Commercial entrance, wall mural, pendant lights, vertical green wall, escalator, pedestrian traffic, terrazzo flooring, geometric panels.

Toombul Fashion mall Brisbane

Fashion Mall precinct design / ambience upgrade

Our design work on the mall refurbishment work at Toombul commenced with mood board and conceptual schematics of the new travelator installed from the upper level carpark into the general fashion and specialty ramped mall outside Kmart.

Concepts for treatment of the mall common areas, ceilings, bulkheads, walls, doors, bulkheads, flooring, pause points with charging facilities and general mall finishes were presented, ensuring sympathetic connection with the new entry point. A refinement of palette to a more luxe level of finish was applied to the fashion mall run, to attract a more global shopper, and a separate more masculine concept was applied to connect with shoppers for the neighbouring Aldi/Bunnings mall.

Take a look at this link to learn more about the development.

The main walkway features a light-filled avenue framed by shop fronts and an expressive ceiling structure. The design emphasizes natural daylighting and warm timber materials to establish a comfortable, open environment that encourages visitors to stroll through the retail precinct.

A suspended network of timber beams and acoustic panels adds depth and pattern to the upper volume of the walkway. This architectural feature integrates structural elements, lighting hardware, and sound management into a single, cohesive design overhead.

Indoor plants hang within a geometric timber framework to bring natural elements into the high ceiling space. This setup fills the upper void with life and color, using plants to soften the clean, straight lines of the building's architecture.

A long moving walkway connects different building levels alongside a brightly illustrated wall panel. The narrow transit corridor turns a routine walk between floors into an interesting visual journey by mixing custom artwork with natural textures.

A close view along the moving walkway shows how graphic art, natural timber, and living plants come together on the wall. This layered surface breaks up the long transit corridor, using distinct textures to add warmth and visual interest at eye level.

Intricate black-and-white linework wraps around a functional transition zone, turning a routine threshold into an expressive visual pause. This artistic intervention uses high-contrast graphics to challenge the boundary between utility spaces and the public experience.