Preston House 01

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

Preston House 01

Healy Ryan Architects

ARCHITECTS
Healy Ryan Architects

BUILDERS
Jam Building Group

DESIGN AND DOCUMENTATION
Tom Healy, Dan Ryan

STYLIST
Elizabeth Bird

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS
Brock Consulting

LANDSCAPE DESIGN
Tom Healy

MANUFACTURERS
Aws, Austview, Blackbutt

PHOTOGRAPHS
Dan Preston

AREA
183 M²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Preston, Australia

CATEGORY
Houses

The brief for the project was quite typical for a residential block in inner Melbourne. A heritage-listed Californian Bungalow, showing its age, required some general updates as well as some additional space to suit the needs of the owners, a young, growing family.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

We and the client were keen to pay respect to the history of the original building.

Aside from the obvious economic and environmental benefits of recycling the demolished bricks from the original lean-to, we felt there would also be nice potential from a heritage perspective; to instill some of the characters of the old into the new.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

The rear extension comprises a series of 350mm thick exposed brick walls, with windows, doors, and walls recessively fitting in-between and around them, connecting to the brickwork as delicately as possible.

Two of the largest of these walls sit at the end of the original hallway, creating a powerful impression upon entry to the new rear space.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

Openings through these walls lead to the rumpus or kitchen/living/dining rooms and continuing between the walls leads out to the rear garden via a 3.3m high glazed pivot door.

The original hallway continues into the rear extension and is mirrored above with timber-lined eaves, providing ideal shading to the 3.3m high north-facing stackable glazed doors.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

The roof design extends the elemental logic of the extension.

Large, floating roof forms are separated from adjoining walls by long, highlight windows.

A lower (2.6m) height ceiling in the kitchen and rumpus allows the roof above to respectfully slide under the existing exposed rafters at the connection point to the existing building.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston

A lower ceiling was also desired to provide a more intimate spatial quality, when compared with the vast 3.3m timber-lined ceilings in the dining and living, and also give dynamism to the rear space. The mass of brick walls is balanced by the textural feel of the interior spaces.

Blackbutt timber boards line the ceilings and the textural quality of the painted recycled bricks, and the concrete floor ensures the space doesn’t feel stark or cold.

Floating pendant lights over the dining table, dark timber veneer on the island bench and muted green cabinetry along the back wall further soften the atmosphere of the space.

Preston House 01
© Dan Preston
Preston House 01
© Dan Preston


Preston House 01
Plan