PROJECTS

Type - Alts and adds
Location - Hobart
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A kitchen in black oriented strand board (OSB) adds texture and tonal contrast to the white brick wall and light-filled courtyard opposite.

Stitch in time: Willisdene

This renovation of a brick cottage in West Hobart uses materials that will wear with age, creating a harmonious contrast between new and old.

Residential
The garden room addition to the Georgian-era cottage embraces its prominent setting.

A garden room with history: Fusilier Cottage Addition

Bence Mulcahy

A Georgian landmark in Hobart’s Battery Point is graced with a surprisingly porous living pavilion that interacts generously with street and garden.

Residential
A play in floor levels maximizes ceiling height and separates old from new.

Small but generous: Arthur Circus

A spatial tardis, this surprising and generous addition enlivens an original Georgian cottage in a tightly controlled Hobart heritage precinct.

Residential
A monochromatic backdrop in the kitchen enlivens the dramatic granite island bench.

A reflective re-invention

A bold extension to a Hobart cottage exploits landscape and reflection to amplify the sense of space and light, and to place the home within its historic context.

Residential
The kitchen benchtop and sink are wrapped in burnished brass that will patina with use.

Garden room: Mount Stuart Greenhouse

Bence Mulcahy

This addition to a grand early-20th-century home in Hobart reads as a generous garden room, housing a new dining and kitchen space that captures the scale and movement of the nearby cypress tree.

Residential
Aligned with a shift in floor level, a narrow skylight marks the point at which the addition and existing house adjoin. Artwork: Jai Vasicek.

Simple wishes: Lansdowne Crescent

A request for increased amenity rather than more square metres was the impetus behind this deceptively compact addition to a period Hobart home by Preston Lane Architects, where shifts in level and volume help create light-filled spaces and a connection to the garden.

Residential
An engaged column caps off an integrated window seat and delineates two cosy sitting spaces looking over Sandy Bay.

Hillside haven: Mawhera Extension

This bold, minimal addition to a hillside house by Preston Lane Architects makes the most of a relatively modest budget, with the new spaces designed for diverse modes of use.

Residential
Blackwood veneer joinery and timber flooring and furniture accentuate the house’s white walls.

Modern dialogue: Longview Avenue Garden Room

Taylor and Hinds Architects’ addition to a 1950s modernist house starts a “conversation” with the original architecture, without compromising the originality and idiosyncrasy of the new.

Residential
The upper deck of the existing house has been “stretched” and wrapped in a veil of timber slats, making space for extra rooms below.

Dynnyrne Extension

A modest extension by Preston Lane Architects delivers more than “just a few extra rooms”.

Residential
A sky-lit entry has been added on the western edge.

The Barn

A historic stone barn has been sensitively brought back to life by Maria Gigney Architects.

Residential