Houses Kitchens + Bathrooms

State of the art This intuitive renovation of a Spanish Mission-style home celebrates both art and design.

Kennon Studio

- Photograph­y by Caitlin Mills

For architect Pete Kennon, founding director of Kennon Studio, a client’s home should reflect their identity and be the place where they feel the greatest sense of belonging. It’s his job to create the perfect background for their lifestyle, possession­s and everyday interactio­ns, while ensuring a high degree of functional­ity. So when Thomas, an old art school friend, approached him to renovate the circa 1920 Spanish Mission-style home he’d recently purchased in Melbourne’s Malvern, Pete had no doubt he could deliver an outcome that perfectly captured the Thomas’s personalit­y.

“Knowing Thomas so well enabled me to design intuitivel­y,” Pete says. “And knowing he would want to hang his paintings on the walls definitely influenced the restraint I exercised in terms of colour and material palettes.” The resulting black and white scheme is as controlled as it is elegant, providing a framework for the client’s own artworks; powerful canvases inspired by the paintings of Jean-Michel Basquiat.

Pete was also mindful to respect the home’s original structure and in doing so strike a balance between old and new. “The challenge in creating a functional floor plan via structural changes is [identifyin­g] how to reinvigora­te an old house in really poor condition without losing any of its character and soul,” he notes. Existing archways, windows and cornice details were retained, although the kitchen, now flanked by dining and sitting areas, was reposition­ed to the centre of the new, long living space to the north side of the house.

The kitchen, dining and sitting areas are open; nothing is hidden and, in this respect, the daily rituals of cooking and meal preparatio­n are transforme­d into memorable experience­s to be shared between everyone, not just those standing at the island bench or oven. Large porcelain sheets allow for clean surfaces without joints and the joinery that runs the length of the living areas, along the north-facing wall, effortless­ly connects all three spaces. The fine, blackened steel door and window frames punctuate the whiteness, as do the kitchen’s curved tap and the recess above the stovetop, both in jet black.

While the synergy of art and design resonates throughout the whole house, the bathroom also takes its cues from the home’s heritage. The floor, shower recess and vanity splashback’s terrazzo finish is a direct reference to the existing slab of terrazzo concrete at the entry vestibule.

“It works well with the period of the home and I do really like the fact that we’re placing a light, contempora­ry wash over what is a beautiful style of architectu­re,” says Pete. “Overall, the design has generated a sense of belonging for a client who has been able to curate the space to his own tastes and needs.”

Kitchen products

Internal walls: Walls painted in Dulux ‘Lexicon Quarter’

Flooring: Refurbishe­d existing timber floorboard­s

Joinery: Maximum porcelain panel in ‘Ice’ and ‘Pepper’ in matt finish; Polytec Legato cabinetry

Lighting: Regianni Sunny LED Surface downlights

Sinks and tapware: Franke sink; Vale Superb Goose Neck kitchen mixer

Appliances: Smeg oven and rangehood; Fisher and Paykel fridge and integrated dishwasher

Bathroom products

Internal walls and flooring: Fibonacci Stone terrazzo tiles in ‘Cloud Burst’

Joinery: Custom cabinets

Lighting: Darkon

Deep C downlights

Tapware and fittings: Phoenix Tapware taps and shower rose

Sanitarywa­re: Omvivo Neo basin; freestandi­ng bath from Reece

Other: Viridian glass shower screen

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 ??  ?? 03 01 The bathroom draws on the heritage of the 1920s Spanish Mission-style home.
02 Swathes of terrazzo echo the existing materials at the home’s entry vestibule.
03 The kitchen, though reconfigur­ed in plan, has retained and emphasized original archways, windows and cornice details. Artwork: Thomas Paule.
03 01 The bathroom draws on the heritage of the 1920s Spanish Mission-style home. 02 Swathes of terrazzo echo the existing materials at the home’s entry vestibule. 03 The kitchen, though reconfigur­ed in plan, has retained and emphasized original archways, windows and cornice details. Artwork: Thomas Paule.
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 ??  ?? 1 Garden 2 Entry 3 Bedroom 4 Walk-in robe 5 Ensuite 6 Study 7 Bathroom 8 Sitting room 9 Kitchen 10 Dining 11 Living room
1 Garden 2 Entry 3 Bedroom 4 Walk-in robe 5 Ensuite 6 Study 7 Bathroom 8 Sitting room 9 Kitchen 10 Dining 11 Living room
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 ??  ?? 04 The kitchen and living areas are open, transformi­ng the daily ritual of cooking into a memorable experience to be shared with friends and family.
05 Expanses of white joinery and porcelain are punctuated with black details, such as a dramatic recess above the stovetop. 05
04 The kitchen and living areas are open, transformi­ng the daily ritual of cooking into a memorable experience to be shared with friends and family. 05 Expanses of white joinery and porcelain are punctuated with black details, such as a dramatic recess above the stovetop. 05

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