Sugi Ban.
First Lessons House is the first architectural project of Ray Dinh Architecture and has proven a resounding success for the client and their family and friends.
In celebration of the launch of Habitus House of the Year, we’ve pulled together our favourite, jaw-dropping exteriors from the 2018 inaugural selection. Is one of the following your Habitus House of the Year? Vote now is for the People’s Choice.
The garage, the granny flat and the backyard shed have evolved into flexible spaces with private and public presence.
Acting as mediators and design catalysts, these small scale residential buildings make sense of desires for domesticity and engage with the realities of the densification of our suburban environment through thoughtful urban responses.