A ceiling with exposed ductwork and suspended pink tube lights in an office. The lights hang at different angles beneath metal cable trays and silver ventilation pipes.
A black floor lamp with the Hassell's logo stands between two large windows in an office. Tall buildings are visible through the windows on both sides, and the wall behind the lamp is matte pale grey.
A long corridor is lit with moody overhead lighting. The walls and ceiling are dark green, and mirror panels at both ends of the corridor create an infinite reflection. An automated sliding door on the right has a panel with the Hassell's logo, and the floor is smooth and light grey.
An open-plan office with exposed ceiling services and long tube lights. Two people sit facing each other at a table in the material library in the foreground, while other people sit and work further back in the background. The space has white walls, pink built-in units on the right, and black chairs around tables.
A bright open office with tables, black chairs and exposed ceiling ductwork. Two people sit at a central table near a low bookshelf and material library, and more seating is arranged across the room. The floor is polished concrete, the left wall is pink, and large windows line the far side of the space.

Hassell Studio

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Architect/Designer: Hassell Studio

Description

Located on Wurundjeri Country within I.M. Pei’s modernist tower at 55 Collins Street, the new Melbourne studio for international design practice Hassell is conceived as a ‘worklab’: an open place to experiment, refine and share ideas. Intentionally raw and rigorously planned, it seeks to challenge the design of more traditional workplaces via a design-with-less philosophy that delivers a space that’s unexpected, distinctive and environmentally responsible.

Aiming for Living Building Challenge certification — the world’s most exacting standard for regenerative architecture — the studio treats regenerative design (the principle of giving back more than a building takes) as a baseline. Ninety-eight per cent of all construction and fit-out waste was recycled and diverted from landfill. Existing ceilings, perimeter walls and concrete floors have been left as found, while joinery, workstations, furniture and studio tools have been salvaged and reused from the company’s previous workplace. 

With no formal reception, visitors step directly into the heart of the studio among the models and sketches, seeing firsthand how a climate-conscious future is negotiated. By exposing the reality of the design process, Hassell’s Melbourne studio acts as a physical manifesto for a design firm that values accountability and environmental consequence over a polished front-of-house.

What's On

International design firm Hassell opens its Melbourne studio as a ‘worklab’: a functional testing ground rather than a curated showroom.

Through a self-guided tour, visitors can observe the real-time mechanics of a practice aiming for Living Building Challenge certification. The space serves as a physical case study in regenerative design, where ninety-eight per cent of construction waste was diverted from landfill and existing structures were left raw. It’s an invitation to see how exacting environmental discipline translates into a purposeful, lower-impact aesthetic, reimagining the workplace as an active participant in the city’s ecological future.

Images: (1-5) Hassell Studio, Melbourne. All photos: Kertina Liu & Francis Ng.

Important Details

Tour/event summary information

Saturday 25 July
Open access 10am—4pm

Bookings

No bookings required.

Meeting Point

Enter via 55 Collins Street lobby

Accessibility

Lift access to all public levels, All ages, Level access tram stop, Accessible bathrooms, Ramp or level (step free) entry, Accessible parking

Dim light upon entry

Location

Level 9, 55 Collins St, Melbourne VIC 3000

Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Country

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