Facebook

Tweet

Help

Grand home on a limited footprint

Love that heritage building but unsure whether it could ever be fit for modern purpose? Constraints can bring out the best in architectural thinking as this elegant cottage transformation reflects

On this project, the lower floor rooms and white
On this project, the lower floor rooms and limited garden needed to provide the decompression space necessary for the children at meal/play time.

Design by Alexander & Co

From the designers:

This project involved the alteration and addition of an existing Victorian cottage in Darling Point, Sydney. In recognition of the local suburbs’ vernacular, our ambition was to pay homage to a traditional grand home within a limited footprint.

Within the building’s heritage walls our team has articulated a contemporary floor plan for a noble family home including the overall replanning of the floor plate with relocation of stairs, four bedrooms and a garden terrace.


Design brief

The owners are a family of five, with three young children. The brief revolved around a highly programmable floor plate within a tightly condensed footprint. Each parent had particular needs including privacy, adult space and ample amenity for their kids including separate rooms with desks, wardrobes and play areas. 

The lower floor rooms and limited garden needed to provide the decompression space necessary for the children at meal/play time, as well as for the family to operate at different time scales; both the noisy, public and the intimate, private.

Response to the owner’s brief

Our pursuit throughout was to create measured complexity; a story of rooms and a home in which each inhabitant could find their own usage, favourite nook or public arena. Densely told, this is a story which is effectively nostalgic, allows personal and intimate experiences and creates a high value of story telling per metre, meeting the clients brief with care.

Similarly, our interest in the textured, hand constructed and materially robust spirit of the home was a theme we maintained during the design of this project. All surfaces have been deliberately hand detailed and finished from polished plaster and painted tidelines to ceiling lining boards and contemporary wall paneling.

In the kitchen, two pot railings in solid brass are encouraged to patina with time, reflecting the authenticity of material selections within the home. They also include light fittings. 

We also explored several historic references throughout including the application of traditional paved limestone floors in the kitchen and scullery, a grand central stairwell and light-well and the hearth of the grand rooms as well as contemporary interpretations of traditional wall paneling shown throughout. 

Interior designer Samantha Birtles

Upstairs, the family bathroom was designed as an abstract of a traditional winter-garden with steel framed skylight and timber ceiling paneling.

A house of rooms

Darling Point is a heritage conservation zone and is fiercely protected by its local community. 

Our house falls into this zone and is identified within an inventory of contributory items. Our role during the design and reconstruction was to allow the house to have its own celebrated story and scale within a tightly administered public domain.

With intent to regain the spirit of the building, rather than simply recreate its history we sought to dismantle the components of a home typical of the surrounding neighbourhood before scaling it back to fit the specifics of the site. This included replanning of the floor plate, with relocation of stairs, rooms and amenity as well as external works. 

In the absence of ‘open plan’ we have created a house of rooms; a home of rich personalisation for its inhabitants that is greatly beneficial to the homeowner.

But it is here too that we also find innovation, the built form sympathetic to its surrounding environment. The home is detailed to feel valuable within its restricted dimension and still told each internal story without obvious restriction. District views are carefully framed by paneled and obscured windows and doors, external landscaping and the glow of garden sconce lighting.

The project is beautiful in its exploration of finding the contemporary and grand within what is historic and compact; youthful but also reverential. It is a delicate, slightly feminine study in the role of the contemporary classic.

Architect Anna Trefely

Credit list

Architecture and interiors firm
Alexander & Co
Interior designers
Samantha Birtles, Sophie Harris, Mengxi Deng, Charlene Cong, Mel Mckoy
Project
Darling Point, Sydney
Architects
Anna Trefely, Jeremy Bull
Project size
230m2

Designed by: Design by Alexander & Co

Story by: Trendsideas

Photography by: Tom Ferguson

15 Dec, 2019

We know the Specialists

Related Book

TRENDS MINI COVER 19 12 A -

For several reasons, many sustainable, some materials that were once seen as having average merit in design terms have n...

Read More

Similar Stories