How Powersurge became the quiet constant in a Stanmore Bay home’s second chapter

Stanmore Bay still keeps the easy rhythm of a classic New Zealand seaside settlement. Creosote-stained baches sit alongside newer interventions, and the streetscape feels agreeably removed from the city, a few bends of the Whangaparāoa Peninsula away from Auckland’s gravitational pull.

It is the kind of place you arrive at slowly, which is precisely the point of the house Jessop Architects has quietly evolved here. The project, known simply as Stanmore, began as a young couple’s first home together, bought not long after university. The brief, when it came, was not to erase what they had fallen for, but to let it grow up.

Jessop’s response is a study in restraint. Rather than overwrite the original cottage, additions thread through the site with deference to the mature pōhutukawa, their canopy left to shape both the approach and the outlook. Arrival is deliberately unhurried: you cross the lawn, pass beneath the trees, and only once you are inside does the water reveal itself.

A sheltered courtyard on the inland side is the project’s quiet masterstroke. Where many coastal houses commit entirely to the sea, Stanmore gives itself two considered aspects: the water on one side, a protected, north-facing garden room on the other. It is an unshowy way of doubling the house’s usable life through shoulder-season afternoons and early evenings.

Inside, the palette does its work without raising its voice. Sandy stone tones run through the interiors, grounded and durable rather than decorative, paired with warm timbers and the kind of deft joinery that rewards a second look. Cabinetry is fitted with Powersurge’s Entrada Round Bar Handle and Beam Handle, discreet, well-weighted, the sort of detail you register with your hand before your eye.

Above the island, Powersurge’s Lateral Pendant draws a single clean horizontal line through the main living space, a quiet echo of the sea beyond the windows. It is specification rather than feature, which feels right for a house that never tries to perform.

What Jessop has built here is, in the end, a family home that still reads as a first home loved into its second chapter. The pōhutukawa remain, the bach-era rhythm of the bay is intact, and the interiors feel patinated rather than polished. It is a renovation that understands the difference between evolving a house and replacing it.

powersurge.co.nz

Design

Salone del Mobile 2026: How Louis Vuitton, Dior, Gucci & Moncler redefined fashion’s role at Milan Design Week
The dining table designed to bring everyone together
A softer surface: The rise of tonal, textured interiors

The new Mexican spot serving margaritas, birria tacos and a very compelling enchilada deal

The space that once housed Ghost Donkey in Commercial Bay has been reborn. Dos Donkeys, a modern Mexican restaurant and bar built on the philosophy that food and drinks are better shared, has opened with a menu that makes a strong case for heading downtown.

The name nods to its two founders: one led with energy, the other with effort. They discovered that vibrancy and discipline make for a better table when they sit side by side. It’s a venue built on connection, where dinner turns into late night, and grit meets good times.

The frozen margaritas are already proving to be their calling card. At $10 during happy hour (4 pm to 6 pm daily, alongside $10 wines and $8 Coronas), they’re sharp, icy and dangerously easy to justify. The food matches the energy, with birria tacos delivering the kind of slow-cooked depth that earns the wait. Then there’s the corn ribs, loaded with colour and crunch, and Enchiladas Borrachas with slow-cooked al pastor, mozzarella, salsa borracha, pickled onion and sour cream, which make a persuasive argument for ordering more.

Corn Ribs
Birria Tacos

Dos Donkeys’ room is warm, low-lit, with neon accents, making it the kind of spot built for lingering. Whether you’re after a post-work margarita or an evening fuelled by tacos and tequila, Dos Donkeys is the downtown Mexican you didn’t know you were waiting for.

dosdonkeys.co.nz

Level 2, 1 Queen Street
Commercial Bay
Auckland

Gastronomy

Long live the long lunch: Ki Māha for King’s Birthday
Why SkyCity’s DELISH is Auckland’s most comforting culinary event this winter
K’ Road’s newest café doubles as a quietly cool concept store

Win the ultimate SkyCity escape for mum this Mother’s Day, worth over $1,000

What mum actually wants for Mother’s Day (beyond the breakfast-in-bed attempt that leaves the kitchen looking like a crime scene) is a moment of genuine, uninterrupted stillness. SkyCity has built exactly that into one very generous package, and we’re giving it away to a lucky mother this May.

