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25.01.2022 Issue 75 is on its way to subscribers now and on sale in newsagents September 3. In our annual small spaces issue, we explore little projects that go a long way. Plus, meet the social enterprise program transforming unused land into market gardens and see how a landscape architect has used tricks of texture to enlarge a small area. Take a peek: https://bit.ly/3lGuR3I



23.01.2022 Issue 76 is on its way to subscribers now and on sale in newsagents November 5. Our annual offices feature showcases dynamic workspaces from home and away. Then, see a home grown from hemp and meet Melbourne beekeeping collective, Honey Fingers. Look inside: https://bit.ly/2TXNsLO

23.01.2022 Inside issue 75: Freedom and exploration, in both architecture and landscape, flow through Bismarck House, designed by Andrew Burges Architects and Dangar Barin Smith. https://bit.ly/3lGuR3I

22.01.2022 A period home in Brisbane brings out the very best of its locale: capitalising on its inner-city position with curated natural landscapes. https://bit.ly/38Z0Kkj



22.01.2022 Handmade & Found is an Adelaide-based studio that produces handmade objects for everyday use. https://bit.ly/2PQR1lj

21.01.2022 A series of cohesive and varied volumes sees this long, narrow home transition from weatherboard to concrete to brick. http://bit.ly/2IkjkHq

20.01.2022 Inside issue 78: A much-loved home in Hobart is given a refresh that’s economical, sustainable and a tad daring. See more: https://bit.ly/3b4rnoc



20.01.2022 Pre-subscriptions are now available for Walkers Journal! Learn the story behind the publication via The Age.

20.01.2022 We're excited to announce the launch of our new publication, Walkers Journal. Walkers Journal will be a website and quarterly print publication for people who love to walk. We want to share the best coastal, overland and urban walks in Australia, with stories and photography to match. Follow us Walkers Journal for inspiration for your next adventure. Subscribe via Pozible soon. Stay tuned!

19.01.2022 Architect Clinton Cole integrated landscape, food and energy into the architecture of his family home to create a machine for sustaining life. https://bit.ly/38B3P9F

18.01.2022 David Boyle Architect took cues from the surrounding bushland and water views to create sculptural additions that connect Five Gardens House with the landscape. https://bit.ly/3hEGsNO

18.01.2022 Architect Alex Symes’ abstracted inverted hat form delivers a technically efficient off-grid house that also provides year-round comfort, 360-degree views and a celebration of rainfall in a region that yearns for it. https://bit.ly/3f2JLQX



17.01.2022 An inventive urban gardening community in Portugal is creating self-watering garden beds that arrive flat-packed by post. https://bit.ly/2Tae2kI

16.01.2022 Inside issue 74: Architect Alex Symes’ abstracted inverted hat form delivers a technically efficient off-grid house that also provides year-round comfort, 360-degree views and a celebration of rainfall in a region that yearns for it. https://bit.ly/2NRoWcq

14.01.2022 Chance encounters and interactions on the rear laneway have become an invaluable part of Dave and Skye Palethorpe’s enjoyment of their house. http://bit.ly/2m8cbQn

14.01.2022 Issue 74 is on its way to subscribers now and on sale in newsagents July 6. Our 'bush architecture' issue features some of the best in regional and coastal projects. One of our gardens celebrates productive landscapes, the other the beauty of endemic species. Take a peek: https://bit.ly/2NRoWcq

14.01.2022 National Gallery of Victoria's Melbourne Design Week 2021 has begun! We’ve rounded up a selection of events with a sustainable focus that will be worth checking out. https://bit.ly/31julj9

14.01.2022 Ex-publishing duo Emma Bowen and Michael Zagoridis trade in their desk jobs to pursue urban farming, and it turns out they’re pretty good at it. https://bit.ly/2DytiTI

13.01.2022 With a brief that asked for the opposite of a beach mansion, the owners of this 40-square-metre hut got exactly that. And couldn’t have been more pleased. https://bit.ly/2NXCGSW

