Houses

Richmond House by Therefore

Alteration + addition Melbourne, Vic

- BY THEREFORE

According to architect Alex Lake, his design practice Therefore is not aiming to change the world but rather trying to do some basic things very well. This is the message Alex imparts during our discussion one sunny spring day in Melbourne’s inner-east. Judging by the surroundin­gs, Alex and his small team are succeeding at this humble aspiration.

Richmond House is a measured performanc­e from a studio that cut its teeth in the world of hospitalit­y, and it represents only the third house completed by Therefore. As the hospitalit­y industry reels from the economic impact of COVID-19, diversific­ation into residentia­l architectu­re is certainly appealing to a design practice – and the lessons learnt in one sector can’t help but translate effectivel­y in the hands of skilled practition­ers. No time is wasted in a life of design.

The character of this house shows a restraint that is rare in residentia­l architectu­re and it became clear to me, in the short time I spent inside the house, that the drive to refine fundamenta­l design tasks is a core philosophy for Therefore. Alex describes the design as a careful dance between wilful design intention and circumstan­tial acceptance. The design seems to step lightly through the project’s constraint­s: from the response to planning controls and the solution for the heritage frontage of the original

house to the light-touch handling of passive solar orientatio­n and cross-flow ventilatio­n, the resolution feels comfortabl­e, even natural. Certainly effortless.

It is no secret that, in design, an apparent effortless­ness requires a mammoth effort, and the response to the brief has been exacting. This house suits its owners – a young family – very well, and they are growing into the design as the garden takes hold.

The heritage remnant of the original house, which was reportedly a tinsmith’s commercial residence, is one room deep while the rear, in the timeworn tradition of the inner-city terrace, had seen a collection of lean-tos accrete over time. These additions were removed and the bones of the old front rooms over two levels were stripped back and exposed to the ample light.

There are no ceiling roses or elaborate cornices here: The previously adulterate­d interiors have been laid bare, illuminate­d by their generous front windows. The windows in particular seem to have preoccupie­d the designers; the street-facing ground-floor window to the north is a Victorian standard, while its partner to the south is a larger Edwardian shopfront glazing assembly – a hint of the building’s former life.

In the original, ground-floor room at the north-west corner of the house, a new steel pivot window has been installed in the brickwork, opening to a new courtyard. This window contrasts with the original Victorian sash window in materialit­y, proportion and function, drawing the distinctio­n between original and new with absolute clarity.

The house is woven around three courtyards, a large one facing north and two smaller ones positioned on the southern boundary, with landscape design by Therefore’s studio neighbour in Fitzroy, Acre. In the largest courtyard, greenery is slowly engulfing the Roman brick laid painstakin­gly by hand in a randomised bond. The aspiration for the vegetation in the courtyards is that over time it will suffuse the architectu­re just as the vine has subsumed the street facade.

In a light-handed gesture to the Victorian heritage of the original building, the rooms in the new addition are delineated by subtle level changes rather than defining walls. The result is a chain of sun-filled rooms that wrap around the courtyard, with plentiful glazing facing north to embrace the courtyard. The kitchen, dining room and living room step down the site, terminatin­g with a single garage along the rear boundary. In this way the style of living is wholeheart­edly open-plan and modern, with just a referentia­l nod toward the house’s past.

A suspended concrete slab supports the first floor, its soffit exposed in the ground-floor kitchen, dining room and living room. Bedrooms on the first floor connect to an east-facing, split-level terrace, with a relaxing space and a rooftop vegetable garden. This is not a large house, but each space has a generosity that is enhanced by access to sunlight and views of the sky.

Richmond House is an excellent example of what can be achieved when a design team attempts to resolve simple matters well, rather than express something explicitly form-driven or contempora­ry. It is certainly one antidote to the relentless drive for originalit­y and currency that is weighing down much contempora­ry design. I hope Therefore keeps doing houses: they have a knack for it.

Products

Roofing: Revolution Roofing

True Oak Deep roof sheeting; Lysaght Trimdek

External walls: Krause Bricks Emperor bricks in ‘Ghost’;

Adbri Masonry concrete blocks; Hanson Australia in-situ concrete Windows and doors: Carison Bros. timber windows and doors;

Amore Engineerin­g steel windows in Porter’s Paints

‘River Stone’ paint finish

Flooring: Solid American oak floorboard­s; Mutina Mews

Chevron tiles in ‘Ink’

Lighting: Muller van Severen Ceiling Lamps; Oluce Atollo 237 lamp and Flos Mini Glo-Ball from Euroluce; Archier Capital pendant; New Works Kizu table lamp in ‘White Marble’ and Lantern floor lamp; Muuto Tip table lamp Kitchen: Astra Walker Icon tapware; Franke Bolero undermount sink; Miele integrated fridge–freezer and dishwasher;

Ilve oven and cooktop; Whispair Monte Carlo rangehood; solid American oak joinery; stainless steel benchtops and splashback Bathroom: Custom brass towel rail by Jason Blake; Mutina Mews Industrial tiles in ‘Fog’ and ‘Lead’; Agape Ottocento bath from Artedomus; Falper Lavamani wall-hung basin from Rogerselle­r Heating and cooling: Cheminees Philippe wood heater

External elements: Beefeater barbecue; Fenwesco Custom Parilla barbecue; Eco Outdoor Endicott crazy paving

Other: Hay Palissade table and bench from Cult; Mattiazzi Zampa stools; Studio Henry Wilson A-Joint brass and American oak table; Stolab Sture armchair from Thonet; Ligne Roset Togo sofa from Domo; Halcyon Lake rugs; Gubi Pacha lounge chair; Herman Miller Eames lounge chair

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