est Magazine Issue #40 | Kitchen Culture

Page 1

07

KITCHEN CULTURE

+ Kitchens

to Inspire

12

FIRST LOOK

Unseen Projects


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ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Editor’s Letter

Sophie Lewis Managing Editor @sophlew_says

It couldn’t be more timely that we celebrate 40 issues of est Magazine in the kitchen, heralding 40 designers who define an era of kitchen design. I recently visited the Future Food System; a productive, zerowaste home manifested through a collaboration between Joost Bakker and chefs Matt Stone and Jo Barrett. It highlighted

Read more about the Future Food System by Joost Bakker NEWS

how we’re more conscious than ever before of how we want to live in our homes – and how the kitchen is central to our propensity for change; to sustaining us and our environment. As a space to connect and collaborate, this issue looks at what the kitchen has come to be and how design thinking has evolved, as designer Nathalie Deboel explores in our cover’s kitchen-dining configuration. The kitchen also heightens our senses – not only through what food we prepare but in the richness of natural materials, as we see in Made in Belgium. We step inside a curvaceous place of respite by architect Susi Leeton and discover an effective use of space in architects Rosa Coy and George Yiontis’ family home. We exhale in an embracing country home on the Mornington Peninsula and further abroad, in the Hamptons home of Australian designer Ameé Allsop. Just as our Kitchen Compendium delves into signature design details, our style page curates a utilitarian approach to what we wear. We’ve assembled our favourite cookbooks in the Library and a playlist ready for when you’ve found the right recipe. Sophie X

Explore the Rock by Gort Scott Architects GLOBAL ARCHITECTURE & INTERIORS


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

The Latest An up-to-date look at what’s happening on estliving.com and across our social platforms.

Explore our list of Recommended Australian Designers for your next project GO-TO DESIGNERS

Learn more about the iconic Barcelona Chair designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich THE ICON

Be inspired by the Seaside Retreat by Stef Claes PINTEREST Swipe through Palm Beach Blue by Benn + Penna Architecture INSTAGRAM


WATCH NOW

VOLA 94 Wellington St, Collingwood, Victoria Stockists www.vola.com


ISSUE #40

THE DANISH WAY

The Sommerhus is ingrained in Danish life. More than just a holiday home, it’s where the Danes have long retreated to reset and gain perspective. Natural materials and pure design intersect to create a compact escape from the bustle of city life, immersed in the coastal landscape. Made in Horsen, Denmark, VOLA prides itself on a distinctly Danish heritage. VOLA taps are a natural fit within the Sommerhus, as a symbol of sustainability, craftsmanship – and valuing the simple things in life. VOLA taps in a brushed gold finish, part of an exclusive colour series, feature in the Skagen Sommerhus designed by ARDESS Arkitektur.

THE DANISH SOMMERHUS – INSPIRING LIFE

Explore the collection vola.com


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Meet the Contributors

Nicole England | Photographer Nicole is in her element capturing the fleeting moments. Her ability to capture both the magic of the transient moment and the essential, unchanging qualities of space, form, texture, and detail is what gives Nicole’s photography its power. When Nicole isn’t shooting architecture and design for work, she can be found photographing personal projects – most of which have an architectural focus. The best known of these is Resident Dog, which grew to become a book that captured the hearts of dog and design lovers around the world. In this issue, Nicole photographs the Melbourne home of architects Rosa Coy and George Yiontis.

@nicoleengland

Glen Allsop | Photographer Glen is a photographer who seeks authenticity and a sense of atmosphere in his work. As a visual artist, Glen has the rare ability to find intriguing images in moments and subjects unposed and uncontrived. With his love of natural light, Defenders and cycling, he captures portraits, place and process with a discerning eye for detail. After seven years of residing in New York City, he currently lives and works in East Hampton, New York with his wife Amee and two sons, Navy and Finn. In this issue, Glen captures Amee in their family home as part of our My Space series. @glenallsop

Thomas De Bruyne | Photographer Thomas De Bruyne is an architectural photographer and graphic designer based in Belgium. Best known for capturing the work of Belgium’s leading architects, Thomas has a love for unique vintage furniture, raw materials and imperfect finishes. Thomas is the photographer behind our Belgian Kitchen Edit in this issue of est Magazine. @cafeine

Bronwyn Marshall | Contributing writer As an architect, designer and writer, Bronwyn’s layered and storied approach see her transfer fluidly across several disciplines, ensuring an empathetic narrative unfolds. Immersed within the world of design, she has lived and worked in Australia, Europe and the United States, and is quested to find and imbed meaning in the many spaces and places we occupy. Her love of language and the importance of substance through design ensures her account of Susi Leeton’s Birch Tree House comes from a place of curiosity and appreciation. @bronwynmarshall


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Credits est TEAM

CONTRIBUTORS

Managing Editor Sophie Lewis

WORDS Stephen Crafti, Yvette Caprioglio, Lidia Boniwell, Bronwyn Marshall, Tiffany Jade, Emma-Kate Wilson, Gabrielle Williams, Sophie Lewis

Style Editor & Copy Yvette Caprioglio Design & Creative Jack Seedsman Kate Dixon Product Editor Brigitte Craig Editorial & Social Media Coordinator Lidia Boniwell

PHOTOGRAPHY The Latest Rory Gardiner, Katherine Lu, Anson Smart, Dean Bradley, Eric Petschek Beauty in Balance Nicole England, Felix Mooneeram, Emily Ward

