Projects
RSSA $200-million infant milk formula plant in the Waikato is the latest addition to the dairy landscape.
The games village is envisaged as a point of engagement between the heart of the country, its people and the outside world.
Set in the Cardrona Valley is a building the sight of which is sure to warm the cockles on a cold winter’s morn.
Kiwi architect Daniel Lewis is part of the team that has won the coveted 2015 RIBA Stirling Prize for best new UK building.
Michael O’Sullivan has an unconventional architectural approach as client, architect and builder of his Lyttleton studio.
Auckland’s version of an iconic, 52-year-old hospitality spot in Wellington pays well-informed homage to its predecessor.
Abundant greenery, vibrant colour and organic shapes conjure up a lush oasis in the middle of Auckland’s CBD.
World-first technology has given Young Hunter House in Christchurch the ability to withstand a one-in-2500-year seismic event.
Concrete walls, taxidermy, collected objects, pops of colour – and, of course, great food – come together.
Aesthetic and programmatic elements that articulated the client’s values led to the Supreme Award at the 2015 Interior Awards.
More than a century of history is encapsulated within the walls of this restored building.
Irving Smith Jack Architects has added to its family of innovative earthquake-resistant timber buildings in Nelson.
Capitalising on the interior space’s engineering functions and materials were key drivers in this workplace’s refit.
The Grey Lynn headquarters is a functional and inspirational workplace, that embodies the essence of this iconic brand.
A revitalised art deco building offers plenty of natural light, vibrancy and workplace innovation.
Wingate+Farquhar’s warm and welcoming radiation therapy clinic on the edge of the Tauranga Hospital campus.
Located in the gritty district of Auckland’s K Road, the Goodfolk office easily mixes a corporate and bohemian aesthetic.
Camille Khouri explores an Auckland workspace with lots of colour, vibrancy and design quirks.
With a design that accounts for a protected tree, the Novotel Hobson hotel in New Plymouth is more than the sum of its parts.
This 30,000m2 anchor building occupies the site where the popular Re:Start container mall once stood.
A 1980s-era mock-Tudor motel transformation from the inside out.
A raw, stripped-back aesthetic, with an understated palette and quirky geometric paint features.
This space was designed to offer powerful experiences generated by the work of visionary Kiwi artist Len Lye.
This law firm’s refit takes its cues from an impressive art collection.
Interior magazine takes a walk – and a slide – through the new headquarters of this internet retailer.
A Fisher & Paykel appliance factory is converted to house its product designers and engineers.
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.
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 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.
Jasmax’s new headquarters for Tūhoe arrives with a spectacular arched frontage that creates a gateway in the Bay of Plenty.
Interior magazine explores how Designworks and Kiwibank are adapting to these pixelated times.
Interior takes a walk through one of Auckland’s most highly utilised lobby shortcuts – inside the PwC Tower.
Progressive Building visits The New Zealand Blood Service’s new headquarters in Christchurch.
It is what isn’t in this building - constructed four floors above the ground on an existing structure - that makes it unique.
The opening up of a formerly unused light well in this workplace was the catalyst for a revolution in staff engagement.
Expanses of glass and intense swathes of black, shot through with faceted shapes and bold colours, are talking points at every turn in this new workplace.
A luxurious, contemporary expression of traditional Japanese culture, Masu brings sophisticated new meaning to Asian fusion.