Centennial Park House

Madeleine Blanchfield Architects finished this project by flooding an old house with light, and brings clarity and cohesiveness to the previously rambling spaces of the Sydney, Australia home.

The extensive refurbishment of this Queen-Anne style home restored original rooms and added a new steel living, dining and kitchen pavilion. The stair was relocated to the centre of the house where it could draw in light and a strong graphic palette was used to connect new and old spaces.

The brief was to rework the planning and interiors of a beautiful heritage home in Sydney’s Centennial Park. The strategy included relocating the stair and adding a contemporary steel structure at the rear. The alterations were to be light filled, calm and sympathetic to the original architecture. A few bold planning and volumetric moves allow the quality of the original details and spaces to be not only seen but amplified and appreciated.

A refined palette and strong insertions such as deep timber reveals blend together the old and new. Dark timber and black painted walls are used to amplify the experience of moving through the house and to highlight the existing details. The existing home was restored including windows and timber details. A large skylight was inserted above the new staircase and a light filled core from which every room in the house sprung was created. Suddenly the entry became a buoyant place from which all the old rooms were visible along with the new.

Bathrooms and new bedrooms were designed as contemporary spaces using materials such as black timber, textured decorative glass and steel which carried the language of the old house. In the master bedroom, the concept of contemporary and contrasting insertions is carried through with a black freestanding bed frame set in the centre of an old and highly decorative room. Through a strong, contrasting palette of light and dark materials the previously disconnected rooms are harmonized with the new stair void.

The new living wing, in sympathetic materials and tones provides the family of 5 the space, light and connection to the garden they required for day-to-day living. Restoring a heritage home requires painstaking attention to detail, the ability to see potential and the appreciation of the craftsmanship that was involved in the original construction. The project shows that by being restrained and respectful interiors can allow old spaces to sing harmoniously alongside new work and both can be enjoyed as one whole.

Refined planning and bold but sympathetic new insertions feel effortless and stand in contrast and as equals to the original architecture. The skylight was extremely complex, given its double curvature and insertion into an existing pitched slate roof. 3D software and rendering programs were used to perfect the details and angles.

DesignMadeleine Blanchfield Architects
Photography: Prue Ruscoe