BUTTERY APARTMENT – Melbourne
CBD
In this project – an interior refurbishment of a former
CBD office space, maximum effect was sort with a minimal budget.
The relaxed program of living amongst translucent partitions within
an open-planned living space reflects the contemporary urban lifestyle
synonymous with it’s CBD location.
Physically, the space is defined by two architectural devices.
The first is a freestanding multipurpose joinery unit which simultaneously
fulfils the functions of bedroom partition, kitchen pantry, refrigerator
housing, wardrobe and bookshelf. As a sculptural object, it floats
free of existing services and adjacent material surfaces. The
second, is an iconic floor motif sandblasted into the existing
concrete floor screed.
Constructed from precision-assembled twin-wall polycarbonate
sheet, the freestanding unit becomes a focal point for the interior
– almost operating as a glowing light source with the inadvertent
effects of shadows cast by objects on shelves. The tapered cut-out
motif references the floor treatment and arrests one’s attention
upon entering the apartment.
Minimal impact was made to the existing shell to achieve as much
effect as possible with the budget. Floor and ceiling finishes
mirror each other’s raw existing condition - in direct opposition
to the newly painted wall surfaces. Existing air-ducted mechanical
and fire-sprinkler services are retained as visual (and operative)
features in the design.
The kitchen area is deliberately modest (in accordance with the
client brief), and to give way to the visual importance of the
free standing unit. All storage is confined to open shelving,
to eliminate the joinery cost of cupboards and drawers. Together
with the free-standing unit, the kitchen provides an appropriate
narrowing of the space at the private end of the apartment.
Photography – Shannon McGrath
Workshop Architecture