Framework for living
Moloney Architects
This addition is characterized by durability, natural materials and pops of colour.
With its emphasis on durability, natural materials and pops of colour, this addition to a 1910 weatherboard house in regional Victoria is a domestic retreat perfectly suited to the vicissitudes of everyday life.
01 A kitchen in robust formply is built to withstand the daily bustle of family life, while an open shelf provides ample storage for plants.
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02 The social, open-plan kitchen is positioned inside a “wooden box” that has been added to the back of a 1910 weatherboard cottage. Artwork: Chris Ingham. 03 Above the kitchen, exposed beams reveal the structure of the new addition and lend the living and cooking zones different personalities.
The home of architects Mick and Jules Moloney is, in some respects, a bit like a mullet – business in the front, party in the back. That’s not to say that the house feels like a questionable hairstyle statement best left in the 1980s, but rather a literal descriptor of the floor plan: the couple’s architecture studio resides in the front of the 1910 weatherboard house, while the informal and social living zone of their home opens generously onto the north-facing garden at the back.
When they bought the house, located on the main street of Ballarat in Victoria, Mick and Jules of Moloney Architects turned the front two bedrooms into their studio and lived in the remaining rooms at the back until, three kids and several years later, the space was in dire need of an overhaul. The bedrooms and bathrooms at the centre of the house were renovated and a new open-plan kitchen, living and dining extension was, in Mick’s words, “plugged” onto the back.
“Ballarat is a city with a rich architectural legacy and we believe in allowing old and new to sit respectfully,” explains Mick. To this end, the visually distinct addition – a cedar-clad wooden box – tucks in under the old roof.
Inside, natural materials prevail, from the blackbutt flooring and plywood ceiling to exposed beams and bookshelves in Victorian ash. Materials were selected for their durability and cost-effectiveness
and remain unadorned. Kitchen joinery is built from black formply, the surface of which is a little imperfect – an aesthetic the architects felt was well suited to the practicality of life with young children in tow. The colour and contrast of the formply demarcate the kitchen from the adjacent living zone. Similarly, the exposed beams above give the kitchen and living areas different personalities and “undress the structure a bit,” says Mick. These changes in materiality denote a shift in function in a modern-day interpretation of the compartmentalized rooms of Victorian houses.
The kitchen layout is informed by the family’s habits. The cooktop is located on the kitchen island to prevent the person doing the cooking from having to constantly turn to continue a conversation, while overhead cupboards have been eliminated in favour of an open shelf for plants. “We’re not tall,” explains Mick, “so neither of us really like overhead cupboards.”
The aesthetic in the family bathroom and ensuite is in keeping with the new addition. White tiles and black grout on the walls meet bluestone tiling on the floor and bath shelves in black formply. In the main bathroom, practicality is punctuated with a pop of colour thanks to the yellow 1970s pendant rescued from a junk shop. The brilliant yellow became the cue for yellow doors to the bedrooms and bathrooms – a dash of whimsy in a house that doesn’t take itself too seriously.
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04 Aligning the mirror and window in the main bathroom creates a sense of space, while a salvaged 1970s pendant adds personality and playfulness.
Architect
Moloney Architects
1320 Sturt Street
Ballarat Vic 3350
+61 3 5309 2499 info@moloneyarchitects.com.au moloneyarchitects.com.au
Project team
Mick Moloney, Jules Moloney
Builder Shane Lavery
Consultants
Joinery: Central Joinery and Kitchens Kitchen products
Internal walls: Hoop pine plywood; formply skirts and details; painted plasterboard; exposed Victorian ash beams Flooring: Blackbutt flooring Joinery: Carrara marble and stainless steel benchtops; white subway tile splashback; custom formply joinery; Victorian ash shelves Lighting: Paris Au Mois D’Aout pendants; Euroluce Sunny LED projector lights Sinks and tapware:
Tapware and Schock granite sink from Abey Appliances: Fisher and Paykel appliances Bathroom products Internal walls: White wall tiles from Ballarat tiles; Mapei grout
Joinery: Vanity by Central Joinery and Kitchens; Mirror from W.J. Robson Glass Lighting: Vintage yellow pendant; Euroluce Sunny LED projector lights Tapware and fittings: Tapware from Reece Sanitaryware: Basins, bath and toilet from Reece Doors and windows: Window frames by Central Joinery and Kitchens; doors painted yellow
Other: Custom bath shelf by Central Joinery and Kitchens