Sydney, Australia

'You once wrote that Modernists couldn't do front doors, so I've tried to prove you wrong,' says architect Ian Moore, as he pivots the massive milk-glass front door to admit me from the street. And prove me wrong he resoundingly has, with a front entrance noticeably grander and more ceremonial than that of the Sydney Opera House (at which my original point was aimed).

The milk glass, within a fine, matte-black frame set into the rustic brick facade of a 19th-century warehouse, prefigures a super-rationalist interior where monochromatic minimalism reigns supreme.

 

'You once wrote that Modernists couldn't do front doors, so I've tried to prove you wrong,' says architect Ian Moore, as he pivots the massive milk-glass front door to admit me from the street. And prove me wrong he resoundingly has, with a front entrance noticeably grander and more ceremonial than that of the Sydney Opera House (at which my original point was aimed).

The milk glass, within a fine, matte-black frame set into the rustic brick facade of a 19th-century warehouse, prefigures a super-rationalist interior where monochromatic minimalism reigns supreme.

The architect's brief, as he explains it, was for 'a black-and-white Ian Moore house with a large, very well-lit bathroom.' Moore, an engineer who became an architect after working with Foster + Partners on the HSBC headquarters in Hong Kong (1986), is known for his superslick white boxes. So this was something of a departure. The stark palette accords well with the client's collection of black-and-white photographs, a number of which'including Mervyn Bishop's portraits of Roy Orbison and Mick Jagger'are prominently displayed on an upstairs wall.

Because of an earlier, 1970s residential conversion, relatively little structural intervention was required to turn this former grocery warehouse and subsequent engineering workshop into an ultrachic urban terrace house; much of the effort was an exercise in lining, finishing, and furnishing. A 5'-foot drop in grade between the two street entrances led to creating a split-level ground floor, with a tall living space entered directly from the street and overlooked by the kitchen on a mezzanine. It, in turn, is backed by a garage opening to a second street.

Moore colored everything that existed'walls, ceilings, and floors'white, while everything new'stairs, cupboards, the kitchen, furniture (and even the dog food)'is black. The upper-level bathroom, however, a black anodized-aluminum glass-topped box, lit from the roof and dividing the bedroom and sitting area, stretches the rule. Because the bathroom existed there before, it should be white. But two new walls, plus a mirrored wall should be black. Here Moore departed from his conceit. 'The bathroom was about space and light,' he says, 'so I abandoned the strict regime in favor of its purity.'

The structure occupies about a 15-foot-wide terrace-house slot in the inner-urban Surry Hills neighborhood of Sydney. Subtracting from the 882-square-foot lot, the minimum widths for toilet, stair, and car left about ? inch for a new semi-structural wall between the garage and stair. The only material that fit the bill was steel plate. Finished in a matte-black epoxy paint, then washed with vinegar and rubbed to a soft sheen with (of all things) baby oil, the steel plate became something of a motif. It forms not just the staircase slot'with its freestanding sheet-steel balustrade'but the full-height cupboard doors in the garage/utility room, the large built-in banquette that marks the level-change between kitchen and first-floor living space, and the floor-to-ceiling bookcase, which, slotted together in the manner of the Eames House of Cards, covers the living room's south wall.

The precise design called for immense devotion to detailing white plasterboard, black steel, white rubber (for the flooring), and glass. It's a brave thing to adopt such a strict a regime for a domestic environment. So, does it work?

For me, it's probably a little too brave'too demanding, too rigid for habitation. But architecture should be measured against its own brief, and it is clear that Moore's client, an art director and stylist, loves it. In fact, it passed the ultimate test, as Moore's client is now his fianc'e, and he is already living there. That's got to be not one, but two, votes of confidence.

Elizabeth Farrelly, an architecture critic and columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald, wrote Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness (2007).

Cost: $743,000

Completion Date: August, 2010

Gross Square Footage: 1,615 sq.ft.

