A Victorian-era terrace shakes off its guest house past with a rationalised plan and artful embellishments, restoring its former grandeur in a contemporary way. The palette of natural materials, fluted forms, warm pastels, and cool terrazzo flooring breathes new life into the interior with light and shade, texture, and detail.
The task was to deconstruct redundant guest house rooms and facilities and reconfigure them into a spacious family home, with minimal increase to the footprint. Its reunited spaces are luxuriously appointed with timber cabinets that soften and streamline circulation areas, sculptural pendant lights for ambient pools of light, linen curtains, and aged brass fixtures.
Colour is used confidently, from a pastel ochre pink in the public space to the bathroom’s opulent Ming green scalloped marble tiles. The deep rear garden is reorganised into three functional zones – a dining patio, a play lawn, and a swimming pool - to extend the living outdoors.
Photography: Kat Lu
Our work is spatially exciting, playful, and robust, tuned to nature and place.
Architecture should allow us to feel safe & secure, confident & expressive, quiet & reflective. It should make our lives better.
Our team comes from a range of backgrounds and disciplines, united by a passion for design excellence. Our focus on fostering a supportive, inclusive, well-balanced studio environment earned us the Best In Practice prize at the 2020 NSW Institute of Architects Awards.
Carter Williamson acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the Land on which we work, the Wangal people of the Eora nation, and the Land on which our projects are sited, including the Gadigal, Guringai, and Cammeraygal peoples. We pay our respects to Elders past, present, and emerging, and recognise the myriad ongoing ways First Nations peoples have cared for and shaped their natural and built environments across thousands of generations.