The central promenade forms the cultural spine, lined with pre-existing brick, timber structures and filtered canopy light, expressing continuity between Country, existing fabric and new Indigenous-informed practices
Set among native trees, the perforated roof references the filtering qualities of the forest canopy, binding new interventions to the landscape through light, rhythm, and topographic alignment
Floor plan showing new and existing buildings linked by lightweight glass hallways, reinforcing public–private separation while framing views toward the central promenade and surrounding bushland
Exploded axonometric highlighting the Aboriginal Women’s Workshop as a key cultural space, its relation to the central promenade, and the dual-roof system that layers protection, privacy, and continuity
A monochrome elevation to highlight the contrast in materiality and form between new and existing structures