Anson Smart Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/anson-smart/ The leading authority for the Architecture & Design community Fri, 21 Mar 2025 14:04:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://interiordesign.net/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/ID_favicon.png Anson Smart Archives - Interior Design https://interiordesign.net/tag/anson-smart/ 32 32 Unwind In This Artful Sydney Residence With Soul https://interiordesign.net/projects/decus-ka-design-studio-syndey-residence/ Fri, 21 Mar 2025 14:04:23 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=252740 Decus and KA Design Studio look to a patchwork of global influences and material complexity to craft this striking family home in Sydney.

The post Unwind In This Artful Sydney Residence With Soul appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
kitchen area with long dining table, kitchen and natural lighting
A sculpted, 20-seater dining table, bar and and oak-lined kitchen, offer a vibrant entertaining space set against verdant landscape vistas and abundant northern light.

Unwind In This Artful Sydney Residence With Soul

“The clients wanted a home with soul—something layered, tactile, and effortlessly lived-in, nothing that felt too pristine,” explains Alexandra Donohoe Church, Decus founder and managing director. “It had to be as functional as it was beautiful, a place where their extended family could gather over long lunches but also a sanctuary for quiet moments.”

Inheriting a home that had been artfully renovated by KA Design Studio, Decus was charged with adding warmth and personality to the grand, multilevel (and multigenerational) home, blessed with sweeping views across Sydney’s premier beach suburbs of Vaucluse and Watson’s Bay. Buoyed by their mission to “rage against its simplicity”, the studio has woven together diverse design influences, grounding textures, materials and hues to create a captivating journey—a ‘patchwork’ of experiences—across the home.

Inside A Patchwork Sydney Home

entryway with arched entrance and view of stairs
Layered with a lively mix of figured natural stone and polished plaster walls, the cupola, designed alongside architecture practice KA Design Studio defines the home’s main axis: a space for special events, that feeds movement into the adjacent library, living spaces and up the sweeping staircase.
entryway with lots of natural light and dining table
Upon entry, views are cast through a striking central cupola—a double-height, circular volume with dancing natural light.

The striking entryway cupola—a naturally illuminated double-height volume with a James Turrell like ocular opening at its centre—subtly sets the tone for the visual journey about to unfold, with a striking Viabizzuno chandelier, Marmorino-rendered walls and beautiful object de art forming a highly considered, yet welcoming entry experience. The space then effortlessly flows into the adjacent library and living spaces (past the sweeping staircase), leading to a sculpted, 20-seat dining table and to a kitchen that is as visually intoxicating as it is refined and sophisticated. A Decus custom-designed aged brass hood is contrasted against the granite kitchen island where the stone veining is so dynamic, it threatens to overwhelm the space, but is yet so perfectly in rhythm with every other element. Such is the skill of the curatorial skill of the studio.

The elegant lounge area, with a sinuous custom banquette seating taking centre stage, brings additional dynamism to the space. An arched, Flemish glass-lined double door opening connects to an intimate library, color washed in an appropriately named “cab sav” paint finish, harmoniously pared with other bespoke pieces in in bursts of burgundy, ink, terracotta, and mauve to exhilarating effect. The oak-lined study and master bedroom and master robe master bathroom, have the same moody impact, with the sumptuous oak joinery and extraordinary selection of veined stone granite echoing the other key areas of the home. A hidden stairwell leads to the home’s private lower level: a self-contained ‘apartment’ for recreation and visiting guests.

Bespoke Furnishings Enliven The Home

lounge area with ribbed ceiling and elevated podium area
A ribbed ceiling and elevated podium define an elegant lounge area, the undulating lines of its bespoke tiered sofa softening the floorplan’s formal geometry, while delineating interior settings.
library area with arched entryway, shelves and seating
An arched aperture, lined with Flemish glass, connects to the intimate library.

At the centre of the lower level, a horse-shoe shaped wine cellar is complemented by a pool table and ping-pong table, leading through to a kitchen and expansive outdoor terrace. This generous rumpus space is complemented by guest quarters, a gym, sauna and cinema room—“a place to party, party, party, while accommodating three generations of this incredibly close-knit, extended family under one roof,” says Alexandra.

kitchen area with long dining table, kitchen and natural lighting
A sculpted, 20-seater dining table, bar and and oak-lined kitchen, offer a vibrant entertaining space set against verdant landscape vistas and abundant northern light.
study with dark olive green chair and wooden shelves
In the study—beyond the arched aperture, set against a rich tapestry of textures and materials, a collection of custom furniture pieces and full-height bookshelves offer a quiet ambiance.
library area with shelves, lamp and seating
Sculpted furniture and full-height bookshelves offer a quiet ambience, complete with a hidden stairwell to the home’s private lower level—a self-contained ‘apartment’ for recreation and visiting guests.
kitchen with dark marble island and neutral hues
Weaving together diverse design influences, materials and colors, this chameleonic home in Sydney’s leafy Vaucluse offers a nuanced and captivating journey across spaces–an embodiment of Decus’ rebellious yet worldly spirit.
bedroom with dark red sheets and large art piece hanging above bed
A generous main suite opens on to a broad, north-facing terrace.
primary suite bathroom with wooden wardrobe and marble sink
In the primary suite, floor-to-ceiling stained oak joinery flows from the walk-in wardrobe to the ensuite, where natural light enhances the luxurious atmosphere.
suite area outside of bathroom with wooden chair
Swathed in timber, the primary suite extends seamlessly into the walk-in-wardrobe and bathroom.
bathroom with freestanding bath and seating area
A freestanding bath rests upon sumptuous stone, while a full-width curve shower niche evokes the comfort and indulgence of a hotel.
powder room with arched entryway and bronze basin
Defined by its domed ceiling, gracefully curved lavender walls, and custom cast bronze basin, the powder room was conceived as the Jewellery Box of the home; a soft, intimate space that exudes luxury and meticulous craftsmanship.

