The New Zealand Herald

PLAY HOUSE

A Melbourne warehouse-turned-cubbyhouse champions spaces that make city living playful

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The Melbourne warehouse of two clever creatives is flled with happy memories

When Leah Hudson-Smith was a young girl growing up in Auckland, she would spend her days building cubbyhouse­s. Beyond just throwing a sheet over two armchairs, Leah would create serious structures that weaved through doorways and required the reposition­ing of furniture to maximise the fort’s footprint and flow. While most of us were just rearrangin­g things on our bookshelve­s or creating pop-star montages on our bedroom walls, Leah was reimaging entire spaces and, much to her engineerin­g father’s delight, revealing an early interest in architectu­re and spatial relationsh­ips.

Talk to Leah about the residence she currently shares with her partner, Wally Maloney, in the inner suburbs of Melbourne, and you can tell that the home they have created is the result of her thoughtful approach to space planning, charged with the couple’s shared need to keep life light and fun. Leah and Wally — an interior architect and a musician/ tour manager, respective­ly — are a social couple who like to laugh, entertain and travel. Their open-plan warehouse home gives them plenty of space to host friends and the flexibilit­y to change the layout when they need to combat the extremes of the Melbourne seasons.

Their charismati­c pooch, Benson the ‘Prince of the North’, pads around the space, taking his role as the unofficial doorbell seriously, alerting the couple to incoming guests with his deep bark. Bikes roll in next to the dining table, and their outdoor space — with its turf, potted plants and bench seating — resembles the sort of outdoor bar you would see on the buzzy main street just around the corner. So much so, strangers often pop their head into the warehouse’s laneway entrance looking for a pint.

Wally is a born and bred Melburnian, having grown up only a suburb away. Besides an overseas gallivant in his early twenties and internatio­nal tours with his band, he has always resided and worked within a tight inner- city radius, including time he lived behind a gourmet grocery store that he owned and ran with a close friend.

The sense of community and connection that Wally feels to the area are very strong, as illustrate­d by the fact that his band members live in a large warehouse next door. When the guys rehearse, their tropical-inspired party music filters through the streets.

It was through friends that Leah and Wally came to live in this sensationa­l space. The warehouse’s previous tenant, a talented woodworker whom they knew, had turned what was once a grubby mechanic’s garage into something habitable. He had cleaned away years of oil and grime, lined the ceiling in ply, put up bathroom walls and created a neat kitchen with American oak benchtops and exposed copper pipes — a good match to the industrial feel of the brick walls and concrete floors. Their friend had undertaken a huge amount of the grunt work, but Leah knew that the space still needed a few more things before it could be considered ‘home’. The big, open room was missing the private zones that a standard home would offer, particular­ly areas in which to sleep and work.

Leah, having taken her cubbyhouse­building prowess and turned it into a successful design career, took the opportunit­y to design two separate

pod structures — sophistica­ted, grown-up versions of a cubbyhouse. The bedroom structure is made of maple and shaped like a child’s line drawing of a house, with a pitched roof and a window off to one side. The interior of the maple house is painted white and minimally decorated, providing the couple with a calm and neutral space in which to sleep. Most importantl­y, the maple house can be completely closed off from the larger space to contain heat, sorely needed in Melbourne’s chilly winters. The other structure is a charcoal- painted bunkerlike box and the perfect insular hideaway in which Wally can work without interrupti­ons. Shelves installed on the outside of the bunker create a library zone in the negative space between the two structures.

With the help of a stonemason friend (in exchange for a bottle of whisky), the couple installed a fireplace, completing the transforma­tion from warehouse to home. It is filled with one-off timber furniture pieces that Leah has made through her calculated trial and error approach to creating. Because she is untrained in carpentry, Leah works instinctiv­ely, responding to the grain of the piece of timber in front of her. The process satisfies her deep-seated need to experiment and play. Her work includes a striking timber screen, two dimensiona­l pieces for the wall and many of the tables in the space, each with the attention to detail and finish you would expect from an interior architect.

The rest of the home is furnished with Gumtree [online site] discoverie­s or finds from the side of the road, and the objects, textiles and art carefully dotted around the lofty space have been collected over the many travels that Leah and Wally have done. As much as they love kicking back at home, they highly value their travel adventures and the inspiratio­n these journeys provide. By decorating their home with pieces collected on their trips, they are constantly reminded of the experience­s that define them. More importantl­y, they are reminded to keep playing and learning.

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 ??  ?? Wally composes music on this century-old piano, sitting on a chair Leah made from American oak. The lithograph­c print is from Oaxaca, Mexico.
Wally composes music on this century-old piano, sitting on a chair Leah made from American oak. The lithograph­c print is from Oaxaca, Mexico.
 ??  ?? The bedroom pod is an initimate space with the bonus of temperatur­e control.
The bedroom pod is an initimate space with the bonus of temperatur­e control.
 ??  ?? Above left: A brass crab picked up in Japan. Above: The small but well-functionin­g kitchen.
Above left: A brass crab picked up in Japan. Above: The small but well-functionin­g kitchen.
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 ??  ?? • Images and text from Individual by Jessica Bellef, photograph­y by Sue Stubbs, Murdoch Books RRP $55
• Images and text from Individual by Jessica Bellef, photograph­y by Sue Stubbs, Murdoch Books RRP $55

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