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Located on Richmond Hill, what was once a run-down Edwardian cottage is now a family home. On a pint-sized plot of just over 170-square metres, the period home, with its picket fence, cleverly conceals three levels (utilises the fall of the land). Benefiting from two street frontages, with the front being the retained heritage, the rear elevation, with its roof-top terrace, is contemporary.

Designed for a client who had a full brief considering the size of the plot and the house, the home is deceptive. While the two front original rooms were retained, and are now used as bedrooms for the owners’ two young children, everything else is new. A few steps down, replacing what was a rudimentary lean-to, is now the main bedroom, walk-in dressing area and ensuite, benefiting from a slither of a courtyard that allows filtered natural light to enter over a tranquil fish pond. Pivotal to the design is the open treaded staircase, seen as the ‘spine’ of the house, that not only brings natural light into the core of the plan. The kitchen, for example, with its marble island bench, functions as a wall or partition, as much as a place for food preparation. And in keeping with contemporary living, there’s an open plan dining and living area that leads to a deck via generous glazing.

On the top level, a generous roof deck adjacent to the study/second living area offers amazing views of Melbourne’s skyline. Complete with outdoor barbeque, this deck functions as an outdoor room and its form respond to the slope of neighbouring roofs, thereby creating a protective enclave.

While there are still vestiges from the past, including the exposed red brick walls in the corridor of the original cottage, there are contemporary ‘textures’ to appreciate: acid washed cedar formed concrete ceilings, timber floors and bespoke joinery throughout. And while the dimensions of this place can be ‘read’ from the secondary street, it still appears as a single-storey cottage on Stanley Street. The only exception is the mirrored metal facade peaking above the home’s parapet, a solution for this heritage-protected street.

This house not only includes all the things a growing family was looking for but also benefits from its inner-city location. For a family with young children, this arrangement could not be more ideal.

Photography: Derek Swalwell

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Professional

Jost Architects was established in 2008 by Patrick Jost. With an enthusiastic approach at the beginning of the global financial crisis of that same year, and navigating the way through this challenging period it enabled the practice to move into the better years ahead. In the early days like many other practices, was based out the back of his house but it was only a year later that an office in St Kilda East opened, giving the practice a genuine identity and later moving further up the road to St Kilda.

From the inauguration of the practice, irrespective of the scale of a project, Jost Architects understand the importance not only of getting the design right but the essential requirement for exacting documentation for each individual project. The buildability of a project, the site and its constraints, are considered during this process. Costing and value management methods are also used at particular stages of the project to ensure the desired financial outcome.

While Jost and his team are perfectly adept at hand drawing, today everything produced from the office is through 3D modelling and presentation software from start to finish, assisting both clients and builders. The practice continues to renovate and extend period homes, design new homes, as well as work on larger projects such as apartment developments, cafes, office fit-outs and warehouses. It’s the process, as much as the diversity of the projects that continues to stimulate and enthuse the office.

At Jost Architects there isn’t a ‘practice style’ as treating each project as unique, the site, client’s functional requirements and preferred aesthetics results in distinct project styles. The practice produces strong contemporary designs that respond to brief, budget and location, along with the setting in which it’s found. The need to produce sustainable outcomes, irrespective of the scale of a project is a core value of Jost Architects, a focus since the practice was first established. Starting with the adoption of the basic principles of thermal passive design, sustainable systems are integrated within the building fabric to become unnoticed aesthetically. This results in projects which are comfortable to live in, economical to operate and of high-quality contemporary architecture.