Grand Deluxe Room at The Grand by SkyCity
East Day Spa

The prize begins with a night in a Grand Deluxe Room at The Grand by SkyCity, parking included, because the last thing mum needs is to circle a building three times before her evening of calm begins. From there, East Day Spa’s two-hour Moment of Stillness treatment takes over. A full body Shanti massage designed around slow, rhythmic movement eases tension from places she didn’t know she was holding it, followed by the East Day Spa x Augustinus Bader Methode Facial, a pairing of advanced skincare, sculpting massage, LED therapy, and formulas that leave the skin looking genuinely restored rather than just temporarily dewy.

Left: Metita. Right: Cassia
Masu

Then there’s dinner (for two). A $250 dining credit at one of the award-winning restaurants located within The Grand by SkyCity, with the option to choose from Michael Meredith’s Metita, Sid Sahrawat’s Cassia, or long-time favourite MASU by Nic Watt. No kids’ menu negotiations, no compromises, just a properly good meal with good company in a room that matches the occasion. The following morning, breakfast for two, because even the most deserving solo escape benefits from someone to share the coffee with.

The total prize is worth over $1,000 and must be redeemed in full, Monday to Thursday. Which, frankly, only makes it better. A midweek night in a hotel with nowhere to be the next morning is the kind of luxury that money can’t quite replicate.

This Mother’s Day, treat mum to truly unforgettable experience combining rest, relaxation, and a necessary spot of indulgence. This giveaway is now closed.

skycityauckland.co.nz

Gastronomy

Long live the long lunch: Ki Māha for King’s Birthday
Why SkyCity’s DELISH is Auckland’s most comforting culinary event this winter
K’ Road’s newest café doubles as a quietly cool concept store
The Devil Wears Prada 2
Euphoria Season 3
The Drama
Margo's Got Money Troubles
Michael

What to watch next: These are the addictive new series & movies to have on your radar

Consider this your edit of the series and movies worth pressing play on now, from dark, psychologically driven dramas to slow-burn thrillers and quietly compelling character studies. From the iconic The Devil Wears Prada 2 to The Drama, alongside the latest releases and returning favourites already generating conversation, these are the shows setting the tone for what to watch now.

Movies


The Devil Wears Prada 2

When & Where to Watch: In NZ cinemas from 30 April
Starring: Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, Stanley Tucci

Twenty years after the original, Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt and Stanley Tucci all return to the offices of Runway magazine — joined by Kenneth Branagh, Simone Ashley, Lucy Liu and Lady Gaga, who contributes an original song. This time, Miranda Priestly faces a more existential crisis: keeping legacy media alive in a digital-first world. The teaser trailer broke records as the most-viewed comedy trailer in 15 years.


Project Hail Mary

When & Where to Watch: In cinemas now
Starring: Ryan Gosling, Sandra Hüller, Milana Vayntrub, Ken Leung

Ryan Gosling stars as a schoolteacher who wakes alone on a spaceship with no memory and a mission to save Earth, in Phil Lord and Christopher Miller’s adaptation of Andy Weir’s beloved novel. Smart, funny, visually dazzling and surprisingly moving, it has the rare quality of making a cinema full of strangers feel something at the same time. Gosling has rarely been better, and the interstellar friendship at the film’s heart is one you won’t forget quickly. See it on the biggest screen you can find.


The Drama

When & Where to Watch: In cinemas now
Starring: Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Alana Haim, Mamoudou Athie

Zendaya and Robert Pattinson star as a Boston couple whose wedding week is derailed by an unexpected confession during a drunken party game — one that neither can easily move past. Part dark comedy, part relationship thriller, part provocation, with two career-highlight performances and the kind of central dilemma that will follow you out of the cinema and straight into an argument with whoever you saw it with. You’ve been warned.


Lorne

When & Where to Watch: In cinemas now
Featuring: Lorne Michaels, Tina Fey, Chris Rock, John Mulaney

Morgan Neville, the Oscar-winning director behind Won’t You Be My Neighbor? and 20 Feet from Stardom turns his lens on Lorne Michaels, the enigmatic creator of Saturday Night Live. Featuring exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and candid interviews with Tina Fey, Chris Rock, Conan O’Brien, John Mulaney, Maya Rudolph, Kristen Wiig and Paul Simon, the film is less a revealing portrait than an immensely entertaining one — funnier than most comedies in cinemas right now, and a must for anyone who cares about how comedy gets made.