read more

The post Unwind In This Artful Sydney Residence With Soul appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
Embrace Streamline Moderne Architecture In This Sydney Home https://interiordesign.net/projects/streamline-moderne-home-by-greg-natale/ Mon, 09 Dec 2024 15:15:22 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=canvasflow&p=243818 In Sydney, Greg Natale revisits a residential project, evolving his Hollywood Regency signature into something more streamlined but no less glamorous.

The post Embrace Streamline Moderne Architecture In This Sydney Home appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
living room with white lounge chair, brown stairs and arched entryway in home by Greg Natale
In Sydney, a Vladimir Kagan sofa, Warren Platner lounge chair, and freeform custom rug define the sunken living room in a 3,600-square-foot, two-story house recently renovated for the second time by local designer Greg Natale.

Embrace Streamline Moderne Architecture In This Sydney Home

Battered by the Great Depression, the 1930’s public escaped into the sleekly glamorous, white-telephone world of the Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers musicals. Those and similarly art-directed American movies helped popularize Streamline Moderne architecture globally, and the aspirational style’s rounded edges, smooth surfaces, and curvilinear forms were often seen in residential and commercial properties from Beirut to Buenos Aires. In Sydney, too, where designer Greg Natale recently got to revamp a house dating from the swing era, a two-story structure with a contoured stucco exterior that still retains a feeling of creamy swellegance.

In fact, this was Natale’s second bite at the apple. A dozen years ago, his eponymous firm completed a major redesign of what was then a two-apartment building on a compact site in Bellevue Hill, a leafy suburb, transforming it into a 3,600-square-foot, single-family home. This required structural changes, including the creation of a sunken living room and the addition of several Juliet balconies, each accessed by multipane French doors. Taking cues from the original terra-cotta roof, for the interior, Natale channeled another, slightly later movie-inspired aesthetic: Hollywood Regency. “It was all black and white with pops of color,” he reports, referring to such style signifiers as checkerboard marble flooring, Chippendale-Chinoiserie dining chairs lacquered red, and blue-and-white dragon-patterned vases. “There was a lot of painted wood paneling and crown moldings, too,” he adds, noting that the spaces were above all rectilinear. Much published, the eye-catching project became an exemplar of Natale’s signature style.

Greg Natale Channels Hollywood Regency In This Sydney Residence

a living room with a round couch and a round table in home by Greg Natale
In Sydney, a Vladimir Kagan sofa, Warren Platner lounge chair, and freeform custom rug define the sunken living room in a 3,600-square-foot, two-story house recently renovated for the second time by local designer Greg Natale.

In 2020, socialite Eleni Taylor bought the house for herself and her two teenage children. “The property checked a lot of boxes for her,” Natale says. “Not too big, in the right location, and it had a swimming pool.” However, while the new homeowner loved the high ceilings and overall feel of the interior, she sought a softer, more feminine look that would bring the curves of the exterior indoors. Taylor, who has Greek heritage, envisioned the kind of pared-down, seamlessly fluid spaces found in Cycladic architecture. “Even though I hadn’t done a project like that before, Eleni got in touch with me,” Natale continues. “After meeting our team, she felt confident we could achieve what she had in mind, so she hired us.”

Once again, Natale gutted the place and started from scratch, which was a first for him. “I’ve gone back to projects to add rooms or layers to what we’ve already done,” he explains. “But here was a great chance to reinvent myself as a designer.” Apart from reconfiguring and slightly extending the second floor, which now comprises four bedrooms and three bathrooms, there were few structural changes (the garden-level kitchen and living, dining, and media rooms were not relocated). Outside, the balconies’ painted-ironwork balustrades are new, as are the simplified single-pane French doors and some other fenestration, including four glass-block windows on the ground floor. However, the interior envelope is all but unrecognizable: Its moldings, paneling, and ornamentation are gone, its straight edges and angular corners replaced with sinuous lines, swelling forms, and arching portals. Finished throughout with a natural-clay plaster that gives the walls and ceilings a silky tactility, the lofty living spaces are at once organic and pristine, suggesting a light-filled, soigné version of Ali Baba’s cave.

Spotlight On A Star-Worthy Home

a living room with a large window and a round table
The formerly rectilinear space has been softened with curving forms and a natural clay–plaster finish on the walls and ceiling.
a spiral staircase with a green and white marble floor
Flanked by Lara Bohinc’s Celeste chair, a new sculptural staircase rises from the entry’s Patagonia Verde quartzite floor.