Editorial Assistant India Curtain

Kitchen Compendium Thomas de Bruyne, Kasia Gatkowska, Thomas Seear-Budd, Simon Wilson, Matthew Walsh, Aaron Leitz, Derek Swalwell, Anders Schonnemann, Romello Pereira, Paul Babera

Managing Director Miffy Coady

Inherently Australian Sharyn Cairns

Advertising & Partnerships Mandy Loftus-Hills | mandy@estliving.com Astrid Saint-John | astrid@estliving.com Deb Robertson | deb@estliving.com

The Belgian Lens Thomas de Bruyne

ON THE COVER

The Poetics of Space Glen Allsop

Design Nathalie Deboel Photography Thomas de Bruyne Location Knokke, Belgium

Worlds Collide Sharyn Cairns

Return to Simplicity Timothy Kaye Where Architects Live: Rosa Coy & George Yiontis Nicole England The Library Peter Bennetts Playlist Photography | Stuart Cantor Curation | Mark Richardson

CONTACT editorial@estliving.com advertising@estliving.com

CONNECT

40 Kitchens That Define Design Thomas de Bruyne, Claessens & Deschamps, Yiorgos Kordakis, Amit Geron, Piet-Albert Goethals, Rory Gardiner, Juan Rodríguez, Annick Vernimmen, Norm Architects, Kvänum, Adrien Dirand, Mauricio Fuertes, Richard Leeney, Nicole Franzen, James Brittain, Scott & Scott Architects, Jasper Carlberg, Sharyn Cairns, Romello Pereira, Sharrin Rees, Robert Walsh, Tom Blachford, Mark Roper, Prue Ruscoe, Shannon McGrath, Anson Smart⁠, Tom Ferguson, Felix Forest, Derek Swalwell, Chris Warnes The Detail Anders Hviid, Thomas De Bruyne, Anson Smart, Prue Ruscoe, Elisa Watson, Sharyn Cairns, Derek Swalwell


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Contents

The Latest

est Style

Beauty in Balance

Kitchen Compendiun

Inherently Australian

The Belgian Lens

Worlds Collide

Where Architects Live

Return to Simplicty

The Poetics of Space

40 Kitchens

The Detail





The New Utilitarian BY YVETTE CAPRIOGLIO STYLE EDITOR

Add form, function and utility to your wardrobe by adopting a pragmatic approach with purpose. Remember that minimalist, utilitarian pieces don’t need to come at the cost of losing your cool edge. A laissez-faire approach borne from a desire to have easy-towear ‘utility’ pieces in a palette of khaki, camel, black, white, navy will add an efficiency through basics that make getting dressed easy.

DOUBLE FACE LONG SLEEVE SWEAT HOODIE UNIQLO

NAPPA LEATHER TRISTAN TROUSERS JOSEPH

RICCARDO TOE-CAP LEATHER BOOTS IN BLACK GABRIELA HEARST

SHOP THE COLLECTION >

COTTON LINEN OVERSIZED KNIT MILITARY BASSIKE


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est Style

FORMES SIMPLES SQUARE BANGLE IN BRASS WITH GOLD FINISH CELINE

OBLONG SLING GRAIN BLACK A-ESQUE

DOUBLE FACE COCOON COAT UNIQLO

ARKIN DENIM JUMPSUIT J BRAND



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BEAUTY IN BALANCE ARCHITECT Susi Leeton Architects + Interiors BUILDER Visioneer Builder LIGHTING DESIGN SLA & Adrian Pizzey PHOTOGRAPHY Nicole England, Felix Mooneeram & Emily Ward WORDS Bronwyn Marshall



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Photography This Page | Emily Ward Previous Page | Felix Mooneeram


A Camie Lyons bronze sculpture from Scott Livesey studio features alongside artwork by Warlimpirrnga Tjapaltjarri on one side of the gas fireplace, with a Hemisphere bowl by John Pawson for When Objects Work on the other.


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eferencing subtle cues from its natured muse, Birch Tree House by Susi Leeton Architects + Interiors gently curves and

meanders around its site as a welcomed counterbalance to the vibrancy of the family life it encases. Sited on a generous allotment in Melbourne, Birch Tree House speaks to a lasting resonance, where the conjuring of a relaxed and emotive response is celebrated. Through a series of spaces that encourage a tangible engagement, curved and linear elements come together through a muted softness, carving out unique meditative moments within the greater whole, while embracing its landscape. Natural light and soft materials have been used to create an atmosphere of light and shade, with refined and tonal finishes. Considered subtleties of textural polished plaster and light oak timber flooring add warmth emphasising scale and an inherent cohesiveness, while contrasting elements of natural limestone and heavy flowing linen sit alongside each other as an equaliser.

Photography Felix Mooneeram


The Botolo by Cini Boeri for Arflex and artwork, ‘My Country’ (2006) by Sally Gabori offer playful colour and texture to the Marmorino polished plaster walls and limed oak floors.

Photography This Spread | Nicole England


The relaxed living area features the Paulistano armchair by Paulo Mendes Da Rocha for Objekto, Delano sofa by Pianca and artwork, ‘Thund Barramundi Story’ (2008) by Sally Gabori.


“As you continue into the public areas of the home, the exterior openings grow in size allowing unobstructed views of the water and surrounding landscape.” –Adam Jordan

The kitchen features the Macon Classic Lacanche in Deft Blue, coupled with the handmade Nazari Fes tiled-splashback from EARP Bros. Uccio leather stools by Daniel Vintage Loop Chairs Barbera for Barbera Design are tucked under by Willy Guhl in the the custom island. Art by Billy Benn Perrurle courtyard. and Piers Greville.

Photog Nicole E


graphy England


Photography Nicole England


As a calming and composed place of respite, that is also deeply introspective, Birch Tree House uses solid masonry to define the exterior envelope, while thin-framed apertures connect to the expressed arches of the surrounding pergola, adding a sculptural rhythm to the space. Discreet and nuanced, Birch Tree House modestly navigates its site with a refreshing curation of its many parts, bringing natural and sculpted elements with softer and unexpected pops of colour. Classical proportions and an innate softness underpin the resulting home, revealing itself through inspiration from how the spaces should feel and engage its occupants.

The Thonet Chair 20 dining chairs and Bronze Table by Daniel Barbera for Barbera Design create an informal dining setting by the landscaped outdoor space.


Photography Nicole England


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The deep blue Marenco sofa by Mario Marenco for Arflex punctuates the neutral palette.


Teal glazed handmade Bijmat tiles from EARP Bros. call on the home’s signature curves, together with Signorino limestone tiles.


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Photography This Page | Felix Mooneeram Previous Page | Nicole England


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BIJMAT FRENCH BLUE EARP BROS

ZELLIJ PAMPAS EARP BROS

TUNDRA GREY PIETRA STONE GALLERY

WHITE SMOKED ROYAL OAK FLOORS

GATHER CO. TERRACOTTA MALINA RECTANGLE DI LORENZO

MARENCO SOFA ARFLEX

SUSI LEETON ARCHITECTS + INTERIORS SIGNATURE STYLE


SALLY GABORI

PAULISTANO ARMCHAIR OBJEKTO

“Birch Tree House challenges conflicting notions of modesty and luxury in an understated manner. Reflecting generosity and gentleness of space was our aspiration.” – Susi Leeton

COMO PULL IN TUMBLED BRASS PITTELLA

3818 BERBER RUG LOOM RUGS

CLUNY ‘CLASSIC’ LACANCHE

SEE MORE PRODUCTS >



THE BEAUTY OF CHOICE CHOOSE FROM FOUR APPLIANCE STYLES TO COMPLEMENT YOUR KITCHEN DESIGN

fisherpaykel.com/styles


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Kitchen Compendium Explore the design of nine Australian and international kitchen projects and the designers behind them.

WORDS | Sophie Lewis


Design Niels Maier Project Rough House Photography Thomas de Bruyne


Photography Thomas de Bruyne


NEEDLE DELTALIGHT

SPANISH DINING CHAIR FREDERICIA

Rough House Limburg, The Netherlands

OXIDISED BEAMWOOD LAMINEX

Niels Maier

LAMINAM CALCE NERO SIGNORINO

Designer Niels Maier proposed an unlikely material to shape a half-timbered house kitchen in the hills of Limburg, the Netherlands. Described as ‘warm, solid and natural’ for the way it works with the raw timber beams and terracotta flooring, the patinated brass kitchen invites the owners to leave marks, adding to the earthen character of this historic home.

KAKOMI IH DONABE KINTO

GATHER CO. MALINA TERRACOTTA – RECTANGLE DI LORENZO


Keshaw McArthur co-founder Xuan McArthur Nguyen sees ‘space’ as a medium they work with to provide definition and direct flow – an approach explored in the Valley House kitchen. “Instead of approaching the kitchen as a moment within the home that looks to show off or stand out, we were interested in how it could have an understated character, yet still possess a quiet beauty,” Xuan says. A rethinking of fundamental parts, Keshaw McArthur challenged formality and dissolved boundaries between the kitchen and scullery to create a space formed on ‘pure function’.

Valley House Auckland, New Zealand

PIETRA GREY MARBLE PIETRA STONE GALLERY NUEVE (ETERNO) TONGUE N GROOVE

Keshaw McArthur Architects

KV1L & 500T1 KITCHEN MIXER VOLA

SERIES 9 | MINIMAL 60CM OVEN – 11 FUNCTION FISHER & PAYKEL


“We were always more interested in how it could have an understated character, yet still possess a quiet beauty.” – Xuan McArthur Nguyen

Photography Thomas Seear-Budd, Simon Wilson


Photography


y Aaron Leitz

Pearl Loft Portland, USA Jessica Helgerson Interior Design



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True to the Pearl District in Portland, Oregon, known for its warehouse conversions, craft breweries and fashion scene, the Pearl Loft by Jessica Helgerson Interior Design merges bespoke design with an industrial setting. Initially debating whether or not to transform the rundown space, the owner encouraged Jessica Helgerson Interior Design to experiment with a minimalist palette and maximum detail. Cue the concrete sink and benchtop, soft-toned timber cabinetry and notable design pieces such as the Tulip Chair by Eero Saarinen that bring a ‘fresh and calm’ perspective to this transformed space.

