Design that Endures: ArchiPro Clients Recognised at the 2025 Good Design Awards
Written by
09 November 2025
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2 min read

Puretec, Screenwood and Expella each took home accolades for designs that exemplify clarity of purpose where form follows not only function, but foresight. From water and air to sound and structure, these solutions demonstrate that progress in the built environment often begins with the invisible.
Puretec FilterWall™ F Series
Good Design Award Winner 2025
Hardware & Building
Puretec’s FilterWall™ F Series elevates water filtration from an afterthought to an architectural element. Responding to a growing appetite for healthier, more sustainable homes, the system conceals its complexity behind a minimalist design language. Every detail from its seamless installation to its efficient operation reinforces a new benchmark in how sustainability can be both seen and felt throughout the modern home.
Screenwood Modulo® Acoustic
Good Design Award Winner 2025
Hardware & Building
In the world of interior architecture, the most sophisticated solutions are often the quietest. Screenwood’s Modulo® Acoustic, meticulously crafted from aluminium, offers a prefinished tongue-and-groove system that merges acoustic performance with fire safety and visual refinement. The result is a lining solution that doesn’t just manage sound. It orchestrates atmosphere, balancing practicality with a designer’s eye for proportion and finish.
Expella Coreduct™
Good Design Award Gold Winner 2025
Hardware & Building
Engineering
Developed by Australian ventilation specialists Expella in collaboration with Cube Industrial Design, Coreduct™ reimagines a product category rarely seen yet essential to every building. The low-profile, flat-pack ducting system transforms how ventilation components are stored, handled, and installed reducing waste, improving transport efficiency, and simplifying the build process.
Its material intelligence and modular design represent a new standard of sustainability within the HVAC industry, proving that good design extends as much to the systems behind the walls as to the spaces we inhabit.