In something of an “open sesame” moment, entering the custom bronze front door reveals a new showstopping sculptural staircase that ascends in a flowing arc to the private family quarters. Adding to the effect, the entry hall is paved with slabs of Patagonia Verde quartzite, a Brazilian stone awash with bold sea-green and smoke-gray swirls. “The colors remind Eleni of the beach,” Natale says of the flooring, which sets the stage for another of the home’s signature elements: the extensive use of marble in a variety of dramatic patterns and hues, enlivening the otherwise muted palette. “The client likes color, but she loves marble,” the designer discloses. “From day one, we knew it was going to be full-slab bathrooms.” These include moody, emerald-tone Verdi Alpi in the powder room, and jadelike Arcadia that wraps one of the bathrooms upstairs. Taylor was so enamored of Breccia Capraia, a Carrara marble with veins of delicate pink, inky purple, and charcoal gray splashed across a white background, that she imported a wealth of the striking stone from Italy. Now it not only clads the kitchen countertops, island, backsplash, and vent hood but also appears in the main bathroom: on the floor, lining the long, windowed shower cubicle, and as a backdrop wall for the custom vanity, a massive double-sink unit made of the same material.

Along with marble and plaster, the principal material is American oak. The blond wood is used for the chevron-patterned flooring throughout, as well as the minimalist kitchen cabinetry and the handsome millwork in the two kids’ bedrooms, including a built-in desk with round travertine drawer pulls in the son’s study area. Gio Ponti’s 1931 Bilia table lamp sits on the work surface, which is served by Grant and Mary Featherston’s circa 1960 Scape chair—two pieces created 30 years apart but sharing the spirit of 20th-century modernism that pervades the house. Other furnishings, which range from mid-century classics like Warren Platner’s steel-rod lounge chair and Vladimir Kagan’s slinky Serpentine sofa in the living room to contemporary pieces like Lara Bohinc’s space-age Orbit chairs and Marco Pagnoncelli’s flying-saucer Masai pendant fixtures in the dining room, also exude the aura of eternal youth epitomized by Fred and Ginger and their streamlined world.

Inside A Showstopping Home By Greg Natale

a modern kitchen with marble walls and wooden floors in home by Greg Natale
The striking Breccia Capraia marble that clads much of the kitchen was imported from Italy by the client, Eleni Taylor, who has a passion for the material.
a bathroom with a marble counter and a mirror
Christopher Boots’s Sugar Bomb pendant fixture hangs above the powder room’s custom Verde Alpi marble vanity.
a bathroom with green marble walls and a mirror
Kelly Wearstler’s Melange sconces bookend the mirror in a secondary bathroom wrapped entirely in jadelike Arcadia marble.
a living room with a round table and chairs in home by Greg Natale
Beneath Marco Pagnoncelli’s Masai pendants, Bohinc’s Orbit chairs surround a vintage Lella and Massimo Vignelli table in the dining room, where the glass-block windows are new.
a bathroom with a large white tub and a black and white marbles
In the main bathroom, Natale’s customized Milazzo tub sits on a floor of Breccia Capraia slabs, which also compose the custom vanity and cover the backsplash wall.
a room with a desk, chair and shelves
Custom travertine drawer pulls ornament the built-in oak desk in the son’s bedroom, while Grant and Mary Featherston’s Scape chair faces Gio Ponti’s Bilia table lamp.
a bedroom with a bed and a large window in home by Greg Natale
Beyond Patricia Urquiola’s Husk bed, new single-pane French doors and painted-iron balustrades enhance the main bedroom’s Juliet balcony from the previous renovation.
a bathroom with a marble wall and a black and white shower
Matte black fittings make a graphic statement in the main bathroom’s all-Breccia windowed shower cubicle.
a long hallway with a wooden floor and a white wall
New skylights illuminate a felt wall hanging by Sarah Robson in the upstairs hallway, which has the chevron-patterned oak flooring that’s used throughout the house.
a bathroom with a marble floor and a tub
A ceramic side table by Tanika Jellis sits next to the tub in the second bathroom, one of three on the upper level, each featuring its own distinctive marble.

GREG NATALE: VICTOR WONG; GEORGA GOODWIN. UNITEX: CEMENT WORK. LUSSO VENETIAN FINISHES: PLASTERWORK. CLEVER BUILT CONSTRUCTIONS: GENERAL CONTRACTOR.

FROM FRONTKNOLL: LOUNGE CHAIR (LIVING ROOM). SEM: COCKTAIL TABLE. BAXTER: SIDE TABLE. ARTILLERIET: EASY CHAIR. CHRISTOPHERBOOTS: SMALL PENDANT FIX­TURES (LIVING ROOM, POWDER ROOM). APPARATUS: SCONCE (LIVING ROOM), PENDANT FIXTURE (KITCHEN). DIMOREMILANO: MULTILEG SIDE TABLE (LIVING ROOM), ARMCHAIR (MAIN BEDROOM). THROUGH 1STDIBS: VINTAGE SOFA, MIRROR (LIVING ROOM), VINTAGE GLASS TABLE (KITCHEN), VINTAGE TABLE (DINING ROOM). ICONE LUCE: PENDANT FIX­TURES (LIVING ROOM, DINING ROOM, MAIN BEDROOM). TANIKA JELLIS: CERAMIC SIDE TABLE (LIVING ROOM, SECOND BATHROOM). ANNA CHARLESWORTH: PENDANT FIXTURE (ENTRY). BOHINC STUDIO: CHAIRS (ENTRY, DINING ROOM). ESSENTIAL HOME: BARSTOOLS (KITCHEN). INSTYLE: STOOL LEATHER. ALIAS DESIGN: ARMCHAIR. LO & CO INTERIORS: CABINETRY HARDWARE (KITCHEN, SON’S BEDROOM). VISUAL COMFORT & CO.: SCONCES (SECOND BATH­ROOM, HALLWAY). GLASS BRICK COMPANY: GLASS BLOCK (DINING ROOM). MEEK BATH­WARE: TUB (MAIN BATHROOM). ARTÌCOLO STUDIOS: PENDANT FIXTURE. GRAZIA & CO: CHAIR (SON’S BEDROOM). FONTANAARTE: TABLE LAMP. GREG NATALE: MARBLE VASES. B&B ITALIA: BED (MAIN BEDROOM). KANTTARI: NIGHTSTANDS. THROUGH CONLEY & CO: VIN­TAGE TABLE LAMPS. GIOBAGNARA: SIDE TABLE. KELLY WEARSTLER: RUG. THROUGHOUTASTRA WALKER: BATHROOM SINKS, TUB, SHOWER FITTINGS. DESIGNER RUGS: CUSTOM RUGS. TONGUE & GROOVE: ENGINEERED OAK FLOORING. DULUX: PAINT.