No Other Choice

When & Where to Watch: Rent or buy on Apple TV & Prime Video
Starring: Lee Byung-hun, Son Ye-jin, Park Hee-soon, Cha Seung-won

If you missed Park Chan-wook’s latest in cinemas, now is the time. A paper industry expert is fired after 25 years and, in a state of escalating desperation, begins eliminating his job competition — literally. Based on Donald Westlake’s novel The Ax, it holds a staggering 97% on Rotten Tomatoes, earned a standing ovation at Venice, and is somehow both one of the funniest and most unsettling films of the past twelve months. Lee Byung-hun is extraordinary. Essential viewing for anyone who has ever fantasised, even briefly, about dismantling the corporate ladder.


Mother Mary

When & Where to Watch: In NZ cinemas from 14 May
Starring: Anne Hathaway, Michaela Coel, Hunter Schafer, FKA Twigs

David Lowery’s psychosexual pop thriller stars Anne Hathaway as an iconic pop star reuniting with her estranged best friend and former costume designer, played by Michaela Coel, on the eve of a comeback performance. With Hunter Schafer, FKA Twigs and Kaia Gerber rounding out a magnetic cast, and original music by Jack Antonoff and Charli XCX, it’s a strange, bewitching piece of filmmaking — the kind of A24 release you either surrender to completely or argue about for weeks. Already playing in the US; arrives in New Zealand cinemas in May.


Apex

When & Where to Watch: Netflix from 24 April
Starring: Charlize Theron, Taron Egerton, Eric Bana

A survival thriller set in the Australian wilderness. A grieving woman on a solo adventure is ensnared in a deadly game of cat and mouse with a ruthless killer who thinks she’s prey. Directed by Baltasar Kormákur, who knows how to shoot landscapes and escalating tension in equal measure (Everest, Adrift). It’s the kind of taut, star-powered Netflix drop that justifies keeping the subscription — perfect for a rainy Auckland evening.


Michael

When & Where to Watch: In NZ cinemas from 22 April
Starring: Jaafar Jackson, Colman Domingo, Nia Long, Miles Teller

Antoine Fuqua’s musical biopic of Michael Jackson, starring the King of Pop’s nephew Jaafar Jackson in his film debut. The film traces Jackson’s journey from the Jackson 5 through the creation of Off the Wall, Thriller and Bad, with Colman Domingo as Joe Jackson, Nia Long as Katherine, and Miles Teller as entertainment lawyer John Branca. Tracking suggests a record-breaking opening for a musical biopic — and regardless of where you stand on the man, the spectacle of the performances alone should be worth the ticket. Yellowstone.


Outcome

When & Where to Watch: Apple TV
Starring: Keanu Reeves, Jonah Hill, Cameron Diaz, Matt Bomer

Keanu Reeves plays a beloved Hollywood star, five years sober, whose carefully rebuilt life is upended when a blackmailer surfaces with a career-ending video. Directed by Jonah Hill, who also co-stars as Reef’s crisis lawyer, it’s a dark comedy that’s sharply divided critics — but at a brisk 83 minutes and with Reeves turning in some of his most quietly affecting work, it’s worth a watch on a quiet evening.


Tv Series


Your Friends & Neighbours Season 2

When & Where to Watch: 3rd April, Apple TV
Starring: Jon Hamm, Amanda Peet
, Olivia Munn

Andrew Cooper (Hamm) doubles down on his life as an unlikely suburban thief, until the arrival of a new neighbour threatens to expose his secrets and place his family at risk.


Euphoria Season 3

When & Where to Watch: 13th April, Neon
Starring: Zendaya, Sydney Sweeney, Jacob Elordi

The long-awaited return after a four-year hiatus. Five years have passed for the former students of East Highland High, with Rue now in Mexico, Cassie and Nate engaged in the suburbs, and Jules navigating art school. Creator Sam Levinson has conceived the third season as a film noir.


The Boys Season 5

When & Where to Watch: 8th April, Prime Video
Starring: Karl Urban, Jack Quaid, Antony Starr

The long-awaited return after a four-year hiatus. Five years have passed for the former students of East Highland High, with Rue now in Mexico, Cassie and Nate engaged in the suburbs, and Jules navigating art school. Creator Sam Levinson has conceived the third season as a film noir.


