House of Darwin

House of Darwin A COMMUNITY DRIVEN LOVE LETTER TO THE NORTHERN TERRITORY • RESPECT YOUR ELDERS • 100% INDIGENOUS OWNED

WHAT IF THE PEOPLE USING A PLACE HELPED DESIGN IT?For tens of thousands of years, Aboriginal people designed with Countr...
17/06/2026

WHAT IF THE PEOPLE USING A PLACE HELPED DESIGN IT?

For tens of thousands of years, Aboriginal people designed with Country.

Shelter was shaped by climate. Travel routes followed water. Communities built around culture, kinship and connection.

Then somewhere along the way, design started happening from a distance.

Decisions made in offices. Buildings designed by people who’d never lived there. Infrastructure built for communities, not with them.

Hoop Dreams started with a simple belief:

People protect what they help create.

A basketball court is just a basketball court until a community helps design it.

Then it becomes a meeting place.
A source of pride, A symbol of ownership.

We’re not in the business of painting courts.

We’re interested in a bigger question:

What happens when we bring design back to the people?

Because the future of remote Australia won’t be built in Canberra.

It will be built with the people who call it home.

For years we’ve been asking ourselves:How do we take House of Darwin beyond NT merch?The answer wasn’t more graphics.It ...
15/06/2026

For years we’ve been asking ourselves:

How do we take House of Darwin beyond NT merch?

The answer wasn’t more graphics.

It was better design.

Over the past year we’ve invested heavily into cut and sew development, creating garments from the ground up inspired by the people, places and stories that shaped Northern Australia.

One design pillar kept showing up throughout the process.

GRIT.

The resilience of the Indigenous stockmen who helped build the cattle industry and open up the North.

This collection is our interpretation of that story.

Built on Larrakia Country.

Designed in Darwin.

Coming soon.

The Pull of the Centre.
12/06/2026

The Pull of the Centre.

For House of Darwin, Hoop Dreams is much more than a basketball court project.It started as an idea to refurbish run dow...
10/06/2026

For House of Darwin, Hoop Dreams is much more than a basketball court project.

It started as an idea to refurbish run down basketball courts in remote Indigenous communities, but evolved into a community led program where each court is designed alongside local people, artists, Elders and young people. The goal isn’t just to pour concrete and paint lines it’s to create places that reflect local culture, stories and identity

Why it matters

1. It’s often the heart of the community
In many remote communities, the basketball court is one of the few public gathering spaces. It’s where kids play, families gather and community events happen.

2. It creates pride and ownership
Rather than arriving with a finished design, Hoop Dreams works with communities to co-design each court. When people help create something, they look after it and it becomes part of the community’s identity.

3. It preserves and celebrates culture
Each court tells a local story through artwork, language, symbols and cultural narratives. They’re effectively giant pieces of public art that belong to the community.

4. It gives young people something positive
A quality court encourages sport, connection, health and community participation. For many kids, it’s the best recreational infrastructure in town.

The bigger picture

What makes Hoop Dreams special is that it’s not really about basketball.

It’s about proving that infrastructure in remote Australia can be built with communities rather than for them. The court is simply the canvas. The real outcome is connection, pride, culture and opportunity.

A simple way to describe it:

“Hoop Dreams turns basketball courts into cultural landmarks and community meeting places, designed by the people who use them.”

Wishing I was fishing 🎣
09/06/2026

Wishing I was fishing 🎣

♥️🫶🏽
06/06/2026

♥️🫶🏽

03/06/2026
Over 4,000 native plant species call the NT home. Most people see red dirt. We see one of the most diverse and resilient...
29/05/2026

Over 4,000 native plant species call the NT home. Most people see red dirt. We see one of the most diverse and resilient landscapes on Earth.

After months of heat, fire and dust, the first rains arrive and thousands of flowers appear like they’ve been waiting backstage the whole time.

If that doesn’t make you smile, you’re probably not paying attention.

Our New Flowers of the North bag is online now!

Cahills Crossing back online 🫶🏽🐊
28/05/2026

Cahills Crossing back online 🫶🏽🐊

Adelaide River Rodeo 92
25/05/2026

Adelaide River Rodeo 92

Address

2/20 Knuckey Street
Darwin, NT
0800

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5:30pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm
Sunday 10am - 3pm

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