read more

The post Embrace Streamline Moderne Architecture In This Sydney Home appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
How This Earthy Sydney Home Embraces Multiple Eras https://interiordesign.net/projects/sydney-home-by-studio-prineas/ Thu, 07 Nov 2024 22:04:05 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=241452 Studio Prineas crafts a modern family home in Sydney, blending contemporary style with nature through earthy tones that celebrate its lush surroundings.

The post How This Earthy Sydney Home Embraces Multiple Eras appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
kitchen area with pink marble island and wooden cabinets
Swivel stools by Grazia & Co pull up to the kitchen island, also Tiberio marble.

How This Earthy Sydney Home Embraces Multiple Eras

No matter how contemporary, every residence is informed by history. This was doubly the case for Australian firm Studio Prineas’ transformation of a home in Sydney. The clients purchased a house on a tree-lined street and brought in Studio Prineas to craft a warm residence that would encourage connection for their family. The firm, founded in 2004 by architect and principal Eva-Marie Prineas, has a reputation for understanding unique ways to integrate the old and the new. Studio Prineas’ work—both architecture and interior design—accommodated two generations and nodded to the existing architecture and landscape. “The process was a reinvention to suit our clients’ needs, and preserve and respect the heritage of the property,” Prineas explains.

The architect replaced older additions from previous renovations with a cohesive volume adjacent to the rear garden. In that living area, angular skylights and large windows bring in abundant natural light and frame views of the landscape. “Our clients fell in love with the mature gardens, therefore visual and physical connection to nature was a key part of their brief,” she notes. The space is anchored by a large Francesco Binfaré sofa in a hue that echoes the greenery outside.

Existing architectural elements also inspired the residence’s palette. “Throughout both the cottage and the new addition, spaces are bound by color-blocked applications of earthy, botanical tones derived from the home’s well-preserved heritage fireplaces,” she explains. Other materials in the home complement those tones—including brass, leather, and linen.  American white oak and rosy Tiberio marble add additional warmth. Vintage furniture is joined by contemporary pieces and colorful artwork. Lighting is a mix of mid-century classics, some by Le Corbusier, and contemporary fixtures, including a brass-and-glass chandelier by Snelling over the dining table. This embrace of eras helps create one united space for family members at various stages of life.

Take A Stroll Through This Family Home In Sydney

kitchen area with pink marble island and wooden cabinets
Swivel stools by Grazia & Co pull up to the kitchen island, made of Tiberio marble.
dining area with vintage oak table, bright artwork and orange gradient chairs
In the dining area, the vintage table is oak, and artwork is by Laura Jones (left) and Andrew Hopkins (right).
master bathroom with tan walls and tiles
Tiberio marble defines the master bathroom, and floor tiles are a similar hue.
study area with white oak shelves and green rocking chair
Shelving in the study is American white oak.
living room with earthy fireplace and brown accessories stacked on top
Existing fireplaces helped inspire the project’s earthy palette.
white lamp mounted on top of a desk setup with brown chairs and lots of light
A Lampe de Marseille Mini is mounted above a desk, which is also American white oak.
living room with dark green couch, stacking side consoles and high ceilings with skylights and Jacaranda tree
Angular skylights frame views of a mature Jacaranda tree.

read more

The post How This Earthy Sydney Home Embraces Multiple Eras appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
For the Ace Hotel Sydney, Flack Studio Creates an Authentic Australian Experience https://interiordesign.net/projects/flack-studio-designs-the-ace-hotel-sydney/ Wed, 06 Jul 2022 14:11:34 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=198464 For the Ace Hotel Sydney, Flack Studio draws inventively on the neighborhood’s colorful past as a center of ceramics production.

The post For the Ace Hotel Sydney, Flack Studio Creates an Authentic Australian Experience appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
At the Ace Hotel Sydney by Flack Studio, the reception desk is a James Lemon installation of polychrome ceramic bricks—a nod to the neighborhood’s history of pottery production—backed by a Jason Phu wall hanging.
The reception desk is a James Lemon installation of polychrome ceramic bricks—a nod to the neighborhood’s history of pottery production—backed by a Jason Phu wall hanging.

For the Ace Hotel Sydney, Flack Studio Creates an Authentic Australian Experience

Founded in 1999, the Ace Hotel Group has claimed an enviable slice of the hospitality pie with a chain of high-profile luxury boutique properties aimed at a creative clientele. Since opening its first location—a renovated former Salvation Army halfway house in Seattle—the brand has specialized in transforming rescued buildings of some urban significance into state-of-the-art facilities. The group currently comprises nine hotels, including the latest, which opened in May in Sydney.

