Home Gretchen by Lintel Studio is tucked quietly right into a row of turn-of-the-Twentieth-century terraces.
From the road, its heritage façade stays respectfully intact: a modest veranda dotted with planting, a painted brick fence, and a bifold storage door that echoes neighbouring rear-lane vernaculars.
The geometric, pastel tiles on the entrance steps are the one trace at what lies inside this 1907 terrace, which has been totally rethought for up to date life.
The householders — a artistic couple and their teenage son — had already lived in the home for a number of years earlier than embarking on a renovation. The transient known as for an enchancment on how the home felt to stay in — more healthy, brighter, and extra beneficiant — whereas embracing the household’s eclectic tastes.
As with many early-1900s terraces, the house got here with its justifiable share of challenges. Layers of advert hoc rear extensions had gathered over time, creating an extended, tunnel-like ground plan suffering from darkness and damp.
Throughout demolition, a serious concern was uncovered: a century-old terracotta stormwater pipe from a neighbouring property had been directing water beneath the home for many years, inflicting in depth rot and moisture injury. Addressing this wasn’t nearly restore, however about re-engineering the home to breathe once more.
The renovation retained and restored the unique heritage frontage, with delicate changes to the proportions of the entrance bedrooms.
All the things past that time was cleared away and reimagined. Instead of an open-plan format, the brand new scheme centres on a freestanding dice — an ‘in-the-round’ strategy impressed by practitioners like Lina Bo Bardi, David Chipperfield and Sou Fujimoto.
This central quantity homes the kitchen, bar, storage and leisure throughout three faces, with a pivoting door on the fourth face revealing the laundry inside.
The dice cleverly prompts the darkest a part of the positioning — with the assistance of skylights — releasing the ends of the house for light-filled dwelling and eating areas that open onto a rear backyard and inner courtyard.
Materially, Home Gretchen is unapologetically daring. The shoppers’ request for an ‘unflinchingly orange’ kitchen set the tone, resulting in a house punctuated by playful hues and patterns: with an equally unflinching orange and blue lavatory, pale pink bed room, and a yard lined with inexperienced tiles.
Recycled Australian hardwood flooring — salvaged from a demolished highschool gymnasium as soon as frequented by one of many shoppers — run via the restored entrance rooms, nonetheless marked with faint courtroom traces; whereas insulation upgrades, polished concrete slabs, operable skylights, and north-facing openings enhance thermal efficiency and passive air flow.
There’s little that’s delicate about this home — and that’s precisely the purpose. Home Gretchen is a joyful, expressive reimagining of the terrace typology, one which nourishes creativity whereas making on a regular basis life brighter.














