Beachfront sites close to the city have always been prime real estate, but they haven't always been given over to apartment living. Long before the first high-rise was built, it was the family beach cottage that reigned supreme.
Fast-forward half a century and it's easy to spot the difference. At Manly in Sydney's northern suburbs, the beachfront is dotted with boutique apartment developments and a single stand-alone house.
When the Byrne Lewis Group acquired the property featured on these pages, demolishing the last remaining cottage on the beach strip was never going to be an option. Restoring the house, which had just been heritage listed, fitted with the company's philosophy of preserving Sydney's architectural history wherever possible. To this end, local architectural firm Conybeare Morrison was contracted to undertake both the restoration of the cottage, and the design of a boutique apartment building on the rear of the site.
Architect Judith Rintoul says the house, which had been tenanted, was structurally sound, but dated. The character of the home was readily evident, however from the shingle and weatherboard cladding to the bullnose roof and enclosed veranda.
"The house had a very relaxed, beachside quality, which we wanted to enhance," Rintoul says. "Although we did have to replace the roof due to corrosion, the new roof has exactly the same profile as the original."
On the interior, the main living areas have retained their key functions. The enclosed veranda is still a relaxed family living area, and is open to the formal dining and living rooms, as well as the kitchen. With its white-painted sarking, French doors and panelled walls, the room is reminiscent of traditional American clapboard cottages in the Hamptons.