Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries! Submit your best projects now.
Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries!
Submit your best projects now.

No.56

The original post war red brick cottage was compromised by a poor connection to the outdoors and a basement rumpus room with a low ceiling.


The new lounge/kitchen areas have been located at the original basement level. By removing the floor above, the original basement level has been transformed into a lofty, double-height lounge and kitchen area open to the garden. The large volume is naturally lit by considered openings to the north façade which animate the materiality and volume of the space throughout the day.

 

The dining room has been designed as a pavilion between two courtyards. The room scales down the volume of its adjacent kitchen and living spaces to create an intimate garden room. A window box to the garden on the north side expands the function of the space whilst finely detailed steel bi-folding glazing blurs the boundary between in and out.

 

The new design for the master suite (formerly the front entry to the house) has transformed the minutiae of daily life into a luxurious ritual. The creation of separate zones within the space distils each part of the daily routine, serving to moderate the pace of daily life and promote a sense of calm that is heightened by the warm tactile materiality of the space. 

 

Throughout the project, inspiration was drawn from the mid-century era of the cottage. Walnut timber veneer was used in the joinery while other warm, natural tones play out through the timber floor and honey coloured vintage Eames furniture pieces and natural Aran Bianco Limestone of the kitchen bench. The living/kitchen/dining area is animated by the highlight windows that funnel northern light into the home, playing across the materiality and volume of the space in different ways throughout the day.

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