No Image

Tam House / Ivan Bravo Architects

March 10, 2026 Valentina Díaz 0

Casa Tam is one more iteration in a sequence of rewritings. It is a comprehensive renovation of a house already expanded and altered on two prior occasions. Somewhere between new construction and palimpsest, the project takes fragments of original layouts and extends them into new spatial continuities, intertwining them with axes from later interventions.

No Image

Potter Museum of Art / Wood Marsh

February 10, 2026 Pilar Caballero 0

The Ian Potter Museum of Art, Education and Programs Centre is a significant expansion of the original museum at the University of Melbourne’s Parkville campus, extending into the heritage-listed 1930s Physics Annex. Connecting with both the campus and a major road leading out of the city centre, the concave, mirrored, polished stainless-steel portal extends from the original façade, marking the museum’s presence and creating a multi-faceted public interface.

No Image

Loggia House / House of Em

January 21, 2026 Andreas Luco 0

London-based architecture and interiors studio House Of EM – the new practice by former Michaelis Boyd directors Emma Bodie and Matthew Sanders – has completed a renovation and extension in Kensal Rise for a young family of four. Designed for clients Anthony and Roberta, Loggia House includes a ground-floor rear extension, internal alterations throughout, and preparatory work for a future dormer extension, all enhancing scale and functionality for the family to enjoy.

No Image

House Z / Benoit Rotteleur Architecte

November 19, 2025 Hadir Al Koshta 0

This house was built in the 1980s, following the design codes of the time: a semi-subterranean ground floor housing the garage and boiler room, a raised floor above the garden for the living areas, and an attic converted into bedrooms. In the early 2000s, an extension was built on the garden side to accommodate a large living room, but it quickly showed signs of deterioration. After a decade of legal proceedings, the owners were finally compensated for the damages suffered. They then decided to move on from those difficult years by considering the construction of a new house. However, the architect proposed a different approach: to retain as much of the existing structure as possible and demolish only the damaged sections.

No Image

House in the Ostuni Countryside / Tela Architettura

November 19, 2025 Hadir Al Koshta 0

The project completes and reinterprets a residence in the countryside of Ostuni, surrounded by centuries old olive trees and long views toward the Adriatic Sea and the white skyline of the city. When the owners first encountered the site, the house existed only as an unfinished concrete shell abandoned on the slope. Instead of demolishing it, they chose to work with what was already there, using the existing volume as the starting point for a new spatial and material vision.

No Image

House in the Ostuni Countryside / Tela Architettura

November 19, 2025 Hadir Al Koshta 0

The project completes and reinterprets a residence in the countryside of Ostuni, surrounded by centuries old olive trees and long views toward the Adriatic Sea and the white skyline of the city. When the owners first encountered the site, the house existed only as an unfinished concrete shell abandoned on the slope. Instead of demolishing it, they chose to work with what was already there, using the existing volume as the starting point for a new spatial and material vision.

No Image

Medník House / päivä architekti

November 12, 2025 Pilar Caballero 0

The client’s assignment was to expand the existing family house. The existing building was built at the beginning of the 20th century on the edge of a rocky slope above the Sázava River. In 2010, it underwent a major renovation and an extension of the hanging part to the garden. However, it gradually became clear that the size of the building no longer met the client’s needs.

No Image

Medník House / päivä architekti

November 12, 2025 Pilar Caballero 0

The client’s assignment was to expand the existing family house. The existing building was built at the beginning of the 20th century on the edge of a rocky slope above the Sázava River. In 2010, it underwent a major renovation and an extension of the hanging part to the garden. However, it gradually became clear that the size of the building no longer met the client’s needs.