DesignwithNature

We work with like minded groups and partners to develop innovative nature-first solutions. Check out what we've been doing . . .

The Future is Wild @ The Hillocks
WildLab designed and developed the concept, landscape and building for The Future is Wild @ The Hillocks - an innovative visitor experience where place, architecture, VR storytelling, and hands-on planting combine. Each stage reveals Aotearoa’s ecological past and future, guiding visitors from awe to action. The result is a powerful design framework that directly supports nature’s restoration.
Te Ara Ōtākaro Avon River Trail
A community logo design for Te Ara Ōtākaro Avon River Trail uses a multi‑interpretive mark to celebrate connections to the river. It cleverly evokes winding water, long‑finned eel (tuna), a footprint, and movement—expressing the trail’s story with a simple, evocative image.
Punakaiki Coastal Restoration Project
A former mining and farmland site now transforms into thriving native rainforest, nurtured by volunteers and an on‑site nursery. It offers hands‑on experiences—seed‑raising, planting, monitoring, citizen science—while restoring the unique habitat where the Tāiko (Westland petrel) breeds. Over 200,000 eco‑sourced plants have been established.
Oparara Basin Experience Design
Using a ‘Lost World’ narrative, this design transforms Oparara Basin into a top-tier West Coast experience. Visitors encounter moa silhouettes at the entry, then use augmented-reality storytelling to connect past extinctions with present-day conservation efforts—spurring engagement with native species like whio and kiwi.
Eden Project Christchurch Ōtautahi: Ki Uta Ki Tai
An eco‑tourism project to transform the earthquake‑scarred land along the Avon Ōtākaro River into a dynamic waterscape—blending performance space, wetlands, sensory “rain,” “moss,” and “rainbow” rooms, and flood‑resilient landscapes. It combines environment, culture, and experience to reshape Christchurch through water‑enabled connection and renewal
Guide Hill Station Outdoor Museum Interpretation Design
A sequence of interpretation panels weaves stories through tussockland, guiding visitors across Guide Hill Station’s landscape. These panels unfold the history and ecology of merino sheep, mountains, wild Pūkaki, lakes, and restoration efforts—bringing the land’s heritage vividly to life.
Wild Heart Project Punakaiki Storytelling
A series of interpretation panels brings local nature stories to life, guiding volunteers through the plant nursery, sharing the project’s mission, and helping them become storytellers themselves—turning each visit into an engaging, educational exploration of this coastal restoration effort.
Guide Hill Station Farmbase Masterplan
Set close to Lake Pūkaki and Aoraki, the design establishes a low impact visitor facility. It blends infrastructure upgrades—like accommodation, a chapel, restaurant, stables, research hub, and stargazing—with ecological restoration of Black Hole Lake, weaving heritage, hospitality and conservation together.
Guide Hill Station Restoration Strategy
Spanning 3,500 hectares, this restoration strategy weaves ecological renewal into working merino farmland. It safeguards critical habitat for the rare black stilt (kakī), restores ecological corridors like Bolton’s Gully, and balances dryland farming with long-term cultural and environmental resilience.
Lowburn Ferry Vineyard Master Plan
This initial design layers ecological restoration with native planting and productive gardens to highlight terroir. Designed as an animated narrative, it invites people to experience the vineyard’s unique climate and story through immersive landscapes that celebrate place and provenance.
Te Whenua Hou: a distributed forest
A sweeping, distributed native forest of 1.2 million plants springs to life across 20 farms, weaving biodiversity through farmland. Designed with fractal, braided‑river patterns, it creates a 350‑hectare ecological “bird bridge,” connecting the Southern Alps with Banks Peninsula.
Seaview Vineyard White Road Tour Storytelling
Storytelling panels and wayfinding signs guide vineyard visitors along Yealand's White Road Tour, explaining sustainable winemaking practices—like caring for water, nurturing vines naturally, and repurposing prunings—with engaging visuals and clear directions, turning each stop into an immersive, educational journey through the vineyard’s regenerative processes.
Air New Zealand Long-haul Catering Weight and Waste Reduction Project
This study analysed long-haul operations to reduce catering-related waste and carbon emissions. By streamlining food, bar, dry goods, and equipment services—and optimising facilities across global hubs—it identified efficiency gains that cut 3,950 tons of CO₂-equivalent per year while lowering costs.
Antarctica New Zealand’s Scott Base Waste Reduction
This review identified ways to reduce environmental impact at Scott Base—including comparing air- vs sea-freight emissions, cutting food waste to 20%, improving storage and stock control, optimizing recycling systems, and ensuring unnecessary items are returned efficiently to New Zealand.
Mackenzie Basin Drylands Park
The Mackenzie Basin Drylands Park is a design-led exploration of what conservation could look like when integrated with tourism, agriculture, and cultural values. Inspired by the Mackenzie Agreement, this project proposes an alternative future where ecological protection is not separate from - but interwoven with - our productive and recreational landscapes.
Franklin-North Waikato Tracks and Trails Strategy
The Franklin–North Waikato Tracks and Trails Strategy sets out a vision for how trails can connect communities with the Waikato River and its surrounding landscapes. By building on existing opportunities and aligning with local aspirations, the strategy provides a pathway to grow active, healthy, and connected communities.
Matakana Coast Tracks and Trails Strategy
The Matakana Coast Tracks and Trails Strategy provides a roadmap for how the community can channel its energy and commitment into creating a truly connected regional network. Through careful analysis and collaborative planning, the strategy sets out a vision for trails that link coast, forest, and community, strengthening both place and people.
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WildLab @ 2020-2025