The interior of the new property was designed by Flack Studio, a small firm based in Melbourne, best known for residential and retail spaces. Surprisingly, the studio had never worked on a hotel before. “The scale of the job was more than we were used to,” founder and principal David Flack acknowledges. “But I was confident that we could do it. There aren’t many hotel companies that I would want to work for, but Ace is clearly one of them.”

Flack joined the renovation project early on. Bates Smart, one of Australia’s oldest architectural firms, was responsible for gutting the Tyne Building, a 10-story brick structure dating to the early 20th century in the city’s Surry Hills suburb. The architects incorporated the exterior masonry walls into an 18-story, glass-and-steel tower that now houses 257 guest rooms and suites, but “there really wasn’t anything much to salvage of the interior,” Flack observes.

Commissioned artworks by Julia Gutman (left) and Joanna Lamb (back) enliven a pre-event space accessed by a honed Rosso Francia marble staircase.
Commissioned artworks by Julia Gutman (left) and Joanna Lamb (back) enliven a pre-event space accessed by a honed Rosso Francia marble staircase.

Although the Tyne was not officially landmarked, the designer wanted to pay homage not only to the building but also the fascinating history of the neighborhood where, in 1788, the recently arrived British discovered a deposit of pottery clay and built Australia’s first kiln. Within 40 years, Jonathan Leak, a transported convict, established his own pottery works there and was soon cranking out bricks, tiles, bottles, and domestic earthenware. In 1916, Leak’s factory was razed to be replaced by the Tyne Building—originally a pharmaceutical warehouse, later a garment workshop, and then a school for underprivileged kids. Over the years, Surry Hills was home to Chinese immigrants in the gold rush era, dangerous razor gangs in the 1920’s, bootleggers in the ’30’s, boho artists in the ’60’s, and a burgeoning LGBTQ population in the ’70’s, who established the renowned annual Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. Flack wanted to reference all of it.

Early on, he decided that he would stick to straightforward industrial materials used in both traditional and innovative ways. These include the existing brick, along with board-formed concrete, terrazzo and oak flooring, solid woods and veneers, and a variety of metals. There is also stone, such as honed Rosso Francia marble from Italy for the main staircase. Acoustic ceiling panels are used to line guest-room walls—not so much for soundproofing purposes (even though rooms are equipped with turntables, a selection of vinyl records, and, yes, guitars) as for aesthetic reasons: “It’s a rudimentary material, not fancy,” Flack explains, “but it has a beautiful depth and texture to it.”

As for the color palette, Flack chose a singular combination of earthy tans and ochres, burnt oranges, a variety of greens, and, most surprisingly, purple. The inspiration came from the landscape paintings of Albert Namatjira, one of the country’s best-known 20th-century artists of indigenous ancestry. Both Flack and Mark Robinson, his partner in work and life, collect modern art, which plays a large part in the design. Commissioned pieces in many forms by a diverse group of living Australian artists populate the property. The front desk, for example, comprises a multihued patchwork of variously sized ceramic bricks—a gobsmacking installation by James Lemon. “I’m not afraid of using color,” Flack happily concedes.

Applied to a guest room’s walls, acoustic ceiling panels form a kind of tall dado that, despite in-room guitars and stereo equipment, is more about aesthetics than soundproofing.
Applied to a guest room’s walls, acoustic ceiling panels form a kind of tall dado that, despite in-room guitars and stereo equipment, is more about aesthetics than soundproofing.

The furnishings are a mix of vintage pieces—both anonymous and pedigreed—and custom designs. The lobby lounge features Paul Frankl–style mid-century rattan swivel chairs surrounded by bespoke banquettes upholstered in heavily ruched leather. “I do that with leather a lot,” the designer notes. “I think it makes the seating look more inviting.” The lobby restaurant booths, upholstered in similar fashion, are joined by Mart Stam’s classic 1931 tubular-steel chairs, now manufactured by Thonet, their cantilever frames painted fire-engine red. Guest rooms and suites are equally eclectic, with Mario Bellini’s iconic 1977 leather Cab chairs pulling up to Charles and Ray Eames’s round oak-top tables in some of them. Most of the hotel’s striking light fixtures, which include columnlike sconces of aged-finish perforated brass, are custom Flack designs.

Staying “on brand” was a top concern for Flack. “Ace had rules,” he reports. “But they also allowed that rules were made to be broken.” He eventually determined that the chain’s trademark was not so much a look as a feeling. “An Ace hotel wants to engage people on an aesthetic and social level, to encourage them to congregate and interact with others, both guests and locals,” he concludes. “I wanted this hotel to be an authentic Australian experience without losing the slightly renegade history of the neighborhood. In my view, Australia’s greatest strength is our diversity.”

