Peter Bennetts (on the left!) is a Melbourne-based, global-roaming architectural photographer whose work consistently appears in internationally acclaimed publications. He tempers his time at the vanguard of architecture and design with environmental concerns, including documenting Tuvalu, the country most vulnerable to rising sea levels.
Peter Bennetts's Latest contributions
A unifying act: Caulfield to Dandenong Level Crossing Removal Project
The Caulfield to Dandenong Level Crossing Removal Project demonstrates how integrated urban design thinking can shape progressive built outcomes.
Beneath the rail line: Caulfield to Dandenong Level Crossing Removal Project
Attention to scale and a coordinated approach to colour have created an inviting series of spaces, well-suited to individual and collective inhabitation.
The winners of the 2019 Australian Urban Design Awards
Ten of Australia’s best urban design works have received awards and commendations at the 2019 Australian Urban Design Awards.
2019 National Landscape Architecture Awards announced
The Australian Institute of Landscape Architects has announced the winners of the 2019 National Landscape Architecture Awards.
2019 National Landscape Architecture Awards: Landscape Architecture Award for Civic Landscape
Yagan Square by Aspect Studios, Lyons Architecture and Iredale Pedersen Hook
2019 National Landscape Architecture Awards: Landscape Architecture Award for Infrastructure
Caulfield to Dandenong Level Crossing Removal Project by Aspect Studios and Cox Architecture
2019 National Landscape Architecture Awards: Award of Excellence for Tourism
Yagan Square by Aspect Studios, Lyons Architecture and Iredale Pedersen Hook
Winners revealed: 2019 Think Brick Awards
The winners of the 2019 Think Brick Awards were announced at a gala dinner at the Crown Palladium in Melbourne.
Shortlist revealed: 2019 Australian Urban Design Awards
Fifty-two entries have been shortlisted in the 2019 edition of the Australian Urban Design Awards.
Doubleground: 2018 NGV Architecture Commission
Marked by fluid boundaries and tilted terrain, Muir and Openwork’s installation is a potent reflection on architecture, experience and the relationship of memory to place.