Homestyle New Zealand

ENOUGH NOW

Simple and sophistica­ted is the name of the game around here, and the restraint really pays off.

- WORDS PHOTOGR APHY Claire McCall Duncan Innes

GROWING UP, AMY DE COURT HAD

little interest in the world of interiors. Her mother, a graduate of Nanette Cameron’s School of Interior Design, kept a beautiful home, which Amy was vaguely aware of, but Amy took the path to studying industrial and organisati­onal psycholog y instead. It wasn’t until she bought her first house and had kids of her own that a latent desire to create a living environmen­t that was calm and collected surfaced. Now that Sofia and George are at kindergart­en, Amy’s finishing her third year of part-time study at, you guessed it, the very same institute her mother attended.

The Herne Bay, Auckland villa that Amy and her husband Geoff Long moved into two years ago is evidence of her aim to bring simplicity to the fore. “We fell in love with its gorgeous street presence, elevation from the road, high ceilings and wonderful connection to the back garden,” says Amy. Inside, the structural work had been done, including the addition of an open-plan living room to the rear. But Amy could see how something special could become something spectacula­r.

The couple’s previous home was in nearby Arch Hill. “It was a lovely workman’s cottage but tiny,” says Amy, “and with a second child on the way, we needed something larger.” The footprint of this three-bedroom villa may not have been as generous as they’d hoped, but its lightness of being was an irresistib­le selling point. French doors lead from the dining zone •

to the terraced back garden and the lofty stud creates a wonderfull­y spacious feel. “We also liked the L-shaped configurat­ion of the main room, which gives a sense of separation between dining and living.”

Cosmetic adjustment­s were easy to achieve. They repainted with Resene Black White throughout, sanded and polished the floors and laid pale grey carpet in the bedrooms.

Renovating the kitchen and bathrooms was another story. Amy worked closely with interior designer Suzanne Allen on the planning that transforme­d the country-style kitchen into something modern. She had a material palette in mind: white and timber, with marble accents and plenty of storage.

The kitchen now has full-height storage, acres of bench space and a splashback made with hexagonal Carrara marble tiles for some understate­d texture. Indeed, marble is a key aspect of the revamped décor throughout the home: a single smooth slab encases the chimney wall of the living room fireplace and those hexagonal kitchen tiles are also hero elements in both bathrooms. Matte black tapware and shower frames in the bathrooms contrast with the pale tones, and brass light fittings lend a sense of nostalgia.

The new fittings and furnishing­s celebrate the local, with many pieces by New Zealand designers, and the pared-back look is punched up with plants in pots that aren’t your standard •

 ??  ?? ABOVE The Dots by Lars Tornøe for Muuto make chic coat hooks in the entryway above a Sunday bench by Sunday Home Store. TOP RIGHT Seating doubles as storage beneath generous windows opening onto the backyard. OPPOSITE In the dining room, Eames DSW chairs from Matisse gather around a Soul table by Nonn.
ABOVE The Dots by Lars Tornøe for Muuto make chic coat hooks in the entryway above a Sunday bench by Sunday Home Store. TOP RIGHT Seating doubles as storage beneath generous windows opening onto the backyard. OPPOSITE In the dining room, Eames DSW chairs from Matisse gather around a Soul table by Nonn.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE In the main bathroom, wall-mounted Line lights by Douglas and Bec are in perfect circular harmony with a Flynn mirror by Middle of Nowhere.
ABOVE In the main bathroom, wall-mounted Line lights by Douglas and Bec are in perfect circular harmony with a Flynn mirror by Middle of Nowhere.
 ??  ?? OPPOSITE Amy worked with interior designer Suzanne Allen on the kitchen and bathrooms. Here oak-topped S2 stools by David Moreland echo the island benchtop crafted from European ash.
OPPOSITE Amy worked with interior designer Suzanne Allen on the kitchen and bathrooms. Here oak-topped S2 stools by David Moreland echo the island benchtop crafted from European ash.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand