The Shipwreck Lodge is a luxury 20-bed, Eco-tourism resort located in an isolated location in the midst of the wild, but beautifully desolate Skeleton Coast Desert in Namibia.
This renovation project completely recreates an abandoned city squat. Guided by light and materiality, the project utilises recycled timber and focuses on sustainability in an extremely short timeframe.
The St Josephs heritage church in Warnambool, Victoria has undergone a significant overhaul, exposing its long history and creating a welcoming community building with activated street frontage.
This table responds to an existing curved building façade. The table top is finished to a narrow profile and appears to float freely from three legs. The classic components of traditional timber-turning verge on decorative but are simplified by their precise lines and repetition.
Taking inspiration from a lost grove of fig trees, this flexible venue provides a variety of experiences for diners, creating an intimate, comfortable, and familiar space. Sourced from old housing stock, the exposed timber reflects an honesty in the venue's dining values.
This home receives a refined modular extension with relaxed, light-filled gathering spaces. Set in its leafy suburban location, this family's new peaceful haven features sustainably-sourced blackbutt timber installed with efficiency.
Revamped and renewed, the dated interior of this established barbershop emerges as a dual space. Capatilising on the lack of coffee in the area, the shop maximises all forty of its square metres to establish a relaxing hub for locals and passers by.
Inbetween Architecture and Curious Grace collaborate to produce this dynamic exhibition. Elevating and encouraging visual interest and engagement from passers-by, the dressed pine timber stall complements the furniture design elements without competing with them.
Using practical and intelligent design, a beautiful spine-like structure of the curved ceiling transforms the Orana Overture Hall into an organism and a vessel for music and performance.
A welcome contrast to the surrounding 'concrete forest' of the CBD, the rooftop bar of the Corner Hotel utilises FSC new regrowth blackbutt to provide a refreshing change of pace.
This cost efficient project uses reclaimed timbers to bring a minimalist painting studio to a leafy backyard. The studio is designed to gently merge with its tranquil natural setting, inspiring artwork and bringing nature into the space.