Projects
RSSA $35 million apartment and retail complex in Auckland’s central business district is stage one of a three-stage development.
A Fisher & Paykel appliance factory is converted to house its product designers and engineers.
Opening interior spaces to the outside has given this house a lifestyle boost.
The 17-metre mythical form of an abstract waka marks the former Orauiti Pã site atop Point Dorset.
Read about the largest of the Mini showrooms in the southern hemisphere and the most technologically advanced in the world.
Like a Japanese puzzle box, this house unfolds in a series of twists and turns.
Public perception may be changing to favour structural timber solutions after the failure of concrete flooring in Canterbury.
Michael Barrett unravels this ambitious new hub in South Auckland.
At a busy Wellington intersection, this mixed-use development - now home to Trade Me - was a challenging build.
A dynamic trio of Kiwi expats in New York have recently shifted their caffeine dispensary Happy Bones.
Fearon Hay Architects’ playful new marketing suite at Auckland Airport is a declaration of intent.
Hobsonville Land Company, Isthmus and Architecture Workshop have tested a new approach to affordable detached housing.
Urbis talks to the creators of a cosy, low-cost cabin in snowy Canada.
Jacky Bowring finds a unique expression of the dialogue between two potent yet divergent forms of memorial in Madrid.
Robert Tongue and Baker Garden Architects have pulled together four buildings from different eras with dramatic results.
This advanced timber building utilises the first machine-detailed LVL from Nelson Pine.
A home just out of Melbourne, Australia, is sophisticated and sleek despite serious financial and topographical constraints.
A heritage building in Whanganui has been given a new lease of life.
A modern, multi-levelled Sydney, Australia, home tips its cap to its neighbourhood’s historical context.
A house in snowy Quebec, Canada, makes the most of its extreme location and show-stopping views.
An Auckland residence combines the old and the new in the most original and thoughtful of ways.
The lively external façade of a new student village in Auckland’s Parnell complements a cosy interior experience.
A triptych of structural elements in this central Christchurch rebuild marks a world first.
References to domesticity, nostalgia, and mid-century engineering workshops fuel this luscious corporate fit out.
A townhouse in the French capital skilfully combines fine art and luxurious furnishings.
Jasmax’s new headquarters for Tūhoe arrives with a spectacular arched frontage that creates a gateway in the Bay of Plenty.
The ever-impressive Hip Group adds another culinary and architectural flower to its bouquet.
Studio Pacific Architecture has given a transformative facelift on a limited budget to a social housing complex.
A house perched dramatically on the coast of New South Wales, Australia, contains an impressive collection of art.
Interior magazine explores how Designworks and Kiwibank are adapting to these pixelated times.
Perched high above the ocean, Max Patté’s Wellington home is the perfect place to exhibit his work.
This ‘craypot’ building is constructed entirely in timber and is the first in the world to use shear walls of CLT and LVL.
A Portuguese décor combines both old and contemporary art and furniture for ultra-stylish effect.
Plunging cliffs and a harsh coast provide the backdrop to this subtle yet alluring reserve.
Designer William Taylor creates a small space big on hospitality.
Interior takes a walk through one of Auckland’s most highly utilised lobby shortcuts – inside the PwC Tower.
Urbis visits a quartet of architecturally designed artists’ studios in remote Canada.
Interior explores two projects, each with a very distinct Scandinavian flavour.
Views from both airborne and land-based approaches to Auckland Airport now centre on abstract earth forms.