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
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.
Australian projects recognized in international awards
Eight Australian projects were named winners in the 2018 Architecture Masterprize.
2018 National Landscape Architecture Awards: Landscape Architecture Award for Research, Policy and Communications
Monash University – Civil Engineering Hydraulics ‘Living Lab’ by Aspect Studios
City Limits: The vernacular of welcome signs in regional Australia
Anyone who has travelled through regional Australia would understand the importance many towns place on their welcome signs – not just to communicate useful information, but also to establish and project an identity of place.
2017 AILA salary survey: Why are women still under-represented in the upper levels of the profession?
With the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects’ 2017 salary survey revealing entrenched gender inequity, Rush Wright Associates principal Cassandra Chilton makes the case for action.
National Gallery of Australia Sculpture Garden
Thirty years after planting, this serpentine trail is now a destination in its own right.
Hassett Park
Hassett Park by Jane Irwin Landscape Architecture (JILA) is an urban park in Canberra that celebrates hydrological systems and a wild aesthetic.
Three urban design projects awarded at 2017 Good Design Awards
A set of flood-resilient ferry terminals, a mammoth post-industrial renewal project and the ‘daylighting’ of an urban stream all received gongs at 2017 Good Design Awards.
Is it possible to use social infrastructure to catalyse economic growth?
Community centres enrich lives and help develop harmonious societies within our cities, yet they attract little investment. Are there other ways we can help these facilities?