Houses

South Yarra House

A quaint walkway stepping up from Melbourne’s Yarra River is the sole means of access to this 1930s brick home, where an extension fulfils the owners’ desire for a treetop sanctuary.

- by AM Architectu­re

Alteration + addition

Melbourne, Vic

Sitting within inner Melbourne’s fine-grained Domain Precinct, South Yarra House by AM Architectu­re binds together a semi-detached heritage dwelling and its expansive sloped site. The architects have drawn on a quiet design approach that subtly commands the experience of the home’s landscape and picturesqu­e built context. Accessed solely via a quaint pedestrian walkway stepping down to the Yarra River, the 1930s house offered much charm but little connection to its surroundin­gs. Seeking to make the most of the site’s wide-ranging views to the river and the city beyond, the clients wanted a “treehouse” from which to delight in the outdoors.

The extension is composed of two distinct parts. At the top of the house, a stepped copper shroud forms a striking silhouette of its clinker-brick neighbours’ pitched terracotta roofs. Below, a blackened space frame, also stepped, reaches up from the ground, softening the expansive twelve-metre-high northern elevation and breaking down the mass of the house with permeabili­ty and texture. Each element is designed to recede into their surroundin­gs over time: the copper will slowly patina into washes of green, melding with the adjacent rooftops, and foliage will climb the frame, transformi­ng the facade into a continuati­on of the rambling landscape.

Internally, the extension is pulled away from the rear facade of the original house. A double-height void draws attention to the unassuming aged brick of the old home, whose rugged tactility and inflection­s provide unexpected warmth and richness to the crispness of the addition. The home’s original Victorian ash flooring is continued through the extension, where a generous kitchen and dining area is executed with simple detailing. The timber sides of the kitchen bench are topped with a finely profiled stone surface. A wall of sleek black cabinetry lines the western edge of the kitchen space, affording separation from the bustling walkway beyond.

The front of the house has been sensitivel­y restored. While circulatio­n has been redefined for modern living, the home’s original sense of comfort, enclosure and serenity has been retained. A new laundry and powder room, inserted into the existing building envelope, are saturated in a striking green hue that will eventually match the oxidized tones of

the external copper cladding. Upstairs, the existing bedrooms have been restored and refinished with restraint. Incongruou­s additions were stripped back where necessary, while the primary corridor was widened and lined with joinery along the western edge. The bathrooms are pared back yet considered; heritage-inspired fixtures provide personalit­y and gentle green accents add a playful touch.

The single new opening cast into the existing house is treated as a steel-lined threshold to the upper level of the extension. Here, a short bridge creates a sense of suspension within the double-height void and draws attention to the elevated nature of the home and the finely ribbed profile of the copper addition. Beyond, the main bedroom offers broad views to the establishe­d canopy and neighbouri­ng roofs. A north-west-facing corner window fitted with perforated copper screens references the irregulari­ty and grain of the home’s existing windows, bringing together the disparity of the old and the new. A central window with deep copper-lined eaves provides northern shading in summer. Wardrobes lacquered in white and oxidized green stop short of the ceiling, emphasizin­g the height of the space.

The shroud and space frame dip and rise to modulate the experience of the site. To the west, the frame rises to form a screen that filters the sun, then lowers gradually to direct northern views to the Yarra, where the shroud lifts to maximize northern light. To the east, views to neighbouri­ng flats are buffered by a lowering of the shroud, which rises once again to reveal a new south-eastern deck. Operable windows to the deck and northern fringe encourage cross ventilatio­n while extending views to the far corners of the site, increasing the sense of space.

The site’s steepness and the lack of vehicular access directed the design and constructi­on approach, including the lightness of the materials used. Director at AM Architectu­re Andrew Mellios says, “We deal with pragmatics in a direct manner and try to find a poetic resonance to how that’s expressed.” Seen from the Yarra below, the robust forms of the elevated home offer a surprising softness. Behind its gentle disguise, South Yarra House is a home hiding in plain sight.

The front of the house has been sensitivel­y restored. While circulatio­n has been redefined for modern living, the home’s original sense of comfort, enclosure and serenity has been retained.

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 ??  ?? 1 Public walkway 2 Entry 3 Laundry 4 Living
5 Office 6 Kitchen 7 Dining
8 Deck
9 Terrace 10 Neighbouri­ng
building 11 Main bedroom 12 Walk-in robe 13 Void 14 Bedroom
1 Public walkway 2 Entry 3 Laundry 4 Living 5 Office 6 Kitchen 7 Dining 8 Deck 9 Terrace 10 Neighbouri­ng building 11 Main bedroom 12 Walk-in robe 13 Void 14 Bedroom
 ??  ?? 05 Gentle green accents are a playful touch in the paredback bathrooms, where heritagein­spired fixtures add character.
06 Older incongruou­s additions have been stripped back where necessary, while existing bedrooms have been restored with restraint.
06
05 Gentle green accents are a playful touch in the paredback bathrooms, where heritagein­spired fixtures add character. 06 Older incongruou­s additions have been stripped back where necessary, while existing bedrooms have been restored with restraint. 06

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