In cooperation with the leading furniture and design brand Fanuli, Bark is pleased to announce the finalists of the Interior Design Awards 2025. This prestigious program takes place for the 15th time and recognizes outstanding achievements in the Australian interior design and decoration.
The finalists of this year Bark The Fanuli Interior Design Awards in the Residential Interior category are characterized by beautiful, courageous decisions and unbridled design flair.
The finalists: best residential institution 2025
Leeton Pointon Architects + Allison Pye Interiors: House on a hill

House on a Hill, a multi-generation country house on the Mornington Peninsula, is a tribute to curved shapes and natural materials. The interiors are bright and sublime, with a minimal mix of built -in and free -standing furniture and works of art that speak to the surrounding landscape.
I-design: Green residence

The Verdant Residence in Melbourne is a Victorian maisonette apartment with contemporary elements and complementary colors. The owners, longstanding customers of Mim Design, decided to combine the company's expertise, old and new things in a carefully thought -out concept.
SMAC Studio: queen

Shona Mcelroy from SMAC Studio sprayed Hollywood glamor when renovating an Espie Dodds House in Sydney. Intelligent floor plan changes, luxurious materials and a playful color palette with bronze and blush have created a new harmony for customers who maintain a large scale.
Congenital collection: Babylon

Fiona Spence, the founder of Spence & Lyda, used her inimitable design skills in her own house from the 1950s in Buschland north of Sydney. The interiors were redesigned with local materials, furniture from the middle of the century and tailor -made textiles from Fiona's own label.
Golden: Temple house

The team of the Boutique company Golden used its characteristic furnishing style for the renovation of a family home in Melbourne. With a floor plan of the architect J Kidman, which merges into a walled garden, the overall impression arises as if living space and gallery were bathed in contemporary coolness.
Richards Stanisich: Headland House

This residence in North Bondi, housed in an Art Deco building, was completely restructured. Great craftsmanship and an adventurous design that the family offers space for many years have given the interiors a sculptural quality, while the coloring is becoming increasingly intense when descending.
Alexander & Co: Emerald house

The order for this project in the east of Sydney was to find a balance between practicability for family life and the opportunity to maintain large groups. The listed house has been expanded and redesigned and has a rich, luxurious color palette and dark wooden floors as the basis for tailor -made geometric carpets.
Kennedy Nolan: Rosherville House

A brick and brick pavilion from the 1980s on the north coast of Sydney was transformed by a boring and inefficient home into a bright and comfortable home, with travertine, raw tap tiles, cedar tertification, grass tissue and calming tertiary tones in green, blue and umbra.
Honor: Dancing on the ceiling

By overlaping the simple geometry of this coastal house with sculptural shapes and new materials, Decus has created a playful yet relaxed home. The elegant elliptical staircase is the heart of the project and surrounded by a light filtering wooden screen.
Greg Natale: New York House

This four -story town house by Greg Natale is located on the Upper East Side of New York and was designed in such a way that it reflects the global ambitions and artistic passions of the owner. The former business building was restored, the original two-door entrance was restored and the interiors were equipped with vintage and contemporary furniture.
