Our homes give us joy and comfort but the shortlist of The Living Space in this year’s INDE.Awards is so much more – these are homes to truly desire.

Coopworth. Photography: Dianna Snape
June 17th, 2021
The 2021 INDE.Awards shortlist for The Living Space is an exemplar group. Each and every one ticks every box for style, form and function with detail and design finesse at their heart. Houses with views inside and out vie with homes that offer sanctuary and serenity – and everything in between. This year it appears that every project is a winner.
As supporter of The Living Space, Gaggenau knows all about being the best. With products that speak of luxury and outstanding functionality, Gaggenau understands what it takes to create spaces that are future ready for life today.

Federal House. Photography: Ben Hosking
Olya Yemchenko, Senior Brand Communications Manager of Gaggenau Australia reflects on the shortlist and the future of residential design in the Indo-Pacific commenting,
“Today’s residential design places greater emphasis on sustainability, whether this is the interaction between house and garden, renewable electricity or choice of materials. Consideration has been given from boundary to boundary, providing a holistic experience of a home. The created spaces feel much more generous regardless of their physical footprint. What stands out is the use of raw, natural surfaces from exposed brickwork, natural stone palettes to timber, steel and glass. All the little details come together to create a full picture.”

Garden House. Photography: Derek Swalwell
As inspirational as these homes are, there is a continuum between the group and that is their tailormade design for those who live within the walls. More and more our homes not only reflect ourselves and our lives but the way we wish to live now.
Yemchenko explains, “We have previously emphasised that when looking to design The Living Space, the end result is informed by many factors – incorporating the individual needs of the occupant’s lifestyle and aesthetic proclivities. It is really inspiring to see how residences today are taking on the form of their own enclosed oasis, where individuals have the ability to fully immerse themselves within their home environment. Embodying the essence of a private retreat.”

Striated House at Rajagiriya. Photography: Ganidu Balasuriya
While each home in the shortlist exemplifies great residential design, there were a few that caught Yemchenko’s eye as stand outs and they are, “Federal House where the dark finishes contrast with the space, greenery and vastness of the outside world. Garden House is a residence that perfectly marries the transition between indoor and outdoor living and Striated House where space and light is amplified.”
.
Proudly partnered by Gaggenau

Limestone House. Photography: Dianna Snape
8 Yard House
Studio Bright
Australia
Coopworth
FMD Architects
Australia
Cumulus House
Chris Connell Design
Australia
Envelope House
ASOLIDPLAN with Solid Architects LLP
Singapore
Evelyn
Myers Ellyett
Australia
Federal House
Edition Office
Australia
Garden House
Austin Maynard Architects
Australia
K House
Renato D’Ettore Architects
Australia
Limestone House
John Wardle Architects
Australia
PONY
WOWOWA Architecture
Australia
Striated House at Rajagiriya
Palinda Kannangara Architects
Sri Lanka
Terracotta House
Austin Maynard Architects
Australia
.
Be there as the INDE.Award winners are announced. Register for your 2021 digital ticket.
#indeawards
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
The new range features slabs with warm, earthy palettes that lend a sense of organic luxury to every space.
For Aidan Mawhinney, the secret ingredient to Living Edge’s success “comes down to people, product and place.” As the brand celebrates a significant 25-year milestone, it’s that commitment to authentic, sustainable design – and the people behind it all – that continues to anchor its legacy.
BVN’s Sirius Redevelopment has been named one of two joint winners of The Building category at the INDE.Awards 2025. Celebrated alongside Central Station by Woods Bagot and John McAslan + Partners, the project reimagines an iconic Brutalist landmark through a design approach that retains heritage while creating a vibrant, sustainable future for Sydney.
Crafting form and creating function with rattan, Patrick Keane and Enter Projects Asia’s latest project is proving to be a draw card for shoppers at the dynamic fashion house Massimo Dutti.
Hogg & Lamb’s Albion Bathhouse has been awarded The Health & Wellbeing Space at the INDE.Awards 2025. The project reimagines the contemporary bathhouse as an immersive architectural journey – one that restores balance through atmosphere, materiality and mindful design.
Adam Markowitz Design, in collaboration with Simeon Dux, has been awarded The Object at the INDE.Awards 2025. Their winning project, A Cabinet of Curiosities, is a masterwork of craftsmanship and adaptability; a poetic response to shifting domestic and professional life in the post-COVID era.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Grounded by the rich warmth of American white oak, The Standard’s newly opened restaurant, Kaya, redefines the classic dining convention through a tasteful fusion of biophilic design, mid-century modern sensibility and elevated whimsy.
Krost’s new Ace height-adjustable system challenges convention with the world’s thinnest column profile, engineered for design-led workspaces.