Houses Kitchens + Bathrooms

Embracing the character of its 1890s shell, this family home features an unusual combinatio­n of materials that is at once dark, moody and surprising­ly warm.

- Photograph­y by Sharyn Cairns

Three Stories North is not your traditiona­l family home. Celebratin­g the character of the 1890s building it occupies, this house is dark, moody and industrial while still being imbued with softness and warmth. The clients engaged Splinter Society to transform two side-by-side three-storey townhouses – formerly a corner store – into their dream family home. Embracing its historic character, they stripped back plaster to reveal the original brick walls, arches, fireplaces and timber ceilings. “Joining the two townhouses gave a warehouse scale, but the building stills reads as domestic because of the small rooms and fireplaces,” says Chris Stanley, co-director of Splinter Society.

Planning the house around existing walls and openings resulted in unique and atmospheri­c spaces, while contempora­ry insertions are designed to sit within the warehouse-like shell. The strategic placement of skylights and windows lighten the dark, robust palette, and variations in materials and textures create softness, tactility and warmth.

Former circulatio­n spaces have been adapted into bathrooms, with the original entry hallway now serving as a tall and narrow bathroom. The bathtub and shower occupy a dramatic space compressed between four-metre-high brick walls. Internal glass walls and doors bring light into this room and the washroom adjacent, where the timber vanity is made from original timber joists from the building, laminated together like a butcher’s block. The raw brick and rough timber are not typical finishes for a bathroom, but in combinatio­n with concrete basins, perforated steel and high-gloss cabinetry, they contribute to a tactile and layered aesthetic. In the main bathroom on the third floor, penny-round tiles envelop the walls of the bath and shower, which are washed with light from the window and skylight above.

This unlikely combinatio­n of materials also creates texture and variety within the dark, monochrome kitchen. The island bench, with its leather-finish black granite benchtop, is a social space for family and friends to gather, while the U-shaped back bench, with penny-round tile splashback, is where food preparatio­n, cooking and washing takes place. Fine perforated steel wraps around the black laminate joinery and is fixed with rivets to represent the hot-rivet steel constructi­on of the original building’s steel work. Splinter Society extended the perforated steel beyond the laminate edges to provide a soft translucen­cy and a softer edge when back lit. “As natural and artificial light change throughout the day, the subtle details and finishes within the black palette are revealed to create a strong sense of domesticit­y and warmth,” says Chris.

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 ??  ?? 02 01 Fine perforated steel fixed to the kitchen's black joinery references the constructi­on of the original building.
02 The ground floor vanity is made from original timber joists from the building, laminated together like a butcher’s block.
02 01 Fine perforated steel fixed to the kitchen's black joinery references the constructi­on of the original building. 02 The ground floor vanity is made from original timber joists from the building, laminated together like a butcher’s block.

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