HANGING LAMP N2 VALERIE OBJECTS

STONE GLASS SQUARE WHITE EARP BROS

TURA – DOOR PULL PITTELLA

SAN SELMO RECLAIMED AUSTRAL BRICKS

SAARINEN TULIP CHAIR KNOLL

SEASONED OAK LAMINEX


Hall 20 Sydney, Australia Smart Design Studio

Photography R


Romello Pereira


“Our approach to the design was to create an element that was monolithic and calm in form, yet tactile for enjoyed everyday use.” – Aaron Wooster


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MICROLINE 40/40 PENDANT + PROFILE DELTALIGHT

‘CONT’ CONTAINER, SMALL MICHAEL VERHEYDEN

KV1 KITCHEN MIXER VOLA

Smart Design Studio realised a slick and sophisticated vision in their boutique apartment building, Hall 20, not far from Bondi

MOAK BLACK SENSA

Beach. The design team sought high-quality, rigorous finishes to articulate a timeless, all-black aesthetic. “Our approach to the design was to create an element that was monolithic and calm in form, yet tactile for enjoyed everyday use,” head of interiors Aaron Wooster reflects. It’s this treatment, Aaron Wooster says, that creates a new standard for kitchen design outside of single homes.

TACCIA FLOS

ICONIC ST. LAURENT EARP BROS

SILK GEORGETTE SALVATORI


Photography Kasia Gatkowska


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DB11 House Amsterdam, The Netherlands

SNUG AS A BUG TINT

Framework Studio

ENNA GREY OAK IXORA

Sage green wraps the DB11 kitchen designed by Framework Studio inside a late 1930s home located in Amsterdam’s Oud-Zuid neighbourhood. The neighbourhood is known for its leafy-green streets, informing the layered materials that ensue; veined stone, eucalyptus green joinery and a muted Atollo lamp designed by Vico Magistretti, on a bed of classic parquetry flooring. 590V MIXER VOLA

ICE GREEN SIGNORINO

GRAND OAK CLASSIC – LIGHT OIL DINESEN

A VERY SERIOUS COOKBOOK ALISON ROMAN, FABIÁN VON HAUSKE, AND JEREMIAH STONE

CH56 BAR STOOL CARL HANSEN & SØN


Photography M


Matthew Walsh

Old Oaks Sydney, Australia Carole Whiting



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“ Clean and open, timeless, I wanted the kitchen to anchor the house and provide the foundation in palette and design direction for the rest of the home…” – Carole Whiting

DOOM TINT

Asked to update an uninspiring kitchen with an awkward footprint, designer Carole Whiting has let textures do the talking. The Old Oaks kitchen shares a spectrum of the designer’s signature natural materials; white-washed Larch panels, black-stained cabinetry, marble, as well as large-format porcelain and handmade tiles. “Clean, open and timeless, I wanted the kitchen to anchor the house and provide the foundation in palette and design direction for the rest of the POURED CONCRETE POLISHED CONCRETE

MORI SCONCE RBW

home,” Carole says. The butler’s pantry tucked behind conceals storage and appliances – except the built-in ovens.

LARCH ALBA ADMONTER

INAX SHIJIN YU RIN ARTEDOMUS

LINEA PERCH STOOL NIKARI


Middle Park House Melbourne, Australia Auhaus Architecture

Photography Derek Swalwell Styling Anna Fitzpatrick


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Auhaus Architecture lured light and greenery into their Middle Park

W40 ARCHED WINDOW METRO STEEL WINDOWS

kitchen, part of a double-storey extension onto a heritage Melbourne home. A deliberately stripped-back experience, founder Kate Fitzpatrick says they applied geometry and the consistency of natural materials to unite old and new. It’s a richly-toned backdrop to the new living spaces, featuring uninterrupted, veined spotted gum veneer and a robust concrete island at its core. “This simplicity of materiality reinforces the key formal moves and focuses attention on the period details in the front of the home,” Kate says.

GEO VACUUM JUG NORMANN COPENHAGEN

MAGMA 1& 3/4 BOWL SCHOCK

SPOTTED GUM 181.05 GEROGE FEATHER & CO

TUNDRA GREY SANDBLASTED PIETRA STONE GALLERY

YOKATO PULL-OUT KITCHEN MIXER BRODWARE


LK Residence Copenhagen, Denmark Danielle Siggerud

Photography And


ders Schonnemann

“It’s always a challenge to replace something as important as the kitchen in a new place in the house and restoration requires a careful balance between respecting heritage and adding originality.” – Danielle Siggerud



051 CAPITOL COMPLEX OFFICE CHAIR CASSINA

Facing a corner of Frederiksberg Garden, Copenhagen, architect Danielle Siggerud set out to establish a relationship between the LK Residence and the verdant outlook. “Our idea was to be grounded at kitchen level when looking outside, so we placed the

MARGOT CHAMPAGNE COUPE FFERRONE DESIGN

CALACATTA LUXE CDK STONE

kitchen a half-level below the dining area to create an even stronger relationship with the outdoor space,” Danielle says. Designed to feel like part of the furniture with all appliances concealed, the kitchen island functions as a worktop on one side and an informal bench setting on the other. Every element has been meticulously thought-through, down to the bronze backplate on the top of each drawer.

BARLETTA OAK IXORA

YOKATO KITCHEN MIXER BROADWARE

SMOKED & BLACK ROYAL OAK FLOORS


Kooyongkoot Residence Melbourne, Australia B.E. Architecture

The famed 1930s Milanese House, Villa Necchi Campiglio, was a chief source of inspiration inside Kooyongkoot Road by B.E Architecture. Project architect Phoenix Wang says it’s one of the largest kitchens they’ve worked on, designed as a central gathering area for family and guests to share in meals being prepared. “Like the food production areas of Villa Necchi, this kitchen refers to older traditional references like the glazed wall tiles behind the timber shelves and painted timber Venetians of the kitchen‘s working pantry,” Phoenix says.

