Issue No. 17 now available to pre-order
Issue No. 17 now available to pre-order
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Architects at home

& Designers at home

The Local Project’s
latest hardcover books

Issue Nº5
Volume 1, 2021
$29.50 + Shipping

Issue No. 14 features work from Madeleine Blanchfield Architects, Studio Bright, Workroom, Field Architecture, Patterson Associates and more.



Featured on the cover, Cape Schanck House by Studio Goss is a minimalist dwelling that embraces the beauty of light and seamlessly connects with the surrounding landscape on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula. The issue also includes profiles on Brad Swartz, Faulkner Architects and Placement Studio.



The Commercial Project features projects and profiles across the retail lifestyle, hospitality, workplaces and health and education sectors while The Local Marketplace highlights the breadth and quality of local designers, artists, makers and distributors across Australia, New Zealand and North America.

Inside the issue
Tlp Cabbage ©derek004
Cabbage Tree House
Peter Stutchbury Architecture
Emerging from the hillside, Cabbage Tree House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture is a built manifestation of place, whose purpose is to heighten the understanding and emotional experience of the land that informs the architecture.
Wanaka Cover
Wanaka House
Fearon Hay
Ringed by the mountains surrounding the Lake Wanaka basin, encircled by a concrete perimeter wall, and cloaked by perforated steel shutters, Fearon Hay’s Wanaka House is defined by the layered interaction between a series of concentric forms and spaces.
Breathe Edgars Creek House 02
Edgars Creek
Breathe Architecture
In an urban context, connection between the land, people, and the buildings they inhabit is often lost. Edgars Creek House by Breathe Architecture is a rare example of a home whose design offers a reconnection with the essential qualities of a landscape almost entirely superseded by the encroaching built environment.
Image 32
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 33
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Glebe 0002
Glebe House
Chenchow Little
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 33 (2)
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 33 (3)
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Wanaka Cover
Wanaka House
Fearon Hay
Ringed by the mountains surrounding the Lake Wanaka basin, encircled by a concrete perimeter wall, and cloaked by perforated steel shutters, Fearon Hay’s Wanaka House is defined by the layered interaction between a series of concentric forms and spaces.
Breathe Edgars Creek House 02
Edgars Creek
Breathe Architecture
In an urban context, connection between the land, people, and the buildings they inhabit is often lost. Edgars Creek House by Breathe Architecture is a rare example of a home whose design offers a reconnection with the essential qualities of a landscape almost entirely superseded by the encroaching built environment.
Tlp Cabbage ©derek004
Cabbage Tree House
Peter Stutchbury Architecture
Emerging from the hillside, Cabbage Tree House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture is a built manifestation of place, whose purpose is to heighten the understanding and emotional experience of the land that informs the architecture.
Image 33
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 32
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 33 (2)
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Glebe 0002
Glebe House
Chenchow Little
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
Image 33 (3)
McNamara House
Tom Robertson Architecture
Just as the sculptor’s hands push against the clay to give it form, the planning and spatial constraints of the distinctive wedge-shaped site in the Sydney suburb of Glebe became the formative pressure through which Chenchow Little Architects devised the Glebe House.
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