The Chronicle

Better together

HOW ROSIE MORLEY AND PADDY MILNE BROUGHT OUT THE BEST IN EACH OTHER FOR SELLING IN THE CITY

- JAMES WIGNEY Selling in the City, October 19, Binge

Tearing down walls might seem par for the course in a home renovation reality TV show. But on Selling in the City, hosts Rosie Morley and Paddy Milne want to tear down a different kind of barrier – the metaphoric­al one that divides the interior inspiratio­n from the exterior experts.

“There’s a lot of shows out there that have an interior designer on the inside and then there’s someone working outside,” says Milne, who worked for leading landscapin­g companies in Canada and the UK before returning home to Australia to start his own business in Ballarat.

“We want to remove that wall and that’s why we’re always talking to each other. And most importantl­y for people looking at the home for the first time, we want everything to flow. Everything needs to feel conducive and connected through the home and if we don’t talk then you won’t have that.”

Award-winning interior designer Morley, who also has overseas experience working on high-end hotels in London and now heads up the interior team at Melbourne Architectu­re company Fender Katsalidis, agrees.

“We have to keep it symbiotic,” she says. “And we respect each other as designers so we want that opinion. The visual of the two contexts working together is important to us.”

The premise behind Selling in the City is simple: eight homeowners keen to sell their inner-city abodes in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane invite Morley and Milne in to use their design expertise to maximise their value when they hit the market.

Once the pair have been given the keys – and a budget anywhere between $45,000 and $140,000 – they immerse themselves in the suburb to try to find out what makes its residents tick and more importantl­y, what they are willing to pay top dollar for.

“We come up with a concept and then we look for this inspiratio­n in the neighbourh­ood,” says Morley. “With Newtown, for example, we knew it was the origins of queer culture, so we went to a drag show, we did a contempora­ry interpreta­tive dance class and our concepts are all centred around this idea of theatre, performanc­e and expression­ism.”

Morley and Milne then have to walk the line between design ideas that will help the house stand out from the crowd and provide an

instant wow factor, but are not so bold or radical that they put off prospectiv­e buyers.

“We’re looking for that sweet spot,” says Morley. “Bring them on the journey so they are buying into it but not go too hard that it’s polarising. I mean, there’s always that aesthetic sensibilit­y that kicks in and says ‘that is too much’.

And while there were big difference­s between the budgets they had for the houses in Sydney’s Newtown, Marrickvil­le, Leichhardt and Kingsford, Melbourne’s South Melbourne, Fitzroy and Richmond, and Woolloonga­bba in Brisbane, sometimes it was a case of more money, more problems.

“Sometimes with a really tight budget, decision-making is a little simpler and more brutal,” says Morley. “And when there is more money, you’re like ‘I want to do everything!’.” Despite their years of industry experience, Selling in the City is the first TV gig for both Milne and Morley (whose younger brother Bob starred in the hit Binge comedy drama Love Me). The two grew up not far away from each other in country Victoria but had never met until their chemistry reading for the show and hit it off instantly. On the second last day of production – and the afternoon before they are due to reveal the renovated Leichhardt house to its eager owners – Morley gets a little teary when asked what she most admires about her on-air partner.

“He is so collaborat­ive,” she says. “I can just say it straight when I don’t feel something is right outside. And vice versa for the interior. I can just say ‘I don’t know if this is working’ and he’s like, ‘Okay, fine, let’s find another solution’. There’s no ego.”

Similarly, Milne marvels at Morley’s multi-tasking as she segues neatly from her answer to a waiting tradie who urgently needs her advice before proceeding.

“She’s so switched on and so tenacious and it’s amazing what she’s able to take on and still answer questions like that in this conversati­on,” he says. “She’s everywhere. But then she’s just got such a warm, beautiful soul at the same time.”

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 ?? ?? Rosie Morley and Paddy Milne played to each other’s strengths in the reality renovation show Selling in the City; and (below) Morley in problem-solving mode in Fitzroy. Main picture: Nick Wilson/Binge
Rosie Morley and Paddy Milne played to each other’s strengths in the reality renovation show Selling in the City; and (below) Morley in problem-solving mode in Fitzroy. Main picture: Nick Wilson/Binge

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