Vintage rattan armchairs join custom banquettes upholstered with ruched leather in the sunken lobby lounge where flooring is custom terrazzo tile and brickwork is original to the 1916 building.
Vintage rattan armchairs join custom banquettes upholstered with ruched leather in the sunken lobby lounge where flooring is custom terrazzo tile and brickwork is original to the 1916 building.
One wall in a meeting room is texturized with cement render, a finish used in many parts of the hotel.
One wall in a meeting room is texturized with cement render, a finish used in many parts of the hotel.
In the lobby restaurant, perforated panels of blackbutt, a kind of eucalyptus, clad the ceiling, herringbone-pattern oak boards cover the floor, and Mart Stam tubular-steel chairs mix with custom booth seating and tables.
In the lobby restaurant, perforated panels of blackbutt, a kind of eucalyptus, clad the ceiling, herringbone-pattern oak boards cover the floor, and Mart Stam tubular-steel chairs mix with custom booth seating and tables.
Original brickwork and board-formed concrete frame a view of the lobby library featuring an artwork by Nadia Hernández and shelves backed with rattan wallcovering.
Original brickwork and board-formed concrete frame a view of the lobby library featuring an artwork by Nadia Hernández and shelves backed with rattan wallcovering.
In the living room, a Charles and Ray Eames table and Mario Bellini chairs stand under a triangular artwork by Sydney Ball.
In the living room, a Charles and Ray Eames table and Mario Bellini chairs stand under a triangular artwork by Sydney Ball.
A custom solid-oak stool joins the freestanding tub in a terrazzo-floored guest bathroom.
A custom solid-oak stool joins the freestanding tub in a terrazzo-floored guest bathroom.
Most of the room’s other furniture is custom, including the armchairs and built-in sofa, which are overlooked by a finger-painted acrylic on mirror by Michael Lindeman.
Most of the room’s other furniture is custom, including the armchairs and built-in sofa, which are overlooked by a finger-painted acrylic on mirror by Michael Lindeman.
Honed Arabescato Corchia marble forms a plinth and backdrop for a suite bath­room’s custom vanity and mirror.
Honed Arabescato Corchia marble forms a plinth and backdrop for a suite bath­room’s custom vanity and mirror.
At the Ace Hotel Sydney by Flack Studio, the reception desk is a James Lemon installation of polychrome ceramic bricks—a nod to the neighborhood’s history of pottery production—backed by a Jason Phu wall hanging.
The reception desk is a James Lemon installation of polychrome ceramic bricks—a nod to the neighborhood’s history of pottery production—backed by a Jason Phu wall hanging.
David Rowland’s archetypal 1964 stacking chairs, never out of production, outfit a conference room where blackbutt panels line the rear wall.
David Rowland’s archetypal 1964 stacking chairs, never out of production, outfit a conference room where blackbutt panels line the rear wall.
In another guest room, custom wool blankets and vibrant carpeting offset custom oak millwork.
In another guest room, custom wool blankets and vibrant carpeting offset custom oak millwork.
Terra-cotta floor tiles are complemented by a custom vanity of oak and honed Italian marble in another bathroom.
Terra-cotta floor tiles are complemented by a custom vanity of oak and honed Italian marble in another bathroom.
PROJECT TEAM
Flack Studio: Mark Robinson
bates smart: architect of record
plant charmer: landscaping consultants
studio ongarato: custom graphics
electrolight: lighting consultant
marques interiors: custom furniture workshop
signorino: stonework
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
corsi & nicolai: flooring (reception)
akari: lamp (reception), pendant fixtures (lounge, restaurant)
alustain: stair railings (reception, pre-event)
rms traders: wallcovering (reception, library)
dcw editions: sconce (lounge)
flos: ceiling fixtures
nsw leather co.: banquette upholstery
through casser maison: armchairs (pre-event)
ramler: table (meeting room)
westbury textiles: curtain fabric (meeting room, restaurant)
living edge: side chairs (meeting room, conference room)
thonet: chairs (restaurant)
woodstock resources: flooring (restaurant, library)
house of bamboo: wallcovering (library)
warwick textiles: curtain fabric (guest rooms)
stansborough: custom blankets
parisi: tubs, tub fittings (bathrooms)
reece: sinks
mark tuckey: custom stools
artedomus: terra-cotta floor tile (bathroom)
THROUGHOUT
electrolight: custom lighting
halcyon lake: carpeting
terrazzo australian marble: floor tile
classic ceramics; tiento: bathroom wall tile
knauf: acoustic paneling
bishop master finishes: cement render
Kvadrat Maharam: upholstery fabric
instyle: upholstery leather
dulux: paint

read more

recent stories

The post For the Ace Hotel Sydney, Flack Studio Creates an Authentic Australian Experience appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
Duet Gives an Old-School Sydney Residence a Youthful Update https://interiordesign.net/projects/duet-gives-an-old-school-sydney-residence-a-youthful-update/ Thu, 05 May 2022 18:19:07 +0000 https://interiordesign.net/?post_type=id_project&p=195847 An old-school jaded Tudor-style residence in Sydney gets a colorful, youthful update from design duo Duet.

The post Duet Gives an Old-School Sydney Residence a Youthful Update appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>
Accompanying an Esedra pouf by Monica Förster and a marble coffee table, the family room’s leather-clad custom sectional modules can be reconfigured over time as the clients’ needs change.
Accompanying an Esedra pouf by Monica Förster and a marble coffee table, the family room’s leather-clad custom sectional modules can be reconfigured over time as the clients’ needs change.