Photography Paul Babera


“We wanted the kitchen to be relaxed and informal but most importantly, we wanted it to feel more a part of the living room than a traditional kitchen.” – Phoenix Wang


DESIGN Butler Armsden PHOTOGRAPHY Joe Fletcher


Abey x est living Outdoor Living

Make the most of your outdoor living space year-round with an alfresco kitchen. Designed by Abey Australia for the Australian climate, the Alfresco sink and tapware collection is composed of marine-grade 316 stainless steel that can withstand harsh coastal environments. The range features a variety of sink sizes and three European-designed kitchen mixers. VIEW MORE ABEY PRODUCTS >



INHERENTLY AUSTRALIAN Mornington Peninsula House by Studio Esteta has a visual language that draws on the gently rolling landscape and distant coastal views. Resurrected from an existing residence, the home mediates between domestic familiarity and evocative design aptitude.

DESIGN Studio Esteta LANDSCAPE DESIGN Kate Seddon PHOTOGRAPHY Sharyn Cairns WORDS Tiffany Jade



Mid-century materials and finishes find their way into every space – with Studio Esteta’s signature crazy paving marking the entrance of the home and all of the bathrooms.



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ehind a dusty-silver brick facade echoing the surrounding gums, Mornington Peninsula House has largely coaxed its own interior evolution. Bookended by a master suite at one end and a

children’s wing at the other, the home’s heart is a light-drenched open-plan gathering space with expanses of glazing that take in the surrounding 39-hectare property. A raked ceiling has been unveiled, drawing light from the abundant windows and amplifying it. Bagged white recycled bricks are juxtaposed by spotted gum wall paneling and indigenous artworks that reside in harmony with the native surrounds.

The iconic Australian Featherstone Scape chairs appear in both the study and dining space. A Henry Wilson Surface Sconce works in the warm timber cladding and cork.


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The Cluny Classic Lacanche oven takes centre stage in the Pilbara Dreamtime Marble and spotted gum space, reflecting the client’s love of cooking.


The kitchen is central to the revival of the house. Situated at the heart of the home and oriented to maximise the connection with the family living space and the views beyond, the space is defined by form and material. The lowered ceiling height and cohesive treatment of spotted gum create intimacy while a honed Pilbara Dreamtime Marble benchtop hints at the hours spent rolling dough and leaning into glasses of red with family and friends. High-end fixtures fit within seamlessly integrated joinery while a butler’s pantry hides much of the paraphernalia that is traditionally part of a kitchen. The exception is a Lacanche ‘Cluny’ oven that takes centre stage in deference to the owner’s love of cooking. A significant element of Mornington Peninsula house is the landscaping by Kate Seddon. A composition of hard and soft scaping establishes a dialogue between the natural lie of the land and the garden itself through an absence of straight lines, with winding fence lines and a curved concrete bench that mimic the topography. A ha-ha wall preserves breathtaking views while creating a vertical barrier that allows cows to come all the way to the garden. This gesture represents the cohesion between interior design, architecture and landscape design elements, translated as a profound sense of place.

This quiet corner of the home features the Signal wall sconce by Workstead.






PROJECT Residence DC DESIGN Pieter Vanrenterghem


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THE BELGIAN LENS

We step inside four kitchens that epitomise material restraint and resolute craftsmanship that Belgian designers are renowned for.

PHOTOGRAPHY | Thomas de Bruyne WORDS | Lidia Boniwell



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ANNE-CATHÉRINE RAMBOUX Barn Leper

Anne-Cathérine Ramboux designed the Barn

Leper kitchen in Ypres, West Flanders to reflect

the Flemish vernacular in material and form. The Ypres Barn kitchen draws on bespoke

Rosewood cabinetry and Pierre de Varennes limestone to frame the rural landscape.


“On one side, the colours contrast with the rural Flemish landscape. On the other, they create a harmonious coherence with the roughness of the barn.” – Anne-Cathérine Ramboux


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LINEAR Kitchen Slimline Pendants

Barra d’oro Pendant By Mario Nanni

Orion Globe Light

By Lee Broom

Microline 40/40+ Profile Pendant By Deltalight


“ Timber exudes warmth without ever looking bland - that’s why we went all out using custom made wood in this project.” – Bram Couvreur, Founder, Maister


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MAISTER

Summer House Extension Multidisciplinary design studio Maister clad the kitchen in their Pool Pavilion project entirely in

custom-made timber panels. The full-height timber cabinetry transitions seamlessly into the triangular roof, creating a sense of openness, together with the 15-metre long glass sliding doors.



NATHALIE DEBOEL Knokke House Interior designer Nathalie Deboel’s occasional home in Knokke, Belgium calls on its coastal locale through sandy oak and warm grey tones. An integrated bench seat as part of the island bench creates symmetry in the kitchen and allows guests to cook and eat together in the same setting.


