Houses Kitchens + Bathrooms

INSIDE OUT

- Photograph­y by Toby Scott

In renovating his own worker’s cottage in Brisbane’s Highgate Hill, an architect has created a zone for living where the boundaries between spaces and functions dissolve.

Seamless is an adjective often used to describe indoor–outdoor connection­s in residentia­l design, but architect John Ellway prefers “ambiguous.” In the design of his own house, an adaptation to a worker’s cottage in Brisbane’s Highgate Hill, living spaces have been inserted into the former undercroft and the entire house has been engulfed in greenery, resulting in an environmen­t that is protected yet permeable and in which the edges are deliberate­ly difficult to discern.

An external stair shrouded in a vine-covered screen is the entry. Downstairs, finely textured glass on the eastern wall filters morning sunlight and allows inhabitant­s to observe the movement of plants and shifts in light. When open, large sliding doors to the north and south disappear behind walls. Together, these details accentuate the feeling of inhabiting the undercroft.

The kitchen is separated into two zones, one public for food preparatio­n, cooking and entertaini­ng, the other more private for appliances (fridge and dishwasher), the pantry and laundry. A concrete benchtop runs the length of the two zones, becoming a large sink that functions as a laundry tub, a sink for washing large pots or even a bathtub for children – evocative of childhood memories of bathing in the laundry trough. At the end of this space a toilet and shower open onto a planted garden through a sliding door of textured glass.

In the public zone, an island bench with a narrow concrete plinth contains open blackbutt shelves facing the dining area and

ovens on the kitchen side, concealing them from view. A shadow line beneath the black granite benchtop accentuate­s this horizontal form and makes it feel like a piece of furniture. An open timber shelf in place of overhead cupboards on the western wall prevents the open-plan room from being dominated by a joinery-heavy kitchen, while below-bench drawers are raised to extend the view of the floor beneath them, increasing the sense of generosity and space.

In the bathroom upstairs, a polycarbon­ate ceiling revisits the idea of being exposed to, but protected from, the elements. During the day, it fills the room with natural light, while at night it and the dark limestone tiles create a cave-like enclosure – an experience heightened by the sound of rain on the roof.

The vanity is outside the bathroom, in an alcove between the bathroom and main bedroom and adjacent to the void above the dining area, facilitati­ng conversati­on during daily rituals. A decked walkway accentuate­s this vertical openness and unites the vanity and bedroom to the bathroom.

John explains that details in the house recall memories of childhood homes and of internatio­nal travel, from Japanese-inspired screens that allow rooms to change function to lush planting and a semi-outdoor bathroom inspired by Malaysia’s equatorial climate. But it is John’s and Amber’s childhood memories of time spent in the garden, and of escaping Queensland’s sun and heat in dark, shady spaces, that are most clearly articulate­d in the design of Terrarium House.

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06 In the upstairs bathroom, a polycarbon­ate roof admits light and the sound of rain. At night, the dim light and dark tiles create a cave-like enclosure.

07 The vanity occupies a niche outside the bathroom, allowing the daily rituals of teeth brushing and hair drying to become social.

08 A deck-like walkway creates a “feathered edge,” enhancing the vertical openness between the two levels.

Architect John Ellway

+61 408 070 417 mail@jellway.com johnellway.com

Project team John Ellway

Builder

Mat Saggers

Consultant­s

Engineer: Westera Partners Kitchen products

Internal walls: Pine tongue-and-groove boards in Feast Watson ‘Black Japan’; Rockcote rendered concrete block Flooring: Polished concrete with 10 mm bluestone aggregate

Joinery: Granite island benchtop from SNB Stone with ‘Lunar Black’ leather finish; Mast Furniture New England blackbutt and plywood cabinetry; in situ concrete bench and sink by builder

Lighting: Lighting Matters hidden LED strip lighting Sinks and tapware: Oliveri undermount sink; Grohe tapware

Appliances: Fisher and Paykel ovens, fridge, gas cooktop and integrated DishDrawer

Furniture: Nomi table; Elmwood chairs Bathroom products Internal walls: Gris Foussana limestone from Slate and Stone; Pine tongueand-groove boards in Feast Watson ‘Black Japan’ Joinery: Custom steel towel rail and shelf in Dulux ‘Black’ Lighting: Lighting Matters hidden LED strip lighting Tapware and fittings:

Grohe tapware Sanitarywa­re: Villeroy and Boch toilet; Grohe toilet

 ??  ?? 01 The kitchen is split into two zones: one public for cooking and entertaini­ng, the other more hidden for appliances, the laundry and pantry. Artwork: Laura Patterson.
01 The kitchen is split into two zones: one public for cooking and entertaini­ng, the other more hidden for appliances, the laundry and pantry. Artwork: Laura Patterson.
 ??  ?? 03 04 The concrete benchtop runs the length of the kitchen. Appliances are hidden from view for a cohesive aesthetic. 05 An open timber shelf supported by steel rods hangs above the bench and provides storage for everyday items.
03 04 The concrete benchtop runs the length of the kitchen. Appliances are hidden from view for a cohesive aesthetic. 05 An open timber shelf supported by steel rods hangs above the bench and provides storage for everyday items.
 ??  ?? 02 Open timber shelves make the kitchen island into a furniture piece that displays a collection of treasured objects. 03 Living zones occupy the undercroft, where blackstain­ed ceilings preserve a sense of shadow and compressio­n.
02
02 Open timber shelves make the kitchen island into a furniture piece that displays a collection of treasured objects. 03 Living zones occupy the undercroft, where blackstain­ed ceilings preserve a sense of shadow and compressio­n. 02

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