Designing affordable social housing that considers sustainability is integral to Melbourne-based architecture studio Bent Architecture.
Empowered by beautiful, intelligent, simple-to-use appliances, the kitchen is revitalising our quality of (home) life. One brand in particular is leading the renaissance.
What was old is new again in these five outstanding examples of heritage restoration projects that respond to residents' modern needs while respecting the history of the site.
Celebrating its original character and charm, Blank Canvas Architects fitted House 184 with Zip HydroTaps and a material palette that echoes the sophisticated elegance of its past and present.
A strong contrast between a folded steel roof and timber-clad walls brings illumination and new life to a tired weatherboard home by Megowan Architectural.
The BENT Annexe addition creates a feeling of all year round holiday charm with ample natural light in this 1960s Victorian home.
Boundary Street House by Chan Architecture implements contextual incongruity with industrial roots on a tricky, triangulated site.
WALA has turned this Australian heritage house on its head, with an addition that elevates living space upstairs and bedrooms downstairs.
As the demand for modular homes continues to grow, we look at five Australian examples that disrupt the out-dated stereotypes.
Bent Architecture explores sustainable, comfortable living with exceptional indoor outdoor flow and innovative design.
By recontexualising the original brickwork of this Melbourne family home, Inbetween Architecture inject a sense of history in this now contemporary home.