Duet Gives an Old-School Sydney Residence a Youthful Update

As far as first projects go, this five-bedroom house set on a half-acre plot complete with pool and tennis court is an undoubtedly impressive one, both for its scale and for the design freedom extended to interior designers Shannon Shlom and Dominique Brammah. Collaborating for the first time as co-founders of the Sydney studio Duet, the pair worked symbiotically to transform the jaded Tudor-style dwelling in suburban Strathfield, Australia, into a fresh-faced home suited to modern living. The clients, George and Michleen, had purchased the sizeable two-story residence with the desire to create a family-friendly environment for their growing brood. George, a property developer and frequent traveler, also wanted the interior to reflect the luxury hotel aesthetic he appreciated on the road, and to leverage his company’s team of contractors and consultants. Other than that, he gave Duet carte blanche. “This was a true trust exercise where we had complete autonomy to run with our ideas based on the initial brief,” Shlom recalls.

Although the house, built in 1916, had been through a previous renovation and addition, “it was formulaic and lacked heart and soul,” Shlom explains. “The original spaces were bland while the more recently added contemporary spaces were a pastiche of confused styles.” The duo’s initial site visit and floor plan review sparked an idea they realized would improve the flow of foot traffic while also instating spatial logic: relocating the staircase from the entry hall to a more central spot closer to the layout’s actual midpoint. The new stair, a twisty spiral with Carrara marble treads, neatly divides the plan into two zones: a formal one comprising the living room, the guest powder room, and the study, and a more casual, free-flowing wing housing the family room, kitchen/dining area, butler’s pantry, and an additional half-bath. “Those adjustments honored the proportions of the original rooms while allowing for the creation of a generous, open, contemporary space,” Brammah notes. Further bridging old and new are architectural details including custom wall paneling, large-scale dentil molding, parquet de Versailles oak flooring, and vintage lighting—“elements that acknowledge the history of the house yet allowed for a new language that didn’t feel like a replication,” she continues. “It’s an approach that encapsulates the essence of the project: a deeply layered scheme that can continue to evolve with the family over its lifetime.”

A vintage Bilia lamp by Gio Ponti sits in front of the living room’s original stained-glass windows; the sofa and cushions are custom.
A vintage Bilia lamp by Gio Ponti sits in front of the living room’s original stained-glass windows; the sofa and cushions are custom.

Other major interventions to the property include a pergola with an outdoor kitchen and bath, a freestanding tennis/guest house courtside, a rear extension encompassing an enlarged showcase garage (home to George’s vintage car collection) and a game room in which the couple can host late-night card games without disrupting family life in the main house. Indeed, the entire property is both party minded yet practical, down to the kitchen.

“The family loves entertaining—but not the idea of guests getting elbow-deep in grease during cleanup after a long Sunday lunch,” Shlom says. So, Duet conceived a double kitchen: a showpiece cookery paired with a hardworking tucked-away butler’s pantry that houses a second set of appliances. The latter functions as the day-to-day meal-prep area, which freed Duet to push the design parameters of the public-facing side, oriented around a commandingly contemporary two-tone stone island that stands sculpture-like.

For furnishings, Shlom and Brammah sourced far and wide. “Lighting was an important part of bringing a worldly, well-traveled feel to the design, with many eras represented so as not to create a prescriptive style,” Shlom says. The showstopper Lindsey Adelman Drop pendant above the dining room table, in a patinated copper finish, “made our hearts sing,” Brammah says, pointing out how it elegantly twists and turns in the breeze when sliders to the adjacent outdoor living spaces are open. Duet also commissioned myriad custom pieces. In the primary bedroom, for instance, the headboard, bedside tables, pendants, checkerboard broadloom carpet, bed linens, and silk window treatments are all bespoke.

The primary bedroom’s headboard, bedside table, linens, and lighting pendant are custom; the walls are papered in grass-cloth.
The primary bedroom’s headboard, bedside table, linens, and lighting pendant are custom; the walls are papered in grass-cloth.

As for the young members of the household, who range from six months to 11 years old, their sanctums are at once age-appropriate yet designed with longevity in mind, featuring colors and finishes sure to stand the test of time. Take the playroom: The ground-floor space, formerly an uptight formal room, is now an ode to a big-top tent, treated to a vibrant mix of terracotta ceiling stripes and circular elements ranging from the sofa cushions to the area rug.

Equally playful, albeit in another vein entirely, is George’s study. Mirror-backed built-in shelving showcases his prized whiskey collection alongside vintage treasures. An added grace note, the designers specified Piero Fornasetti’s classic Teatro wallpaper, featuring an audience of theater-goers, “so George would always be in good company working late into the night,” Brammah says with a laugh. Who needs alone time?

