Houses Kitchens + Bathrooms

Material expression Textured materials are layered within the sandstone-walled spaces of this Sydney home.

Pohio Adams Architects

- Photograph­y by Katherine Lu

The layering of textured tiles, timber and steel within the sandstone- walled spaces of a heritage home in Sydney express an elegantly balanced approach to materialit­y.

At first glance of this home in Sydney’s Paddington, you’d be forgiven for thinking Pohio Adams Architects had transforme­d a heritage Georgian house into a trendy bar. The home’s ground-floor living areas have a certain commercial quality and, whether it’s due to the low ceiling height or the broad expanse they occupy, they do evoke the mood of a nightspot or atmospheri­c restaurant. But of course, co-directors Bianca Pohio and Christophe­r Adams approached this project with the intent to create an open kitchen, dining and lounge space that was primarily for entertaini­ng and that shirked conservati­sm.

It helped that they had such good bones to work with and the home’s existing sandstone walls were the starting point for a design that celebrates materialit­y. Opening up this lower level required a fair bit of structural steelwork to produce such large spans. This is what lends the interior its industrial-style aesthetic, as does the new burnished white concrete floor, which helps bounce the light around a space that was previously dark and shadowy. A large, blackened-steel spiral staircase provides an anchor within the living spaces, countering the horizontal­ity of the broad room, and a combinatio­n of colour and texture differenti­ates the kitchen, while still allowing it to remain connected to the rest of the space.

Every non-structural element functions as an insertion. In the kitchen, for example, the joinery is freestandi­ng, as is the splashback, which comprises a tiled panel and steel frame that hovers off the sandstone wall. “This gives you a very clear understand­ing of the whole space,” Chris explains. “You can see from corner to corner, and so everything reads as an object installed within a broader context.” Treating the kitchen as a piece of furniture is a design solution that has certainly increased in popularity in recent times and, in this case, the architects have adopted the trend to great effect, emphasizin­g a sense of craftsmans­hip in the process.

The handmade tiles on the kitchen splashback are also used in the bathroom and barbecue area, creating a consistent palette that serves to establish visual cohesion between the home’s interior and exterior. There’s something incredibly appealing about this deliciousl­y glossy, treacle-coloured finish that simultaneo­usly contrasts with the sandstone’s matt surface and complement­s the use of weathering steel in the outdoor entertainm­ent area. This elegant renovation is a perfect study in how to respect the inherent material beauty of an existing built structure by working sensitivel­y to arrive at a fine balance between old and new.

Kitchen products

Internal walls: Existing sandstone; handmade glazed Moroccan tiles from Onsite

Flooring: White burnished concrete; brass trims

Joinery: Black slate benchtops from Bisanna Tiles; teak veneer cupboard fronts; custom mild steel shelving and cupboard fronts; handmade glazed Moroccan tiles from Onsite

Lighting: Custom LED strip lighting; Eutrac track lights from Dedece; Davide Groppi downlights from Dedece

Sinks and tapware: Vola tapware in black from Sydney Tap and Bathroomwa­re; Abey undermount sink in black from Winning Appliances

Appliances: Miele dishwasher, oven and cooktop; Fisher and Paykel french door fridge, refrigerat­ion drawer, extractor and barbecue

Doors and windows: Steel windows in Interpon Powder Coatings Sable Bass powdercoat, and brass hardware and doorhandle­s from Steel Windows Australia

Furniture: Bassam Fellows CB-22 Tractor Counter Stool in Walnut from Living Edge; dining table by Hans Wegner; chair with ottoman by Marcel Breuer

Bathroom products

Internal walls: Existing sandstone; handmade glazed Moroccan tiles from Onsite

Flooring: White burnished concrete

Lighting: Apparatus Trapeze wall light; Kreon Down light from Dedece

Tapware and fittings: Vola tapware in black

Sanitarywa­re: Studio Bagno wall-mounted basin; Astra Walker Pura wall-hung toilet suite

Doors and windows: Steel windows in Interpon Powder Coatings Sable Bass powdercoat, and brass hardware and doorhandle­s from Steel Windows Australia

Other: Brass-framed mirror

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01
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 ??  ?? 1 Kitchen 2 Butler’s pantry 3 Dining
4 Living 5 Bathroom 6 Barbecue area
1 Kitchen 2 Butler’s pantry 3 Dining 4 Living 5 Bathroom 6 Barbecue area
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02 A blackeneds­teel spiral staircase anchors the openplan living space.
02 02 A blackeneds­teel spiral staircase anchors the openplan living space.
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 ??  ?? 03 03 The bathroom features the same handmade tiles and exposed sandstone walls as the kitchen.
03 03 The bathroom features the same handmade tiles and exposed sandstone walls as the kitchen.
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