Margo’s Got Money Troubles

When & Where to Watch: 15th April, AppleTV
Starring: Elle Fanning, Michelle Pfeiffer, Nicole Kidman, Nick Offerman

Based on Rufi Thorpe’s bestselling novel, this bold comedy-drama follows Margo, a college dropout and new mum — the daughter of an ex-Hooters waitress and ex-pro wrestler — who turns to OnlyFans to pay the bills. When her estranged father re-enters her life, his advice from the wrestling world proves unexpectedly useful. From David E. Kelley (Big Little Lies, The Undoing) and A24.


Beef Season 2

When & Where to Watch: 17th April, Netflix
Starring: Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan, Charles Melton, Cailee Spaeny

Set at an elite country club, two young employees film an alarming fight between their boss and his wife — and ignite a blackmail war neither side can win. Fresh cast, same sharp writing.


Running Point Season 2

When & Where to Watch: 23rd April, Netflix
Starring: Kate Hudson, Justin Theroux, Brenda Song

Isla Gordon is no longer the surprise choice to lead the Los Angeles Waves — she’s the one everyone is watching. With the franchise rebounding after last year’s scandal, Isla is determined to prove she’s not just keeping the seat warm for her brother Cam.


Young Sherlock

When & Where to Watch: Prime Video
Starring: Hero Fiennes Tiffin, Dónal Finn, Zine Tseng

A fresh take on a familiar figure, Young Sherlock revisits the world’s most famous detective in his formative years. Less about polished deduction and more about curiosity and instinct, the series traces the early experiences that begin to shape the mind behind the legend.


The Madison

When & Where to Watch: Neon
Starring: Michelle Pfeiffer, Kurt Russell, Matthew Fox

he series follows the Clyburn family, originally from New York City, who relocate to the Madison River valley of southwest Montana for emotional recovery following a life-changing tragedy. From Taylor Sheridan, the creator of Yellowstone.


Scarpetta

When & Where to Watch: Prime Video
Starring: Nicole Kidman, Jamie Lee Curtis, Simon Baker

A sleek, psychologically driven crime drama, Scarpetta follows a brilliant forensic pathologist navigating a series of complex cases where science and instinct collide. Dark, atmospheric and quietly gripping, it leans into the intricacies of investigation while exploring the personal cost of living so close to death.


DTF St. Louis

When & Where to Watch: Neon
Starring: Jason Bateman, David Harbour, Linda Cardellini

Provocative and unfiltered, DTF St. Louis dives into the complexities of modern relationships, intimacy and identity. Set against the backdrop of midwestern America, it’s a candid, often confronting exploration of connection in an era where nothing feels entirely straightforward.


Rooster

When & Where to Watch: Neon
Starring: Steve Carell, Charly Clive, Scott MacArthur

Grounded and character-led, Rooster centres on a small-town figure navigating shifting loyalties and quiet tensions beneath the surface. With a slow, deliberate pace, it leans into mood and nuance, revealing the weight of community, reputation and personal history.


Paradise Season 2

When & Where to Watch: Disney+
Starring: Sterling K. Brown, James Marsden, Julianne Nicholson

Returning with greater scale and sharper stakes, Paradise builds on its first season with a deeper dive into power, control and the illusion of perfection. Sun-drenched on the surface but simmering underneath, it’s a continuation that promises more intrigue, tension and unexpected turns.


The Dinosaurs

When & Where to Watch: Netflix
Starring: Morgan Freeman

Blending nostalgia with contemporary storytelling, The Dinosaurs reimagines prehistoric life through a modern lens. With sharp humour and unexpected emotional depth, it offers a playful yet thoughtful take on family, survival and the rhythms of everyday life, just set several million years earlier.


56 Days

When & Where to Watch: Prime Video
Starring:  Dove Cameron, Avan Jogia, Megan Peta Hill

Taut and twist-laden, 56 Days unfolds within the confines of a pandemic lockdown, where a seemingly chance romance quickly unravels into something far more sinister. What begins as an intimate two-hander evolves into a slow-burn thriller, peeling back layers of deception with each episode.


Imperfect Women

When & Where to Watch: Apple TV+
Starring:  Elisabeth Moss, Kerry Washington, Kate Mara

Glossy on the surface but quietly unraveling beneath, Imperfect Women centres on three lifelong friends whose seemingly perfect lives are disrupted by a shocking crime. What follows is a slow-burn unpicking of friendship, loyalty and long-held secrets, where every revelation feels more personal than the last. Polished, tense and character-driven, it’s the kind of series that lingers well beyond its final episode.