Architect and Designer:
Ian Moore Architects
5/151 Foveaux Street, Surry Hills
New South Wales, 2010, Australia
T: +61 2 8354 1887
F: +61 2 8354 1882
E: info@ianmoorearchitects.com
W: www.ianmoorearchitects.com

People

Client: Tess Strelein

Architect
Ian Moore Architects
5/151 Foveaux Street, Surry Hills
New South Wales, 2010,Australia
T: +61 2 8354 1887
F: +61 2 8354 1882
E: info@ianmoorearchitects.com
W: www.ianmoorearchitects.com

Personnel in architect's firm who should receive special credit:
Principal: Ian Moore (FAIA)

Project Architect: Ian Moore (FAIA)

Project Team: Ian Gorton

Project Team: Danny Mathis (RAIA)

Interior designer
Ian Moore (FAIA)

Engineer(s)
Benvenuti Structural Consultants: Ruggero Benvenuti

Consultant(s)
Landscape:
Fast Feet Garden Design: Kym English

Heritage Consultant:
Urbis: Stephen Davies and Fiona Binns

Building Certifier:
Paul Rolfe Consulting; Paul Rolfe

Steel fabricator:
Salken Engineering; Marq Abela

General contractor
Seagull Constructions

Photographer(s)
Iain D Mackenzie

CAD system, project management, or other software used:
ArchiCAD

 

Products

Structural system
Steel fabricator: Salken Engineering (contact details as above)

All structural steel components for this project, including the entry portals, stair balustrades, kitchen surround and bookcase were fabricated from 10 millimetre (0.4 inches) thick mild steel plate.

Exterior cladding
Masonry: Existing brickwork

Other cladding unique to this project:
Symonite – Aluminium composite cladding to bathroom clerestorey soffit and reveals

Roofing
Metal: 
Existing steel sheeting
Colorbond corrugated steel sheeting to bathroom roof

Windows
Metal frame: Steel framed windows

Glazing
Glass: Translucent ‘comfort plus’ high performance low e glass

Skylights: Breezeway ‘Altair’ adjustable glass louvres to bathrooms

Doors
Entrances: Steel framed glazed door

Metal doors: Aluminium roller shutter garage door

Sliding doors: Solid core doors on Hafele Hawa ‘Junior 80’ sliding door track

Special doors: Internal doors clad with black anodized aluminium sheet

Hardware
Locksets: D line

Pulls: D line

Interior finishes
Suspension grid: Plasterboard sheeting on Rondo suspended ceiling system

Cabinetwork and custom woodwork:
Black melamine carcasses to all cabinet units with black anodized aluminium sheet cladding to all cabinet doors

Paints and stains:
Dulux: ‘Vivid White’ acrylic paint to walls and ceilings
International Protective Coatings: black epoxy paint finish to all steelwork

Wall coverings: Plasterboard on timber stud framing

Solid surfacing: Corian – bathroom walls and floors and custom made hand basins

Special surfacing: Stainless steel kitchen benchtop and door/drawer fronts

Resilient flooring:
Epoxy resin flooring to garage
Dalsouple DAL UNI rubber flooring to main floors and stairs

Furnishings
Study furniture:
Coffee table: ‘Tunnel’ by Piero Lissoni, Marc Krusin, Carlo Tamborini for Glas Italia

Desk: ‘Bridge’ by Piero Lissoni, Marc Krusin, Carlo Tamborini for Glas Italia

Arm chairs: Vintage Art Deco chairs

Telephones: Vintage phones

Dining/Living Room furniture:
Dining and side table: Vintage ‘Tulip’ by Eero Saarinen for Knoll

Dining chairs: ‘Tulip’ by Eero Saarinen for Knoll

Armchair: ‘Mart’ by Antonio Citterio for B&B Italia

Bedroom Furniture:
Bed: ‘Dream Bed’ by Marcel Wanders for Poliform

Bedside tables: ‘Tulip’ by Eero Saarinen for Knoll

Lighting
Interior ambient lighting: Serge Mouille

Downlights: Kreon ‘Down’ with LED lamps

Task lighting: Kreon ‘Diapason Hidden’ track lights with LED lamps

Exterior: Kreon ‘Diapason’ External spot light

Plumbing
Bath: ‘Wash’ by Guilio Cappellini for Flaminia

Handbasins: Custom designed in Corian by the architect

WC: ‘Cube’ by Caroma

Tapware: Vola

Bathroom fittings: D line

Energy
Solar Hot water system

Add any additional building components or special equipment that made a significant contribution to this project
Kitchen and laundry appliances: Miele