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Polenta and Olive Oil Cake with Vin Santo Pears – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

13th May, 2014 googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(\'div-gpt-ad-1499748311474-0\'); });

6 Unusual Ways to Overcome Your Cravings

When it comes to healthy eating and weight loss, cravings tend to be seen as a derailer of goals. But there’s nothing inherently “bad” about them. “A craving is a very natural and normal respons

Ploughman's Lunch – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

When I imagined what to make for this Ploughman’s lunch, I knew it had to be HEARTY and made with heart. A Ploughman’s lunch is traditionally an old English cold meal consisting of cold meats, pickles, bread and cheese. As its name suggests it was designed for ploughmen to eat on the farm, offering them sustenance to get through the day. Following last week’s Ladies Lunch, I thought it was only fair that I put together a more blokey lunchbox option. I imagined what my brother-in-law would love to eat, and decided on a pastrami roll, sweet potato salad, some snacks and a hedgehog. Guaranteed to fill you up for the day!

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A Cascading, Compact Garden That Envelopes Its Newtown Home

GardensA Cascading, Compact Garden That Envelopes Its Newtown Home

Mark Bell of Bell Landscapes cautions against minimalism when designing a garden on a small footprint space. ‘There is the perception that using lots of plants encloses the space and makes it feel smaller.’ But rather, he says, empty pockets make the space feel sparse and underwhelming.

By carefully considering the compact dimensions and curating a thoughtful selection of plants, Mark devised a planting scheme of varied textures, shapes and sizes to create an illusion of depth in this suburban Newtown garden. This clever trick of layering is no more apparent that in the ground coverings, which are dense and varied, each offering different heights and textures of foliage.

Mark;s initial brief was to envelope the pre-existing terrace house with greenery. With a rear terrace, rooftop garden and internal courtyard to work with, his focus was to spread the plantings across various levels and sections of the site. Sticking to his maximalist mantra, Mark created lush verdant zones that punctuate the architecture and bring the living spaces to life. Plants literally spill into the hallway when the floor-to-ceiling glass doors slide open!

‘This garden will continue to gain fullness over time, and merge further with the architectural form of the build,’ Mark explains. ‘The roof garden plants will cascade beautifully like green waterfalls from above.’

Bell Landscapes has been engaged on a continuous basis to maintain the Newtown garden and ensure its longevity well into the future!

See more projects from Bell Landscapes here. See more projects from CplusC Architectural Workshop here.

A view onto the rear terrace garden. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.


Plants from the internal courtyard spill into the house when the sliding glass doors are open. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.


Pops of colour and geometry punctuate this urban oasis. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.


The street-side entrance. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.


A view to the front of the house with the internal courtyard in the foreground. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.


The brief was to envelope the newly renovated terrace in greenery from all angles. Photo – Murray Fredericks. Architect – Clinton Cole of CplusC Architectural Workshop.

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