Nature in 3D

Preserving Australian Flora, One Polygon at a Time

Last updated: 21 March 2026

The Landscape Archive was born from a simple observation: Australian landscape architects deserve better than generic, foreign plant models. For too long, visualising our unique native landscapes meant compromising on accuracy – settling for approximations that looked nothing like the bush we know.

Our founder, Mark N. Laririt, spent over a decade mastering the intersection of landscape architecture and high‑end visualisation. He started his career in Melbourne, learning the craft at some of Australia’s most respected design studios. In 2013, he moved to Singapore, driven by a quiet ambition: to test his skills on a global stage. There, he honed his ability to translate complex design ideas into images that didn’t just look beautiful – they felt true.

Through it all, one frustration never left him.

No matter how skilled the render, the plants were never quite right. The eucalyptus didn’t look like eucalyptus. The banksia was generic. The nuance of an Australian landscape – the texture, the light, the spirit – was always the thing that got left behind.

The Archive is his answer.

A library built by a practitioner, for practitioners. Every species is botanically referenced. Every model is crafted with the technical precision of a visualiser and the soul of a landscape architect who knows what it means to work with Country. No shortcuts. No generic stand‑ins. Just Australian plants, rendered right.

This is not a collection of assets. It is a growing legacy – a commitment to the designers who refuse to compromise, and to the landscapes they are trying to honour.

This is not just a collection of 3D models. It is a growing legacy of Australian biodiversity, built to support the designers, architects, and visualizers who shape the world around us.

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