Skip To Main Content
Issue 66 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 66

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Kitchens and bathrooms are, arguably, the most consequential rooms in the home — and almost always the first to be considered. Whether approached through renovation or new build, their design has the power to recalibrate how a home is lived in and experienced. For this issue, our guest editor, Mardi Doherty, principal of Studio Doherty, explores what it truly means to transform these pivotal spaces — and why thoughtful design in kitchens and bathrooms delivers dividends far beyond the purely functional. Her insights both as an architect and as her own client give an open and honest account of the thinking behind creating a home.

Order Issue

A Product of

Brightly Balanced
HomesEditorial Team

Brightly Balanced

Australia

Deftly combining textures, materials and colours and inviting plentiful natural light into the space, Architect Matt Fearns has created a warm and nuanced equilibrium in this Bondi Terrace.


The client’s brief for the project was to add a second storey and a rear lane structure to a fairly typical terrace house, taking the opportunity to renovate the entire space as part of the intervention.

As part of the design Fearns aimed to resolve the common terrace-house challenges of privacy and illumination, with the latter further exacerbated by a south-facing yard.

An important strategy in overcoming these challenges was the use of skylights – as Fearns states, “It’s not clear from the photos, but the ceiling over the dining area … has a huge skylight – about the same size as a queen bed. It lets in so much light it kept overexposing the images during the shoot.”

Further skylights and clerestory windows allow natural light to penetrate seep into internal spaces without compromising the residents’ or neighbours privacy. On the ground floor, expansive glass sliding doors connect the living/kitchen space with the outdoor area.

 

A particularly striking feature is the second floor bathroom window, which consists of a strip of wall and tiling that can swing out to allow light and ventilation, but when closed ensures insulation and privacy.

 

The house’s materiality is elegantly concise, with painted brick and painted timber strip cladding to all new exteriors as well as clear sealed timber windows and doors. Interiors are white set plasterboard throughout with concrete and timber floors and oak joinery.

 

The kitchen is particularly successful, fusing the utilitarian honesty of polished concrete floors with solid yet meticulously resolved oak cabinetry and island bench. In turn, this is interrupted by the stainless steel splashback, which highlights the timber’s warm, matte texture.

 

Fearns Studio
fearns.com.au

Photography: Tom Ferguson
tomferguson.com.au


About the Author

Editorial Team

Tags

Home ArchitectureHouse ArchitectureResidential Architecture


Related Projects
Issue 66 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 66

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Kitchens and bathrooms are, arguably, the most consequential rooms in the home — and almost always the first to be considered. Whether approached through renovation or new build, their design has the power to recalibrate how a home is lived in and experienced. For this issue, our guest editor, Mardi Doherty, principal of Studio Doherty, explores what it truly means to transform these pivotal spaces — and why thoughtful design in kitchens and bathrooms delivers dividends far beyond the purely functional. Her insights both as an architect and as her own client give an open and honest account of the thinking behind creating a home.

Order Issue