Arkhefield is an architecture and interior design practice based in Brisbane with a focus on projects across regional and metropolitan Queensland. For more than twenty years, the practice has grown its portfolio across multiple sectors – from commercial and workplace, to cultural and residential – and its work has been widely recognised and published. The studio works from a heritage-listed building in Brisbane.
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‘Over-scaled’ Waterfront Brisbane development approved
A proposal to construct a two-tower commercial development on the Brisbane river has been approved by the council despite considerable opposition.
Gavan Ranger to leave Arkhefield
Arkhefield has announced that its strategic director of six years, Gavan Ranger, will be leaving the role at the end of 2020.
Two ‘city shaping’ towers for Brisbane’s waterfront
A $2.1 billion office development designed by FJMT and Arkhefield will comprise two tower at the edge of Brisbane’s city grid and the river.
Home game: Parklands
The 2018 Commonwealth Games Village, designed by Arkhefield, ARM and Archipelago, optimizes the potential of its Parklands site and sets a precedent for considered medium-density development on the Gold Coast.
Queensland government approves ‘mega’ Brisbane cruise ship terminal
The Queensland government has approved a $158 million “mega-cruise ship terminal” for Brisbane, with a design team comprising Arup and Arkhefield.
Hunters Hill House by Arkhefield
This Sydney family home by Brisbane-based firm Arkhefield stems from an inspiring long distance architect–client relationship.
Stokehouse
This Brisbane restaurant by Arkhefield features a stacked, curving timber wall that runs through the centre of the space.
Cairns Cruise Liner Terminal
Cardno S.P.L.A.T.’s Cairns Cruise Liner Terminal is sculptural, elegant and controlled.
Cairns Cruise Terminal
Cairns Cruise Terminal by Arkhefield and Total Project Group Architects won the Lachlan Macquarie Award for Heritage at the 2011 National Architecture Awards.
The Lighthouse
A light-filled three-level addition enlivens a 1960s brick box, tucked into the eucalypt forests of Brisbane’s foothills.