Interiors

A Sunny Melbourne Home Renovated To Reveal Art Deco Flair

Less was more in the renovation of this Melbourne home.

The owners originally planned to extend and add a second storey to the interwar bungalow, which featured a quirky mix of art deco influences and 1990s styling after an earlier renovation.

But Pipkorn Kilpatrick managed to preserve the existing 144-square-metre footprint, instead reworking the interiors to create a refreshed iteration of the house for the busy family of five.

Written
by
Christina Karras
|
Photography
by

Artwork by Hannah Fox. Ceramics by Anna Skermer. Akari 26A pendant.

The renovations were designed the existing voids in the living and kitchen area.

The refreshed dining area features a built-in banquette seat made from blackbutt timber.

Feature grade blackbutt was also used to create the island bench extension.

Walls and ceilings painted in Dulux Natural White. Bijmat Pampas tiles from Earp Bros on splashback.

Tapware from ABI Interiors.

A timber-framed fluted glass door separates the kitchen and laundry area from the TV room.

Bala Pasta tiles from Perini. Terrazzo from Signorino.

A skylight over the shower filters light into the bathroom.

The glamorous art deco-style doors welcome you into the home.

The existing floors and door frames were sanded back to showcase the natural timber.

Writer
Christina Karras
Photography
15th of August 2024
Interior Designer
Landscape Design

Aimee Pilven

Location

Northcote, VIC/Wurundjeri Country

The owners of this Northcote bungalow had owned the home for more than a decade before engaging Pipkorn Kilpatrick for a renovation.

‘We’d describe the original part of the house as an interwar bungalow with art deco influences — including the elaborate ceiling roses and three sets of magnificent kaleidoscopic doors, waiting to be freed of the heavy dark vanish and yellow walls hindering their impact,’ Pipkorn Kilpatrick interior designer and founding partner Jane Kilpatrick says.

The rear of the home featured a 1990s extension that looked a little out of place beside the retro charm of the front rooms. Plus, there was also only one bathroom, awkwardly placed in the middle of the floorplan, which ‘desperately needed reconfiguring’ to better accommodate the busy family of five.

‘Our clients initially looked at extending and adding a second storey, but generous voids letting ample light into the dining areas and the well-positioned kitchen convinced them to work with the existing extension,’ Jane adds.

Instead, they opted for a series of ‘minimal reconfigurations’ that solved the house’s functional flaws, creating a warmer interior palette filled with timbers and natural tones.

The bathroom was divided to create an additional powder room, and a shower with beautiful reeded glass doors replaced the oversized bathtub, as an extraneous door in the hallway was removed to create a new timber cabinet for storing school bags, shoes, and sports equipment.

In the kitchen, the existing openings to the backyard were widened with new double-glazed sliding doors and a blackbutt-timber banquette seat below now provides a sunny dining corner, framed around an Akari pendant light.

‘The other big transformation from 1990s bling to beautiful, complementary hues came after honing the existing polished granite benchtops,’ Jane says. ‘With the gloss gone, the warm tones in the granite blend beautifully with the timber extension and the island bench, while the darker and cooler tones blend with the existing mauve cabinetry and softer toned bjmat tiling.’

The team at Macasar Building also meticulously sanded and resealed the existing floors and enchanting stained-glass doors, revealing the natural timber hidden beneath.

Every small tweak has unlocked a newfound sense of space in the 144-square-metre abode, without impeding on the family’s beloved backyard. And the ample natural sunlight that fills the home throughout the day is the cherry on top.

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