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Thursday, November 7, 2024

A Family Home Of Understated Glamour In Studley Park

Emma Abrahams, founder and creative director of Heart of Bone, is a woman with a distinct sense of style. So, it stands to reason that her home would have equal flair!

We take a tour through the renovated 1970’s Studley Park house that Emma shares with husband Justin (co-founder and director of Pedla), their two kids aged 6 and 12, Ghost the black German shepherd and Shadow the black rescue cat. Despite Emma’s style credentials, she lost the battle with Justin to fit out the home in an all black palette – instead Justin triumphed with his preferred bright, white walls. A win for everyone, we think!

Revisiting A Magical Inner City Treehouse

We’ve featured hundreds of homes over the years on The Design Files, and if I’m honest, some of them don’t quite get all time in the spotlight that they deserve. With COVID-19 currently putting our regular photoshoots on hold, we’re taking this opportunity to dip back into the archives on occasion, revisiting some of our favourite homes that may have slipped under your radar the first time.  

This week we’re bringing you the inner-city Melbourne treehouse of Fleur Glenn, designed by architect Murray Barker.

We caught up with Fleur again to find out what’s changed for her since early 2019, and how she’s navigating this challenging time.

A Clever, Creative Renovation For This Compact Victorian Home

From the front facade, you’d have no idea of the clever renovations that lie within this Victorian cottage in Melbourne.

Keen to avoid a ‘typical box on the back’ extension, owners and designers Penny and Simon Barnes crafted an alternative, curving roof extension that utilises every inch of available space on the Carlton North block.

The expanded home remains faithful to the area’s original architecture, while simultaneously providing more space and improved energy efficiency for the couple and their three children. 

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A Shed-Inspired Home, Designed To Age Gracefully

creative-peoplearchitectureA Shed-Inspired Home, Designed To Age Gracefully

This new house in Bellbrae, Victoria, (located just off the Great Ocean Road between Torquay and Anglesea) is Wiesebrock Architecture’s debut project, setting a high standard of what’s to come from this young studio!

The home replaces a rundown house lived in by the clients for almost 30 years. Having recently retired, they wanted an improved house that could better support their new stage in life, as well as regular visits from their now adult children.

A reworking of the existing house was initially proposed, but proved unsustainable. ‘We established quickly the existing house was beyond repair, and that a new build would be less expensive and a far better design outcome,’ says Richard Wiesebrock, director of Wiesebrock Architecture. 

When word of this imminent demolition got around Bellbrae, an old local came forward to express his relief, having built the property using some very questionable methods!

He professed they had no idea what they were doing,’ Richard says. ‘To source stumps for the house, they drove around the backroads at night and pulled out hardwood, roadside reflector posts. Probably not legal or up to code, but they lasted over 30 years!’

Wiesebrock Architecture designed the new house in the form of two pavilions for multiple reasons. Richard explains, ‘The primary pavilion is a comfortable one-bedroom home with everything they need. It’s easy to maintain, heat and clean.’ 

The second pavilion is used as a private guesthouse comprising two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a kitchenette. When no guests are staying, this becomes a refuge for one of the owners, who is completing a PHD on the works of Emily Dickinson, while the other spends time riding and caring for her horses!

In between the two pavilions is a large outdoor deck covered with polycarbonate roofing. The couple use this area daily when reading the paper, but this can just as easily cater for larger events such as Christmas lunch, and even their son’s wedding!  

Aesthetically, the new house draws on the couple and architect’s love of old farm sheds. ‘We thought we’d take inspiration from our favourite aspects of them: their form, materiality and clustered siting of multiple sheds,’ says Richard.  

Durable, low-maintenance, corrugated and galvanised steel sheeting features on the exterior, while the warm interior references classic shearing sheds. ‘The interior is lined with plywood sheets designed to age gracefully, instead of [needing] repainting in the future,’ says Richard. ‘The sheets to the living area ceiling are overlapped to break up the monolithic surface and utilise full sheet widths, with no cuts required and no waste.’

Other sustainable features include the use of salvaged bricks where possible, and a 6 kilowatt solar array (including some panels reused from the existing house).

This project exemplifies the overall aim of Wiesebrock Architecture: to add value to clients’ lives through considered, functional and elevated design. 

‘I enjoy designing spaces that make life’s little moments better,’ says Richard. ‘The end result is a home the clients love, and a build that still makes me smile.’ 

This country home draws on the client and architect’s love of old farm sheds. Photo –  Ben Hosking


The warm interior features Victorian Ash flooring and radiata pine walls. Photo –  Ben Hosking


The fireplace is the primary heat source in the house’s main pavilion. Photo –  Ben Hosking


The use of overlapped plywood sheets on the roof minimised wastage and labour. Photo –  Ben Hosking


Overlapping plywood gives a perfectly rustic and textured finish. Photo –  Ben Hosking


The plywood sheets will age gracefully. Photo –  Ben Hosking


Durable, low-maintenance, corrugated and galvanised steel sheeting features on the exterior. Photo –  Ben Hosking


Wiesebrock Architecture designed the new house to feature a primary pavilion and guest pavilion, separated by an outdoor deck. Photos –  Ben Hosking


Gable roofs are oriented to allow for a concealed 6kW solar array. Photos –  Ben Hosking


The house belongs to a retired couple, one of whom is completing a PHD on the works of Emily Dickinson, while the other spends time riding and caring for her horses! Photos –  Ben Hosking

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