Architecture & Design

The Bowery

The Bowery is a mixed-use infill project, four storeys in height with 17 dwellings, two commercial spaces and two basement levels, located in a heritage conservati­on area and steep site.

- WORDS ADRIAN HERNANDEZ ARCHITECT ALH+ PHOTOGRAPH­Y TOM FERGUSON

The site is a gateway site to a retail/ commercial strip that is struggling, like many other similar locations in Sydney, to adapt to contempora­ry retail demands with poor quality living opportunit­ies and a very busy road to contend with.

The project addresses how to potentiall­y re-address these issues and create a desirable place to live (17 apartments) over four storeys with great commercial spaces located along one of Sydney’s busiest streets thus providing a vision for future projects in the area to follow.

A vision relying on a deep understand­ing of context, history and stitching together rather than scale and “bling” to create the next evolution for Willoughby Road in Sydney’s inner-north.

AJH+ was commission­ed to undertake architectu­ral and interior design through all phases.

Addressing traffic, privacy, solar access and the heritage qualities of the precinct relied on contempora­ry reinterpre­tations of historical architectu­ral ideas.

In the late 1800’s, Willoughby was a brickmakin­g hub with a variety of manufactur­ers being located in the area. The existing rich tapestry of crafted brick buildings, many of them heritage listed today, pay homage to this era.

The Bowery continues the rich history of considered, well-crafted brick buildings in

Willoughby by wrapping the Bowery in Bowral Gertrudis brown “base” and Bowral Blue “top” articulate and define the architectu­re.

The Bowery uses brick loggias, an external space to the side of a space (usually residentia­l) with columns defining its perimeter, on the lower levels and a fine colonnade on the upper levels to resolve a number of competing requiremen­ts. The material selection was also such that it minimised any maintenanc­e concerns and as well as easily aligning with the history of place.

The reinterpre­tation of the loggia on the lower levels are taken to the boundary line, creating expanding and contractin­g openings, providing privacy from the busy street.

The vertical loggia blades for the balconies also creating a strong sense of an “outdoor room” as an extension of space for the apartments connecting the inside with the outside.

Their articulati­ons respond to the street being wider and more solid providing protection, an initial buffer from sounds, visual privacy and continuing the masonry base characteri­stic of the precinct.

The simple brick gesture engages The Bowery with the existing brick context. The gesture is treated in an unpretenti­ous manner relying on its materials, proportion­s responding to uses and is invigorate­d by the subtle changes that create a variety of very useful “layers” for commercial spaces and residents.

A vision relying on a deep understand­ing of context, history and stitching together rather than scale and “bling”...

Balconies, outdoor rooms, commercial facades, lobbies, communal open spaces, the steepness of the site, separation of neighbouri­ng uses and addresses to the street all interact with the loggia, vary it and adapt its simple gesture.

The varying apartments planned around access to their own “outdoor room” with all living and bedroom spaces located to benefit from the space providing flexibilit­y for expansion, ventilatio­n, external amenity for residents and adjusting with needs as time passes. This provides a well-received unique offering to the market

On the upper levels where there is less privacy and sound concerns, a Bowral blue brick colonnade of finer proportion­s is introduced facilitati­ng distant views, providing solar protection and articulati­ng a tapering of the plan to address the corner gateway site.

Commercial and residentia­l spaces have vastly different requiremen­ts. These requiremen­ts (functional/security/privacy etc) are often conflictin­g and opposed.

The commercial spaces, larger than existing examples, are brought forward to the street line and turn the corner. This provides opportunit­y for “filtration” through many street entries, maximising openings to engage with the street addressing the human scale and providing a balcony for the commercial space.

The apartments are set back as far as possible from the street using distance as the buffer from street. The main spaces (living/bedrooms) face this buffer providing a protected external outlook to the apartments.

The Bowery uses brick loggias, an external space to the side of a space with columns defining its perimeter...

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