Skip To Main Content
Issue 63 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 63

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Habitus 63 is arguably the most aspirational issue of the year with Kitchens & Bathrooms to dream about. Whether a family hub, an entertainer’s paradise or somewhere to grad a quick meal, how we live in and spend time in the kitchen is a very personal question that requires thought and an abundance of resources. Always the aspirational eye candy of design, we have some truly lovely kitchens from Greg Natale, YSG, Splinter Society, Sally Caroline and Studio Johnston. Bathrooms are just as important with Greg Natale, Studio Tate, YSG and Those Architects sharing some fabulous insights

Order Issue

A Product of

The National Hotel
AccommodationEditorial Team

The National Hotel

Australia

A drastic and decisive intervention extracts a clean, modern space from it’s dusty cocoon.


Marooned in the Chinese quarter of Victoria Street, Melbourne, in a ‘dead zone’ between Saigon Street and Ikea, the 1906 building was ageing gracelessly, listless and disconnected from it’s community.

As such the challenge for Jeremy McLeod of Breathe Architecture was to ” bring life back into this ‘inbetween’ area of Victoria Street and make The National Hotel a destination”.

Stripping back 100 years of renovation laid bare the structure’s skeleton and presented a fresh canvas to work with. The space was then divided into ‘provinces’ arranged around a central bar, each given a particular character but tied together by shared elements. In response to the Chinese context of the area the theme of the hotel is a representation of China’s contemporary standing – no longer passive, isolated or backward but industrial, assertive and powerful. In McLeod’s words; ” The National Hotel is now the new republic for the people of Richmond.”

The project is defined by utilitarian design; furniture and surfaces are sturdy and unornamented, and everything serves a purpose. Using a variety of recycled materials including timbers, tarpaulin, tyre matting and zinc panelling creates a beautifully worn, varied aesthetic, and the finishes play on different aspects of modern China – concrete being the monolithic nature of the Chinese government, steel being it’s industrial might, and the tarpaulin being the Chinese military.

For McLeod highlights of the project are the bar, which he describes as “robust and functional”, the courtyard (or ‘Forbidden City’), and the concrete tables in the booth areas; “they absorb the heat from the heaters in winter and retain the warmth which is great to sit at and eat from, [and] they keep cool in summer.”

The project also features various sustainable features, including a 2.5kW solar panel array, a solar hot water system, no air-conditioning, and a concealed services platform for refrigeration equipment to reduce internal heat loading, which also houses kitchen plants and a worm farm. Black recycled caged tanks collect 9000l of rainwater, which is used in the toilets.

 

Breathe Architecture

Ficus Constructions


About the Author

Editorial Team

Tags

Breathe ArchitectureFicus ConstructionsInterior ArchitectureInterior DesignThe National Hotel


Related Projects
Issue 63 - Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Issue 63

Kitchen & Bathroom Issue

Habitus 63 is arguably the most aspirational issue of the year with Kitchens & Bathrooms to dream about. Whether a family hub, an entertainer’s paradise or somewhere to grad a quick meal, how we live in and spend time in the kitchen is a very personal question that requires thought and an abundance of resources. Always the aspirational eye candy of design, we have some truly lovely kitchens from Greg Natale, YSG, Splinter Society, Sally Caroline and Studio Johnston. Bathrooms are just as important with Greg Natale, Studio Tate, YSG and Those Architects sharing some fabulous insights

Order Issue