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Wednesday, November 20, 2024

A Designer’s Colourful + Curvaceous Coogee Rental!

After frequently moving over the past 10 years, Ana Piteira and Jonathan McFarlane went in search for a longer-term place to call home. They found it in this Coogee home, which they’ve been decorating ever since. 

Step inside and you’ll find a suite of curvaceous new and vintage furniture pieces, set amongst a punchy colour palette. Complementing the entire scheme are items from Ana’s home, accessories and clothing labels Reliquia Jewellery, Blanca Studio, Valet Studio, Aeyre Home and Respiro, all encompassed under her company, Reliquia Collective!

The Magic Of City Living, With Dean Bryant and Mathew Frank

Inner city living feels surprisingly uncommon for Australians, and yet those who choose to dwell in the CBD are passionate about doing so. Dean Bryant and Mathew Frank are two of those people!

The pair of theatre professionals (a writer/director, and composer/music director respectively) have lived in their beautiful art deco apartment in a 100-year-old building for the last ten years. In our new series, The Urbanists, in partnership with the City of Melbourne with support from the Victorian Government – we picked the couple’s brains about the places they frequent in the city, the activities they spend the day doing and why they love living right in the thick of things.

And Melbourne? More like Manhattan! Those city views are giving us Big Apple vibes – but better.

6 Ways to Motivate When Weight Loss Gets Tough

Achieving your weight-loss goals involves so much more than just saying no to dessert. For many, the journey to becoming healthier and dropping to your goal weight is a lifestyle change. It’s ab
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A Surprisingly Spacious Home, On A Tiny Footprint

creative-peoplearchitectureA Surprisingly Spacious Home, On A Tiny Footprint

Occupying a low profile on a sloping site in Auckland, New Zealand, this small home designed by Roy Tebbutt of Strachan Group Architects (SGA Ltd) impresses beyond its 64sqm footprint. 

Aptly named Back House – for its location at the back of another house – the brief for the design demanded very little; create a simple, yet beautiful home for a young family, on a small piece of otherwise unusable land.

While the sloping site presented a few challenges in terms of accessibility (with panels having to be crane-lifted in), its angle allowed the striking small home to sit below the main house without obstructing the view. 

To maximise space and comfort, the form of the home was intentionally kept simple. Its rectangular shape allows for service areas to sit along the hallway and sleeping areas. The design then narrows at the north end to a single-width space that stacks kitchen, dining and living areas end on end. 

To make the most of its sunny spot at the end of the garden, the roof of the home reaches up in the living and dining areas, with clerestory glazing to allow morning, midday and then afternoon sun to flood the space. 

The interior of the home features prefabricated cross-laminated timber (CLT) panels. These were used as the construction method to reduce construction time, and form the floor, walls and roof structure. The CLT panels have been left exposed and finished with oil to create a warm and streamlined interior look. 

This clever, compact home demonstrates how thoughtful design really can ensure comfortable and spacious living, even on a tiny footprint!

Back House in Auckland, New Zealand, designed by Roy Tebbutt of  Strachan Group Architects (SGA Ltd). Photo – Ross Keane.


The home was constructed by Create & Construct with Tebbutt Builders Ltd. The exterior features Larch cladding and a Colorsteel roof. Photo – Ross Keane.


Prefabricated cross-laminated timber (CLT) panels finished with oil make up the walls, ceiling and floor for a seamless interior look. Photo – Ross Keane.


The ceiling is raised at the north end of the home to allow morning, midday and afternoon sun to flood the living and dining spaces. Photo – Ross Keane.


Photo – Ross Keane.


Photo – Ross Keane.


Photo – Ross Keane.


Photo – Ross Keane.

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