Culture

Our June culture guide: Everything to see, do and book tickets to this month
In need of some comic relief? These are the best underrated comedy series worth a watch
Heading away for the long weekend? Here’s what to press play on

Polka dots are back, and here’s how to wear fashion’s favourite retro print into autumn


High-contrast, monochromatic polka dots had their moment last summer, and rather than retreating with the warm weather, they’ve walked straight onto the AW26 runways. Carolina Herrera layered them into dropped-waist silhouettes, Dior rendered them in soft wool, and the print turned up across resort collections with a distinctly cooler-weather sensibility. Silk chiffon over tights, polka-dot trousers under tailored coats, a bow clip as the finishing note. The formula still holds: whimsy meets classic tailoring, Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman, Claudia Schiffer circa ’95. What’s shifted is the styling. Think less sundress, more considered layering. Connect the dots, and wear them through the season.

Christian Dior Fall 26
Francoise Mila Pants in Polka Dots from Muse
Brandon Maxwell Riviera Polka dot Dress from Moda Operandi
Isabel Marant Peleo polka-dot mesh pumps from Farfetch

Irving Trouser in Silk Georgette from Harris Tapper
Barbara polka-dot satin pumps from AMINA MUADDI
Elene polka-dot silk-blend twill blouse from DÔEN
Pleated polka-dot crepe midi dress from Balenciaga

Rodarte Flower-Detailed Polka-Dot Dress from Moda Operandi
Dolce & Gabbana polka-dot playsuit from Farfetch
Prada Bow-detail polka-dot hair clip from Mythersa

Coveted

Swarovski’s Millenia collection brings warm topaz tones and octagon-cut crystals to everyday jewellery
Arc’teryx is opening its First New Zealand store at Commercial Bay
Style Icon: Viky Rader
Braised Beef Brisket and Tendon slow-cooked in rich, aromatic Chu Hou sauce

Celebrated Hong Kong chef Tam Tung is bringing his Michelin-starred menu to Auckland for four nights only

For a decade, Chef Tam Tung has held a Michelin star at Yat Tung Heen, the acclaimed Cantonese restaurant at Eaton HK whose moody, 1920s Shanghai-inspired dining room has become one of Hong Kong’s most revered culinary destinations. His cooking draws on generations of Cantonese wisdom, balancing restraint with depth in a style that has earned recognition across the MICHELIN Guide Hong Kong Macau, the South China Morning Post’s 100 Top Tables, and a string of coveted industry accolades. Now, for four nights only, he is bringing that kitchen to Auckland.

From 29 April to 2 May, The Nightcar on Queen Street will host an exclusive pop-up dinner series in collaboration with Cathay Pacific, with Chef Tam Tung’s multicourse menu served across six intimate sittings. The Nightcar’s sophisticated, Chinese-inspired setting provides a fitting stage for the occasion, with dishes presented on signature Cathay Pacific trays as a nod to the airline’s long-standing culinary partnership with Yat Tung Heen.

left: Horopito Vodka and Pōhutukawa-aged curaçao cocktail Cumulus

The evening opens with a choice of signature drinks, from the Horopito Vodka and Pōhutukawa-aged curaçao cocktail Cumulus, to Cathay’s kiwifruit, coconut and fresh mint mocktail Cathay Delight. Then comes a Hot and Sour Seafood Soup, Chef Tam Tung’s Hong Kong-style interpretation of the Sichuan classic, followed by a Preserved Plum-Infused Three Treasures starter that balances sweet, tangy and fresh in equal measure. Mains present the kind of decision nobody wants to make: Stir-fried Seafood and Jade Melon with Yat Tung Heen’s iconic XO sauce, or Braised Beef Brisket and Tendon slow-cooked in rich, aromatic Chu Hou sauce. A golden Cantonese Sugar Puff and a selection of premium JING teas close the experience, with handcrafted Devonport Chocolates offering one final, welcome indulgence.

It is rare for a chef of this calibre to bring a menu of this pedigree to Auckland, rarer still at $60 per person. Book your tickets here.

Please note, this is a curated set menu featuring seafood and meat, and dietary requirements cannot be accommodated.