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NOTABLE Belgian Benchtop Accessories

Shallow Pots By Vincent Van Duysen

Tela Glassware Collection By Hay

Craft Mortar & Pestle By Normann Copenhagen


“We chose to link the kitchen and dining area together, allowing the owners to interact with each other while preparing meals, rather than being separated in different rooms.” – Nathalie Deboel



M MARIE STADSBADER Steel + Stone

Designed by Marie Stadsbader and realised by Belgian kitchen artisans Diapal, this

minimal Jabbeke kitchen walks the line

between functionality and aesthetic,

combining industrial stainless steel work surfaces with raw, textural travertine.



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CLASSIC Chrome Kitchen Mixers

Vola KV1 Kitchen Mixer By Arne Jacobsen

Obumex Kitchen Mixer

By John Pawson

Aboutwater AA/27 Tap

By Michael Anastassiades


MODE Gas Fireplaces exclusively available at Stoke Fireplace Studio. SYDNEY | MELBOURNE WWW.STOKEFIRES.COM




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Playlist

TURN UP THE HEAT Turn up the volume and start cooking with our latest playlist curated by Mark Richardson.

PHOTOGRAPHY Stuart Cantor PRINT Praiano, Amalfi Forever series

Listen now on Spotify or Apple Music



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Windsor Architectural Hardware

Windsor Architectural Hardware has expanded its range of high-end brass hardware for the residential sector. The new NIDO collection unites simplicity and complexity in its designs. Sleek edges are embellished with raw texture, offering industrial elegance and a sensory experience. A key feature of the range is the addition of a series of on-trend knurled levers which offer a significant point of difference to the existing Windsor collection of solid brass door hardware.

www.windsorhardware.com.au sales@windsorhardware.com.au 1800 841 643

VIEW MORE WINDSOR PRODUCTS >



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WORLDS COLLIDE Architects Powell + Glenn and Sally Caroline Interior Atelier bring the best of the past and present together inside a Melbourne bayside home.

DESIGN Sally Caroline Interior Atelier ARCHITECT Powell + Glen STYLING Marsha Golemac PHOTOGRAPHY Sharyn Cairns WORDS Stephen Crafti



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riginally built in the latter part of the 19th century and extended by architects Powell + Glenn, the interiors are now beautifully ‘stitched together’ by interior

designer Sally Knibbs, of Studio Sally Caroline. “All the bones of the original were still there, but the house needed updating for a growing family,” Sally says, who took her design cues from both the home’s heritage fabric and the owner’s joyous and bold personality. While the original house was extended to create open plan living spaces, a new masonry-rendered wing was also added. The two-storey classic form with symmetrical doors at ground level and windows directly above, now overlooks the pitched slate Georgian roofline and the swimming pool and verdant garden by Myles Baldwin. Bespoke joinery, rich parquetry timber floors and sumptuous materials such as Verde Alpi stone, a deep green marble, was used for the island bench and splashback in the new kitchen. This marble also appears on the polished Palladiana floors of the ground level of the pool pavilion, with the children’s bedrooms directly above as part of a new build that is better suited to the site and the home’s orientation.

Insitu Palladiana flooring is a defining feature of the home. Artwork by Nickolas Harding.


Brass wraps the island, with a Verde Alpi stone benchtop and splashback, integrated Gaggenau appliances and Vola tapware. Olive green Diiva swivel stools add to the rich material mix.



Customised built-in joinery and individual pieces such as the desk in the study, provide a personal touch.



A Depadova Square 16 sofa, custom coffee table and Réaction Poétique side table by Jaime Hayón for Cassina.


Sally’s ‘brushstrokes’ feature a number of soft and muted tones, including deep wine hues, strong and soft shades of green and what she refers to as a ‘yellow-based green’, a citrus green for the carpets in the five bedrooms, including the main bedroom and dressing area. “Many clients wouldn’t have been as bold to go with these colours, but the owner was certainly up for it and wanted a point of difference,” Sally says, who kept most of the new contemporary living spaces white. Colour also defines the front formal sitting room and an adjacent study, located at the front of the house and benefitting from the original leadlight windows. A customised lacquered timber desk in an emerald green complements this sophisticated scheme. “We’ve kept all the original features, including the decorative ceilings and tall skirting boards. But we were keen to make this a home for contemporary living, not just a relic from the past,” Sally says.

Vintage clam shell wall sconces with brass backplates emanate a Parisian experience in the powder room.


ISSUE #40 / F EATURED HOME


The pool pavilion bar conjures a European holiday, featuring the Amalfi barstools by Janus Et Cie on insitu Palladiana terrazzo flooring.



The formal parts of the house, given over to the parents, feature a melange of green hues.




Design Sanders & King Project The South Melbourne Home Photography Dave Kulesza Styling Bea+Co.


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ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Where Architects Live: rosa coy george yiontis

WORDS Gabrielle Williams DESIGN Coy Yiontis Architects PHOTOGRAPHY Nicole England STYLING Swee Lim



L

iving in Paris fundamentally changes you. The way you dress. The way you live. And for Rosa Coy and George Yiontis, the husband-

and-wife team behind Coy Yiontis; the way you design. Years spent working with some of the most influential architects in Europe gave the team at Coy Yiontis the lived-experience of how to instil their refined design aesthetic into very limited space. The tall ceilings, the long, elegant windows, the luminous airiness that we all associate with a Parisian pied-a-terre are signatures they brought back with them to Australia. But their antipodean upbringing also infuses all of their designs, with sustainablysourced native timbers a key element of their signature look. When it came to designing their own home, that European apartment-living sensibility became essential, as the timber workman’s cottage that caught their eye was big on potential but very short on space. The heritage façade, painstakingly restored, creates a synergy between this beautiful home and the rest of the heritage streetscape. But that was about all that was salvageable as the knock-down interiors were too far gone, giving this architectural dream team carte blanche to create the perfect space for their family of six.