13.01.2022 Our annual kitchens feature. What more can we say? https://bit.ly/3oEyrwA

12.01.2022 What does it take to elevate a generous modernist apartment with great bones and thermal comfort into a glamorous forever home? WOWOWA’s interiors finesse, a skilled team of craftspeople and a reno-savvy client with bags of style. https://bit.ly/2ZIhc2G

12.01.2022 Denison Rivulet by Taylor and Hinds Architects is a series of cabins north of Bicheno, Tasmania. https://bit.ly/30wMs4g

11.01.2022 Issue 79 comes out 3 May. Our lives have been altered over the last year and we have learnt to adjust to this new way of living. People are looking for more flexibility in the design of their homes; they are interested in homes that can adapt. That’s the theme of this issue. Look inside: https://bit.ly/3xxmayq

11.01.2022 A robust home refined in form and character is shaped by the Tasmanian landscape in more ways than one. https://bit.ly/2QzfzCX

11.01.2022 A compact home for a Northcote family determined not to add another monolith to the neighbourhood feels expansive thanks to transparent materials, concealed rooms, garden connections and some particularly clever privacy screening. https://bit.ly/2U5lduK

10.01.2022 Studio203 designed an energy-efficient house using a combination of passive solar principles and high-performance technology. https://bit.ly/3dRiWwu

09.01.2022 A small off-grid cabin perched high on a Gundagai sheep and cattle farm becomes a beacon for people hoping to spend some time away from the daily grind or get married. http://bit.ly/2K7pbR3

09.01.2022 There’s a meadow growing on the roof of a 1950s apartment block in East St Kilda, and it’s changing the lives of the residents. https://bit.ly/32zSdkD

08.01.2022 A home on the cusp of a ravine on the Sunshine Coast hinterland is testament to the deep understanding between architect and clients. https://bit.ly/3e5axr6

08.01.2022 Three Piece House nods to the past, present and future; designed for the existing streetscape, contemporary living and sustainability. http://bit.ly/2OtqxVz

08.01.2022 A family home in northern NSW is deliberately stripped back to engender connection with people and place. https://bit.ly/30HLxhx

08.01.2022 Make Architecture’s transition into Studio Bright ushers in a new chapter of impactful architecture. https://bit.ly/2ClRKr7

07.01.2022 A five-storey, multi-generational glass-and-concrete home on a tiny St Kilda in-fill site zoned for business sure got the neighbours and council talking. http://bit.ly/2Ioih7Q

07.01.2022 ØsterGRO, Denmark's first rooftop farm, sets a global example. https://bit.ly/2Y5OpnU

06.01.2022 Inside issue 76: A sensitive retrofit by PHOOEY Architects retains the best of a 90s house in Malvern and boosts its thermal and acoustic performance. See more: https://bit.ly/2TXNsLO

06.01.2022 A couple found plenty to love about a defensive 45-year-old brown brick legal office on a tapering block in West Melbourne. http://bit.ly/2UKbkB3

05.01.2022 The worst house on the best street is transformed into a lively, modernist-inspired home by Bellemo & Cat. https://bit.ly/2DAjOI6

05.01.2022 In our annual small spaces issue, we explore little projects that go a long way. Available now and in newsagents September 3. https://bit.ly/2EM7V20

05.01.2022 Conceived in a deal struck between client and designer, this family cabin north of Auckland honours life’s simple pleasures. https://bit.ly/3j4YSHX

04.01.2022 Much has been written and said about Daylesford Longhouse. It’s all fascinating. But that’s not the half of it. https://bit.ly/2QiCdvM

03.01.2022 Issue 76 is on its way to subscribers now and on sale in newsagents November 5. Get your copy here: https://bit.ly/2I2nCnl

02.01.2022 With holiday houses getting larger and shoutier, it's telling that a small, budget weekender is the one turning heads. https://bit.ly/2CWUMTr

02.01.2022 A home by Clare Cousins Architects and garden by Eckersley Garden Architecture uses a sloping site and simple, efficient forms to nestle a family of four into a bushy block near Blackburn’s Gardiner’s Creek. http://bit.ly/38n64ws

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