Projects
RSSThe Coromandel’s gritty persona marries smooth-cut family living in this neutral-hued home, designed by Neu Architecture.
By taking a fresh approach in this Remuera bungalow, Respond Architects has created a home full of light, effortless flow and space for its owners.
Art, greenery, sunshine and a touch of vintage blend effortlessly in this brutalist house for the co-founder of Mexico’s hippest hotel chain.
We look at an innovative New Zealand-made timber pavilion, slated to appear at the 17th Venice Architecture Biennale in Italy.
Two subtle yet sophisticated pavilions honour the interwar character of this home while connecting it with the outdoors.
A series of stacked interconnected volumes that carefully negotiate a tricky wedge-shaped site provided the solution for a client.
Go beyond the everyday face of this Remuera home, originally built in the 1940s, to discover an unexpected touch of star power.
A Hawke’s Bay home from Herriot Melhuish O’Neill expresses Waimarama’s changed circumstances and its continuity of spirit.
From the Houses archives: a penthouse apartment by Cook Sargission & Pirie provides clear evidence of the rise of Freemans Bay.
We revisit a project from the March 2009 issue of Houses where Michael Fisher takes an Auckland art deco house through the rehab process.
This crisp addition to an Australian Federation home exuberantly manoeuvres light, space and monochrome materials to masterfully meet the brief.
Abigail Hurst explores this Warren and Mahoney project, the first of many chessboard moves to establish diverse central-city living in Christchurch.
A Danish kitchen design firm allows potential customers to holiday in homes equipped with its wares. We explore its latest abode, designed by David Thulstrup.
Jack McKinney Architects has transformed a Ponsonby streetscape with a dramatic gesture that is equal parts theatre and sculpture.
This addition to a historic weatherboard cottage captures vistas from new living spaces arranged around a landscaped courtyard.
In responding to the client’s need for a home that caters to a unique family structure, the architects have achieved a fluid and unfussy home.
Over the summer holidays, a group of children discovered a new kind of freedom – that of designing their own play environment.
With lakeside views and an alpine backdrop, this award-winning South Island house is perfectly positioned to be a home for all seasons.
John Sutherland explores Cheshire Architects’ reoccupation of a former seaplane hangar at Hobsonville Point, Auckland.
Cross-pollinated compositions and a certain chromatic sweetness multiply in Bondi Junction.
Take a look back at this home, first published in 2009: a Malcolm Taylor project by the Waikato River that shows architect and builder can get along fine.
Revisit a project where Wendy Shacklock discreetly shuns convention with a modern chalet design near Queenstown.
A Michael Wyatt pavilion executes a graceful pose on its well-favoured Queenstown site in this home from the archives.
Crafted with deference to the sculptural potential of architecture, this compact family home with “elastic” geometry is a lesson in tectonic editing.
This Greek island holiday home combines the best of traditional architecture with modern, worldly comforts, textiles and interiors.
This local, boutique co-working designer and operator unveils its recent Christchurch offering and discusses some of the larger themes behind that style of work.
Ian Lochhead explores the multi-purpose cycle of living, work, worship and service to the community in Christchurch’s Oxford Terrace Baptist Church.
A reimagining of the traditional outdoor bathroom, this shimmering cube in the landscape offers 360-degree views and quiet sanctuary.
Out on Christchurch’s coast Andrew Watson stacks up his boxes against a steep site in this house, originally published in 2009.
One Wellington practice has been making a name fore itself in Kapiti Coast beach houses for over a decade. This 2009 house is a shining example.