Gastronomy

Long live the long lunch: Ki Māha for King’s Birthday
Why SkyCity’s DELISH is Auckland’s most comforting culinary event this winter
K’ Road’s newest café doubles as a quietly cool concept store

40th around the corner? Whether it’s your milestone or someone else’s, here’s what to wear to mark the occasion

In case you missed the memo, 40 is the new 30, and as such, deserves a celebration that is equal parts revelrous and refined, with a wardrobe to match.

From dazzling diamonds to statement pieces with presence, glamorous gowns, and sophisticated suiting, here, we share an edit of what to wear to mark 40 with conviction.

What To Wear

Own the milestone — or celebrate someone else’s —  in effortlessly polished looks that tread the line between bold, modern, and timeless.

Elsa Hosk wearing Murlong Cres dress
Rotate Ruched maxi dress from Moda Operandi
Elsa Peretti Claw necklace from Tiffany & Co.
Serpenti Forever mini top handle bag from Bvlgari
Mesh fabric slingback pumps from Prada
Suki dress and cape from Paris Georgia
High jewellery earrings from Graff
Austin Butler
HardWear Graduated Link necklace from Tiffany & Co.
Single-breasted wool and mohair tuxedo from Prada
Stretch cotton poplin shirt from Gucci
Messika Move Titanium black PM ring from Partridge
À Cheval transformable earrings from Van Cleef & Arpels
ALAÏA Ruched stretch-jersey midi dress from Net-a-porter
Play of Light Diamond Tennis bracelet from Sutcliffe

Coveted

Swarovski’s Millenia collection brings warm topaz tones and octagon-cut crystals to everyday jewellery
Arc’teryx is opening its First New Zealand store at Commercial Bay
Style Icon: Viky Rader
Otway Armchair by Kett from Dawson & Co.

The dining chair that earns its place at the table

There’s a reason the dining chair is the most unforgiving piece of furniture to design. It has to be comfortable enough for a three-hour dinner, light enough to pull back with one hand, strong enough to withstand years of daily use, and, ideally, worth looking at from every angle. The Otway Armchair by Kett manages all four with a kind of quiet confidence that doesn’t announce itself.

Defined by a gently curving solid ash frame, the Otway’s structure is both sculptural and purposeful. Rounded legs intersect to cradle the seat in a gesture that feels intuitively supportive, the kind of detail you notice the second time you sit down, when you realise you haven’t shifted once. Fine woodworking meets contemporary production here, resulting in a chair that is as enduring as it is elegant.

Upholstered in leather or fabric, it invites comfort without fuss. Stackable yet refined, it’s the rare dining chair that works equally well around a long oak table or pulled into a corner as a reading seat. This is a piece designed for unhurried evenings, the ones where conversation stretches well past dessert and nobody wants to be the first to stand up.


dawsonandco.nz

Design

Salone del Mobile 2026: How Louis Vuitton, Dior, Gucci & Moncler redefined fashion’s role at Milan Design Week
The dining table designed to bring everyone together
A softer surface: The rise of tonal, textured interiors

We explore the life, work, and storied career of revered designer Pierre Paulin

There are few design luminaries whose influence is as ubiquitous as that of Pierre Paulin. Known for his innovative work that revolutionised everyday furniture, Paulin’s hand has crafted some of the most iconic furniture designs in history. Many of his works, despite being released over half a century ago, remain as coveted today as they were then — a signifier of his unbridled vision.

Born in Paris in 1927, Pierre Paulin drew early inspiration from his two uncles, a vehicle designer and a sculptor, who instilled in him an early appreciation for the beauty of objects. 

Initially studying ceramics in Vallauris, followed by stone carving in Burgundy, Paulin set out to become a sculptor, following in his uncle’s footsteps. After an injury derailed his plans, he enrolled at the École Camondo in Paris, where he joined the brilliant post-war furniture designer Marcel Gascoin’s workshop. Initially serving as an apprentice, he honed his craft and discovered an early interest in Scandinavian and Japanese design, before travelling to Scandinavia and the United States to begin a career in furniture design.

Pumpkin Armchair (left) from Ligne Roset and Mushroom Chair (right) both by Pierre Paulin

Eventually going on to become one of the most known masters of his field, Paulin’s early career saw him join the team at Dutch manufacturers Artifort, where he shot to global fame following the release of his Mushroom chair in 1960. His work, characterised by the prioritisation of comfort over aesthetics, stood out for its organic form and sculptural shape, changing the face of seating forever. 

