The latest print magazine is about to arrive! With Guest Editor William Smart in the hot seat, we are delighted to share some of the highlights.
August 15th, 2024
How we learn has changed significantly over the past decade and this has only sharpened the need for excellent design. In fact, Live & Learn is pretty well how we now shape education, with spaces designed for the experience of learned outcome. It’s a bit like the old adage: I can tell you everything about gardening, but until you get your hands in the dirt you will not understand. It’s the doing that makes the difference.

As such, the projects our divine Guest Editor, William Smart, is interested in are those that give students – and more generally people – an experiential learning environment. The Science Gallery in Melbourne University by Smart Design Studio, for example, allows students to showcase the outcomes of their work. Blending live and learn in one seamless project is the Bangalore Airport by Patrick Keane; this fabulous installation in woven raffia is key to Kean’s ongoing mission to show the world that sustainable design is as functional and beautiful as any other building medium.
Teaching by example, Bates Smart have gone above and beyond expectations with The Australian Embassy in Washington DC, fitted entirely with Australian timber, plus furniture, lighting and art by the incredible talent of the Australian design elite! John Wardle has just the perfect touch for creating education projects that inspire and delight and his Rivers Edge in Launceston is most decidedly a school that students can take great pride in.

Yu Ting, founder and Chief Architect of Shanghai-based Wutopia Lab, is one of the most interesting architects shaping Shanghai and his work on the Shanghai Book City takes this institute in a whole new direction. Still in China, AIM Architecture’s rejuvenation of four disused oil tanks is startling in its clarity of design where light is key to these brilliant community spaces. Toyo Ito’s breaths fresh life in to the NTU Business School in Singapore and Spacemen Studio get primal with Bar Kar in Kuala Lumpur.
The INDE.Awards 2024 are revealed with exceptional projects and design leaders given the acclaim they deserve. It’s incredibly exciting to reveal the best of the best in the Indo-Pacific as recognised by our fabulous awards program.

Profiles are as always exceptional, with Lisa Havilah, CEO pf the Powerhouse, interviewed by Dr Prudence Gibson, author of Dark Botany: The Herbarium Tales. Hiroshi Sugimoto shares his thoughts on contemporary architecture and Bangawarra discuss the changing attitude to First Nations collaboration.
There is also a huge amount more and naturally the IN SHORT section has a whole host of design moments to inspire. To find out more about the magazine tap here.
Gillian Serisier
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!
CDK Stone’s Natasha Stengos takes us through its Alexandria Selection Centre, where stone choice becomes a sensory experience – from curated spaces, crafted details and a colour-organised selection floor.
From the spark of an idea on the page to the launch of new pieces in a showroom is a journey every aspiring industrial and furnishing designer imagines making.
In an industry where design intent is often diluted by value management and procurement pressures, Klaro Industrial Design positions manufacturing as a creative ally – allowing commercial interior designers to deliver unique pieces aligned to the project’s original vision.
From radical material reuse to office-to-school transformations, these five projects show how circular thinking is reshaping architecture, interiors and community spaces.
Designed by Woods Bagot, the new fit-out of a major resources company transforms 40,000-square-metres across 19 levels into interconnected villages that celebrate Western Australia’s diverse terrain.
In an industry where design intent is often diluted by value management and procurement pressures, Klaro Industrial Design positions manufacturing as a creative ally – allowing commercial interior designers to deliver unique pieces aligned to the project’s original vision.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
From furniture and homewares to lighting, Dirk du Toit’s Melbourne-based studio Dutoit is built on local manufacturing, material restraint and the belief that longevity is central to sustainable design.
BLP’s new Sydney Children’s Hospital, Randwick building brings together paediatric care, family-centred design and Australia’s first Children’s Comprehensive Cancer Centre in a major addition to the Randwick Health & Innovation Precinct.
SHAU’s Kampung Mrican revitalisation transforms community life through social architecture, local collaboration and sustainable design.
At the Munarra Centre for Regional Excellence on Yorta Yorta Country in Victoria, ARM Architecture and Milliken use PrintWorks™ technology to translate First Nations narratives into a layered, community-led floorscape.