Houses Magazine, Issue 135 (August 2020)

Cremorne Point Apartment is a work of intelligent, restrained design. Its simplicity and limited palette of white walls and pale oak timber bring light and life deep into the interior of this moderately sized apartment in a way that might seem inevitable. Yet it has taken Studio Plus Three’s sure hand and subtle confidence to make it happen.

A reworking of a 1980s apartment in Sydney’s Cremorne, the project replaces a semi-enclosed kitchen and opens up the interior to harbour views. With minimal structural alteration, it allows the floor plan to manifest both private and contiguous space, which is in itself a transformative approach that makes modest spaces appear generous. The architect has held true to the design idea in every detail of its execution. Of course, Cremorne Point Apartment has its own calm, clear personality. The design is balanced, however, in such a way that the owners can choose to add their own personality – there is room for them.

For an architect, it is often difficult to decide where architecture ends and decoration begins. But at Cremorne Point Apartment the line is drawn clearly and results in an architectural outcome that is punctuated by clarity.

Words: Houses Awards Jury
Photography:
Ben Hosking

 

More project images here

Previous
Previous

Houses Magazine - Issue 157

Next
Next

studioplusthree selected for Wallpaper* Architects' Directory 2018