The Bend-Sofa by Patricia Urquiola. Large artwork by Rachel Coad, smaller work by Helen Kennedy.


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

A reclaimed conference table and Thomas dining chairs by Metrica for SP01. Art by Helen Kennedy.



The home constantly has to work double-duty to accommodate this big family. A delineation between public and private spaces gives everyone their own as well as the freedom to have friends around without impacting on other members of the family. Fresh thinking is the hallmark; where space is reclaimed by the occupants, rather than being wasted in the provision of rarely used hallways. Traditionally sized rooms are either halved or enlarged, depending on the duty that is required of them. In the living space, the two-sided fireplace is a signature Coy Yiontis detail. Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves store their extensive library of books. A drop-down media system brings the entire family and friends in for movie nights, curling up on the BEND sofa by Patricia Urquiola for B&B Italia. Convention has been turned on its head in Rosa and George’s home. It’s an extraordinary design feat that is grand and intimate all at the same time. As the French would say, ‘Grande et petite, et très très intelligente.’

The hallway links the original front of the house with the modern, architectural rear. The natural river limestone flooring guarantees a warmth that is only enhanced when the eastern morning light streams in. The full-length banquette is a favourite hang-out spot for the kids.




A two-storey spotted gum timberclad extension was designed in response to restrictive planning constraints. The exterior greets the visitor who walks down the sideway to the front entrance housed at the back.


Elba marble adds to the expansive feeling of light and airiness in the parents’ ensuite.


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

The master bedroom features angled walls and a spherical skylight.


Living the good life outside, that is the essence of Tribù. Nodi Sofa designed by Yabu Pushelberg | New Release Coming Soon 2021. Discover the latest outdoor collections by leading designer brand Tribù at Cosh Living.


Melbourne| Sydney | Brisbane | Perth www.coshliving.com.au


RETURN TO SIMPLICITY Adam Kane Architects have created a distinctive calm in an inner-city Melbourne home.

ARCHITECTURE | Adam Kane Architects LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE | Nathan Burkett PHOTOGRAPHY | Timothy Kaye WORDS | Emma-Kate Wilson




R

edesigning a Californian bungalow with a contemporary addition for a growing family, Adam Kane Architects set out to maintain as many features from the period home as possible, while ensuring their work remained sympathetic to the original character. Inspired by the insight he had through meeting with his clients in their existing home, Adam understood their clean, bright and tidy aesthetic with a simple minimal palette. “Everything was very ordered and had its place,” he says. This insight informed his vision, beginning from the outside, with the extension’s concrete render exterior. Inside, a refined material palette transcends the entire home, with polished plaster connecting the ensuite and splashbacks, while a white concrete aggregate floor flows effortlessly through the stone-coloured walls and floating white staircase. The grooved painted joinery in the kitchen conceals the walk-in pantry, fridge and linen cupboard, while the powder room mirrors the joinery unit in the living area, creating a consistent dialogue between spaces.

The kitchen features the Arrow pendant by Apparatus Studio – the same pendant Adam Kane Architects selected for their own studio. The pendant works with the Brodware Yokato tapware in aged iron finish.


ISSUE #40 / F EATURED HOME

The Missing Chairs by New Works and custom rendered dining table by Carlier & Co.



The tonal living space features the Tufty Two sofa by Patricia Urquiola and the high-pile Bosco rug by Tribe.


ISSUE #40 / F EATURED HOME



The master suite, a guest bedroom, home office, and laundry now lie in the original home while in the new minimalist cube, with the children’s bedrooms and a new bathroom, complemented by a second living space now upstairs. The open plan kitchen with a statement kitchen island bench in white marble alludes to the immersive serenity that fills the home. This area is framed by large, glazed openings that diffuse the boundary between inside and outside, with the living and dining space flowing effortlessly into the Nathan Burkett Landscape Architecture garden. The interior palette and landscape work together rather than compete; with the greenery lending vibrance to the pared-down spaces. For Adam, the Brunswick House reflects his philosophy of letting the design do the talking; where a return to simplicity honours the home’s materiality and form.



Surry Hills | Designer: Alexandra Brown Interiors | Stylist: Olga Lewis | Photographer: Pablo Veiga


DESIGN Ameé Allsop Studio PHOTOGRAPHY Glen Allsop WORDS Yvette Caprioglio


ISSUE #40 / MY SPACE

THE

POETICS

OF SPACE

New York-based Australian architectural designer and artist Ameé Allsop takes us through her Hamptons family home and creative studio. We discover what inspires her and how it informs her work and home life.


ISSUE #40 / MY SPACE

How is your space a reflection of you? Our space is a reflection of our values – quality time as a family, relaxed entertaining with friends and a space to cultivate creativity. When we notice certain patterns of our everyday life we make little adjustments in order to make things flow easier. When we have friends over, we make cocktails in the northeast corner of the kitchen and so recently we rearranged the shelves there to accommodate this growing passion. It used to have a mix of coffee cups and spice jars but now it’s taken on a new life. In moments of inspiration we can easily go to the studio since it is under the same roof, yet separate from the living. The way our studio is organised is always evolving with what we are working on. It has been rearranged three or four times since moving here, from photo studio to collaborative work benches to quiet corners.

