Dianna is a Melbourne-based freelance architectural photographer with a passion for the built environment. She works closely with architects and interior designers to establish a visual dialogue that records and promotes their buildings and vision.
Dianna Snape's Latest contributions
The inaugural ArchitectureAU Award for Social Impact shortlist revealed
The ArchitectureAU Award for Social Impact recognizes projects that promote the common good. For 2023, 39 projects have been shortlisted from 139 entries.
Shortlist revealed: 2023 Victorian Architecture Awards
The Australian Institute of Architects has announced the shortlist for the 2023 Victorian Architecture Awards.
2023 Australian Interior Design Awards shortlist: Public Design
The shortlist for the 20th annual Australian Interior Design Awards includes 9 projects in the Public Design category.
2023 Australian Interior Design Awards shortlist: Workplace Design
The shortlist for the 20th annual Australian Interior Design Awards includes 38 projects in the Workplace Design category.
Moonshine by Brit Andresen Architect
On Minjerribah, an architect’s keen knowledge of the island setting distils an immersive experience of nature, inspiring a house that is at once architecturally rigorous and environmentally sensitive.
Ivanhoe Library and Cultural Hub by Croxon Ramsay
Croxon Ramsay has created a flexible and approachable community learning hub on the site of a former 1960s library that connects with an existing interwar town hall and council chambers.
Regional perspectives, dependencies and opportunities
The 2022 Queensland Regional Symposium, held in Yeppoon, featured a number of architectural works that elevate and promote Australia’s regions.
First and Last: Mark Simpson of Design Office
The Artichoke newsletter is launching a new profile series, “First and Last”, diving into the careers of eminent designers, from their earliest project to their most recent.
Revisited: Wright House II
Designed by Robin Boyd in 1962 to replace an earlier house that had been destroyed by bushfire, Wright House II united a robust, fire-resistant material palette with an expansive spatial language. The lovingly preserved house endures as one of Boyd’s most compelling designs.