(inside) Interior Design Review's 12th annual Interior Design Excellence Awards honoured a diverse group of luminary Australian design professionals, each with a brilliantly distinct style and approach.
One of the main events for the local design industry over the last 27 years will not be running next year.
Bosco Verticale by Italian firm Boeri Studio was created to set a new benchmark for environmentally sustainable apartment housing in the region.
Capable of simulating “surfable” 1.5-meter-high waves, the heated salt-water pool is envisioned as an extension of Central Pier in the Docklands.
A diverse group including Adam Goodrum, Coco Flip, Dinosaur Designs, Ken Done, Hecker Guthrie and Romance Was Born have recreated an iconic chair to raise funds and awareness for deserving charities.
Open Agenda aims to test the limits of what architecture is through a critical platform, seeking to amplify the voice of recent Australian and New Zealand architecture graduates.
The standout event unveils a vibrant new program, focused on displaying the best of the Australian design industry.
Designer Kate Hannaford of Moth Design was tasked with applying a fresh new aesthetic to Alto, using a casually elegant contemporary style.
(inside) Interior Design Review magazine’s prestigious Interior Design Excellence Awards showcase the best of Australian product and interior design.
Darebin City Council invites local artists working on small to larger scale projects to invigorate the suburban landscape.
Presented by JamFactory in conjunction with Stylecraft, the awards will honour excellence in Australian furniture design.
Bathe presents technology that turns your bath into a speaker and an illuminating shower head at a recent launch in South Melbourne.
The Chinese leader’s recent comments have the potential to affect the landscape of architectural practice worldwide, as China’s construction boom has created a catalyst for contemporary architecture, with many Western practices relying on the business of providing extravagant projects.
A great range of works this year showcased Melbourne's diversity, with a uniting element across all successful works being a commitment to a high standard of design.
Growing the Seeds is the first event in Australia aiming to crowdsource a national action plan with a mission to introduce 20% more urban green space by 2020.
Renzo Piano and Herzog & de Meuron are among the list of globally acclaimed architects vying for a chance to create a dynamic new hub for Sydney's art scene.
Gerard Smith Design bagged the top prize – National Building Design of the Year Award – for its project River House in the Sunshine Coast, Queensland.
The project houses a private residence and garage within two 'crisp barn-like forms' clad in vertical run steel and recycled bricks taken from the devastation caused by the Christchurch earthquakes.
The entrants were invited to create a concept that is relevant to the time and raises questions about what design will be like in the future.
Five winners, selected from the shortlisted entries, will get a chance to go on a free study tour of Tokyo, Paris and London where they will get first-hand experience of some of the best architectural sites and practices.
It features an exciting program of events celebrating achievements in Western Australia’s built environment and raising community awareness about the importance of high quality design.
Dean Dewhirst's new book, From the Ground Up: 20 Stories of a Life in Architecture, to be launched as part of the World Architecture Day celebrations, features leading Australian architectural practitioners, who reveal what drew them to the profession.
Inspired by the shape of hexagons and water droplet ripples, the new light installation has been designed using interactive digital technology by UNSW students in the Australian School of Architecture and Design.
Bringing Australia’s architecture and design community into focus since 2009.