During the 70s and 80s, Paulin was invited to decorate and furnish several places of significance. Notably, the designer redecorated the living, dining, smoking, and exhibition rooms of the Elysée’s private apartments for Pompidou in 1971, conceiving, as part of the project, one of his most widely revered and iconic collections — his Pumpkin seating. Reissued in 2008 in collaboration with Ligne Roset, Paulin’s Pumpkin seating evokes, as the name suggests, an oversized pumpkin — drawing on its organic form to welcome the user with a protectively voluptuous shell. 

Pumpkin armchair by Pierre Paulin from Ligne Roset

In a similar style, the Alpha sofa is a masterpiece of modern design originally conceived in 1970, defined by its sculptural silhouette and deep, enveloping comfort.

10 years after first joining forces with Ligne Roset (and nine after the designer’s death), the family-run company which seeks to preserve Paulin’s great legacy reissued three designs in 2018 with Roset: Bonnie, Gavrinis 3, and CM 131. The designer’s Bonnie seating was dreamt up in 1975 — a cocoon-like sculptural seat made of foam that hugs the body just so.

Pumpkin armchair, Pumpkin Loveseat & Gavrinis 3 rug by Pierre Paulin from Ligne Roset

Another iconic design — only released following the designer’s death, the Dune Ensemble modular sofa is more a landscape than a piece of furniture, its undulating peaks and valleys adaptable to any space and lifestyle, empowering a home’s inhabitants to be the architects of their own space.

Dune Ensemble by Pierre Paulin

Paulin’s Groovy armchair epitomises Space Age design, its fluid, legless form — sculptural yet ergonomic, remains a coveted icon of mid-century avant-garde design. While his series of rugs explores organic abstraction, taking on a fluid, sculptural form, echoing the contours of a hand-drawn sketch.

Groovy Armchair by Pierre Paulin

Despite always shying away from the spotlight, today, Paulin’s legacy stretches far and wide. His work stands in the homes of some of the world’s foremost collectors, and his designs can be found in contemporary art and design collections around the world, from MOMA to the V&A and the Centre Pompidou in Paris, solidifying his standing as one of history’s most influential designers.

Pierre Paulin’s most iconic designs are stocked locally at Ligne Roset.

ligne.nz

Design

Salone del Mobile 2026: How Louis Vuitton, Dior, Gucci & Moncler redefined fashion’s role at Milan Design Week
The dining table designed to bring everyone together
A softer surface: The rise of tonal, textured interiors

Celebrate back to school at Bravo at Cracker Bay

As the school holidays draw to a close, there’s a familiar parental brief: find somewhere that keeps the children entertained without dulling the adult experience. Easier said than done. Unless, of course, you book a table at Bravo at Cracker Bay.

Winton’s waterfront newcomer at Cracker Bay has quietly positioned itself as one of the most considered family dining destinations in the city. Not in a saccharine, soft-play sense, but in a way that feels genuinely intelligent.

Yes, there is an outdoor playground. But the real drawcard sits just inside, where a fully realised games room offers arcade options, from nostalgic classics to modern favourites. It is the sort of detail that shifts the entire dynamic of a meal. Children disappear into play. Parents exhale. And importantly, nothing else is compromised.

The menu remains firmly in grown-up territory, with seasonal, contemporary dishes and a strong showing of local seafood, alongside a thoughtful kids’ offering that goes beyond the predictable. The Ayrburn wine range is well represented, cocktails are confidently executed, and the setting, with its north-facing aspect over Westhaven Marina, does most of the heavy lifting as the afternoon slips into evening.

It is this balance that Bravo at Cracker Bay gets right. It does not pander, nor does it exclude. Instead, it understands that modern dining often involves multiple generations, each with their own expectations.

So, as the final days of the holidays tick down, consider this your answer. A long lunch that turns into an early dinner. A table by the water. Children are entertained without negotiation. A glass of something excellent in hand.

Everyone leaves happy. Which, in itself, feels like a small miracle.

crackerbay.nz/bravo

Gastronomy

Long live the long lunch: Ki Māha for King’s Birthday
Why SkyCity’s DELISH is Auckland’s most comforting culinary event this winter
K’ Road’s newest café doubles as a quietly cool concept store