Houses Kitchens + Bathrooms

Modernist manoeuvres

Decadent materials define the interiors of this 1960s apartment with harbour views.

- Studio Prineas

The subtle kitchen and bathroom updates in this 1960s apartment have created a rich interior that combines decadent materials with sparkling harbour views.

Studio Prineas’s approach to refreshing and updating this apartment was informed by the constraint­s of working within a 1960s modernist block. Strata rules required carpeted floors except in the kitchen and bathroom, and these rooms couldn’t be moved because of plumbing points. Navigating these constraint­s, Studio Prineas introduced blackened-timber joinery throughout, bringing hard surfaces to the apartment along with continuity and consistenc­y.

The clients purchased the apartment in 2017 in its original condition. There had been no renovation­s since the 1960s, and while the interior was dated, it had generous spaces and a well-planned layout with 270-degree harbour views. Studio Prineas’s transforma­tion began with improving a small but dysfunctio­nal apartment detail, a move that inspired the overall concept. “The key design move was to eliminate the divisive hob between the living area and verandah,” says Eva-Marie Prineas, director of Studio Prineas. Raising the balcony floor to the level of the hob with a blackened-timber step made the flow between interior and exterior spaces more seamless.

Blackened-timber is also used to form a border around the perimeter of the living and dining room, and it morphs into joinery, benchtops, credenzas and thresholds. As per strata requiremen­ts, the floor is otherwise covered in tufted wool loom carpet.

The kitchen design evolved from these two elements. The tufted carpet informed the scale of the tumbled Carrara mosaic floor tiles and its hues inspired the Calacatta Viola benchtop and splashback, bold and graphic against the burgundy-coloured cabinetry. The blackened-timber joinery runs beneath the east-facing window to meet the benchtop’s apron edge, emphasizin­g its monumental­ity. The depth of the bench provides additional surface space in the limited-sized kitchen, and a monolithic wall of black-veneer joinery conceals storage and appliances.

A marble-clad timber step marks the thresholds to the ensuite and guest bathroom/powder room, which have a minimalist palette of marble tiles and blackened steel. The walls, floors and ceilings are enveloped with the same mosaics as the kitchen floor to create consistenc­y and enhance the sense of spaciousne­ss, while fittings and fixtures are detailed in aged brass and blackened steel. A sliding glass door separates the wet area in the guest bathroom, a generous space that celebrates the ritual of bathing. The shower has a timber bench and harbour view, with natural light reflecting off the tiles and highlighti­ng their soft variations in colour.

The constraint­s of a project often drive creativity. For Studio Prineas, standard strata regulation­s impelled a clever response that lifts the apartment far beyond the generic.

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