Accompanying an Esedra pouf by Monica Förster and a marble coffee table, the family room’s leather-clad custom sectional modules can be reconfigured over time as the clients’ needs change.
Accompanying an Esedra pouf by Monica Förster and a marble coffee table, the family room’s leather-clad custom sectional modules can be reconfigured over time as the clients’ needs change.
The rear addition housing the game room is visible beyond the Tudor-style main house and accessed via the enlarged six-car garage.
The rear addition housing the game room is visible beyond the Tudor-style main house and accessed via the enlarged six-car garage.
Piero Fornasetti’s Teatro wallpaper clads the study, where a brass egg sculpture and Joel Escalona’s Miss Jolie ceramic vase alight on an Antella desk by Kazuhide Takahama.
Piero Fornasetti’s Teatro wallpaper clads the study, where a brass egg sculpture and Joel Escalona’s Miss Jolie ceramic vase alight on an Antella desk by Kazuhide Takahama.
A papier-mâché vase by McMullen & Co. tops the kitchen island, which pairs Verde Chambray and Calacatta marble; the dining area’s Lindsey Adelman chandelier sports a copper patina finish.
A papier-mâché vase by McMullen & Co. tops the kitchen island, which pairs Verde Chambray and Calacatta marble; the dining area’s Lindsey Adelman chandelier sports a copper patina finish.
The spiral staircase and wall moldings are newly added.
The spiral staircase and wall moldings are newly added.
In the playroom, the sofa (with a machine-washable slipcover) and rug are custom; a Greta Grossman B-4 table lamp perches on a custom desk.
In the playroom, the sofa (with a machine-washable slipcover) and rug are custom; a Greta Grossman B-4 table lamp perches on a custom desk.
Sibella Court’s Franklin wallpaper animates a small sitting area, dubbed the cubby, off son Peter’s bedroom, illuminated by a Verner Panton Flowerpot lamp.
Sibella Court’s Franklin wallpaper animates a small sitting area, dubbed the cubby, off son Peter’s bedroom, illuminated by a Verner Panton Flowerpot lamp.
The butler’s pantry backsplash is handmade brick.
The butler’s pantry backsplash is handmade brick.
Custom marble parquetry flooring bedecks the foyer, where a Graziela Guardino linen on canvas drapes over a 1970 console by Giacomo Sinopoli; the pendant is an Italian design dating from the midcentury era.
Custom marble parquetry flooring bedecks the foyer, where a Graziela Guardino linen on canvas drapes over a 1970 console by Giacomo Sinopoli; the pendant is an Italian design dating from the midcentury era.
A view across the tennis court—built by former homeowner Daphne Akhurst, a grand slam winner—to the remodeled rear of the house; to the right is the newly constructed tennis house.
A view across the tennis court—built by former homeowner Daphne Akhurst, a grand slam winner—to the remodeled rear of the house; to the right is the newly constructed tennis house.
Moroccan Zellige tiles clad the walls of Peter’s terrazzo-floored bathroom.
Moroccan Zellige tiles clad the walls of Peter’s terrazzo-floored bathroom.
A Brescia Capria backsplash brings an artful note to the tennis house kitchen, furnished with Thonet cane-seat stools.
A Brescia Capria backsplash brings an artful note to the tennis house kitchen, furnished with Thonet cane-seat stools.
A deft layering of shapes, colors, and patterns creates sophistication in Annabelle’s bedroom, with a custom headboard and carpet.
A deft layering of shapes, colors, and patterns creates sophistication in Annabelle’s bedroom, with a custom headboard and carpet.
Boldly veined Brescia Capria marble animates daughter Annabelle’s bath, with custom mirror.
Boldly veined Brescia Capria marble animates daughter Annabelle’s bath, with custom mirror.
Acrylic lamps and a tiered chandelier by Julie Neill illuminate the guest bedroom.
Acrylic lamps and a tiered chandelier by Julie Neill illuminate the guest bedroom.
PROJECT TEAM
Duet: Lead Consultants
AJH+: architecture
Studio Rewild: landscape consultant
Megan Morton: editorial styling
Sophia Kaplan: editorial florals
PRODUCT SOURCES
FROM FRONT
Globewest: coffee tables (family room, living room), table, chairs (kitchen), sofa, side table (cubby), bedside tables (guest bedroom, daughter’s bedroom)
Poltrona Frau through Cult Design: pouf (family room)
Pulpo through Domo: floor lamp
Cole & Sons through Iconradford Wallpaper: wallpaper (study)
Cassina through Cult Design: desk
Fourth Street Home: egg sculpture
Through Mercer & Lewis: amphora pots
joel escalona through adorno design: ceramic vase
through james said: vintage wall light (study), vintage chandelier (living room)
gubi through cult design: chair (study), lamp (playroom)
the visuals: plinth (stair), sculptures (stair, living room)
deemah stone: stone flooring (stair, foyer)
lighting collective: pendant light (playroom)
simple studio: window treatments
murobond: accent paint (playroom, guest bedroom)
house of orange: bench (playroom), console (living room), lamps (guest bedroom)
through smith street bazaar: vintage pendant light (living room)
through tigmi trading: lounge chair, footstool
jetmaster: fireplace
Lindsey adelman studio: pendant light (kitchen)
grazia & co.: stools
mcmullen & co.: vase
porter’s: cabinetry paint (kitchen, butler’s pantry)
granite & marble works: countertop marble (kitchen, daughter’s bathroom), backsplash (tennis house)
through 1st dibs: pendant (foyer)
liwans through nicholas & alistair: vintage console
zip water: specialty tap (butler’s pantry)
onsite supply & design: backsplash
WK: countertop stone
tim roodenrys: rug
&tradition through cult design: lamp (cubby)
the society inc.: wallpaper
ascraft: wallpaper (primary bedroom)
fibonacci stone through onsite supply and design: stone tile (tennis house)
honoré through tigmi trading: pendant light
thonet: stools
julie neill through montauk lighting co.: pendant light (guest bedroom)
s a s veer: artwork
the stitching project: bedcover
THROUGHOUT
dulux: paint
we love parquet: flooring
perrin & rowe through english tapware company: sink fittings
Tappeti: custom rugs
heritage tile co.: terrazzo (kids’ baths)
surface gallery: wall tiles (kids’ baths)
snelling: wall lights (kids’ baths)

read more

recent stories

The post Duet Gives an Old-School Sydney Residence a Youthful Update appeared first on Interior Design.

]]>