Describe your design and interior style: I am motivated by the poetics of space. In the design process I tend to start with a material and imagine its possibilities in relation to form and go on the journey of reduction until it feels right. It’s an intuitive

Materiality informs your work; how does it play out in this house? I’m very conscious of how materials affect us - our little wooden house has a certain feeling to it. For example, it literally sounds different to how a concrete house sounds underfoot and therefore feels different – I can hear where the boys are playing from almost every room in the house.. and what they’re playing with! I love having a travertine stone coffee table because it sounds nice when I set my teacup or cocktail glass down. I love our thick wood dining table because it feels solid and warm to lean on and spend long dinners at.

Does living and working amongst your own design on a daily basis further inform your design process

process.

and creativity?

I tend to create spaces that are calm which I think is

Absolutely. I love being able to experience my pieces in situ,

misinterpreted as bright and white. I love warm, natural

and allow them space to breath and wear in overtime. It also

materials and tones. That is what drew me to our house. The

gives me opportunity to experiment with them – my two

exposed wood structure gives it character and richness but in

piece coffee table has been arranged and rearranged in all

a minimal way. It gives the space a rhythm and familiarity

sorts of ways across the living room and I think it’s important

that delivers a sense of calm.

that I experience it hands-on as opposed to theoretically.


Art by Glen Allsop



Which room do you gravitate to? The southwest corner of the house. It has the best light and views out to the woods without a neighbour in sight. We often watch for the local family of deer to roam through.

Favourite things? My Noguchi dining pendant light sculpture, travertine coffee table, a vintage Olivetti typewriter and etching of the Chrysler building gifted by my husband.

How does your workspace inspire you? It’s a work in progress. But I love having books and material samples around me. I’m on the hunt for a vintage wood drafting board but then I think I will be inspired to design a different studio space.

Which unifying elements do your home and workspace share? They are both an ever-evolving work in progress. Nothing is too perfect and nothing is set–in–stone. If we want to turn the couch around we turn it around. The same goes for the studio. They both morph into spaces that suit us in the season that we’re in, whatever that may be.

Where do you wind down? In winter, around the fireplace. In summer, the edge of the living room – all the doors open and we love to sit on the threshold between the living room and the deck as the sun rolls around.

What makes your home a home? The lives within it make this house a home. Whether it’s meaningful pieces that my husband and I found together overseas; or books that inspire us; or a cluster of carefully selected lego pieces that my son has arranged on the coffee table, mid-build; life and joy finds its way into the house through the lives that live here. Within that joy I think a space becomes a home.


Where natural texture meets enduring beauty

www.naturalfloor.com.au Paddington 02 9550 2066 Marrickville 02 9569 6999

Cammeray 02 9960 6921 Armadale 03 9964 9946



ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Design LAYAN Project Light House Photography Peter Bennetts


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Library Find your next recipe inside our edit of favourite cookbooks.

JAPAN THE COOKBOOK NANCY SINGLETON HACHISU

MOTO: THE COOKBOOK HOMARO CANTU

AUSTRALIAN FOOD BILL GRANGER

STRUDEL, NOODLES AND DUMPLINGS ANJA DUNK

SALT, FAT, ACID, HEAT MASTERING THE ELEMENTS OF GOOD COOKING SAMIN NOSRAT

SICILIANO JOE VARGET TO

BROADSHEE T MELBOURNE COOKBOOK BROADSHEET

WHOLE FOOD COOKING EVERY DAY AMY CHAPLIN

DINNER AT THE CLUB: 100 YEARS OF STORIES AND RECIPES FROM SOUTH PHILLY’S PALIZZI SOCIAL CLUB JOEY BALDINO, ADAM ERACE

SEE MORE BOOKS >


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40

KITCHENS THAT DEFINE DESIGN

To celebrate our 40th issue, the est living team has curated 40 kitchens that define a decade of design.

Design Smart Design Studio Project Indigo Slam Photography Sharrin Rees


01

NICOLAS SCHUYBROEK ARCHITECTS

EUROPE

MK HOUSE ANTWERP, BELGIUM

Photography Thomas de Bru


uyne, Claessens & Deschamps


02

OOAK ARCHITECTS

PATIO HOUSE KARPATHOS, GREECE

Photography Yiorgos Kordakis


03

Photography Richard Leeney

MCLAREN EXCELL

LADBROKE CRESCENT LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM


04

MAR PLUS ASK

GLOGAUER STRASSE BERLIN, GERMANY

Photography Piet-Albert Goethals


05

EMMA & DANIEL LEE

FULHAM HOUSE LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM

Photography Rory Gardiner


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

06

NIELS MAIER

THE NEUTRAL HOUSE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS

Photography Thomas De Bruyne


07

VINCENT VAN DUYSEN

BS HOUSE ZWEVEGEM, BELGIUM

Photography Juan Rodríguez


08

JUMA ARCHITECTS

HH4 RESIDENCE SINT-MARTENS-LATEM, BELGIUM

Photography Annick Vernimmen


09

NORM ARCHITECTS

PH HOUSE COPENHAGEN, DENMARK


10

CAAN ARCHITECTS FREDERIC KIELEMOES & VANESSA CAUWE BELGIAN BARN KORTRIJK, BELGIUM

Photography Thomas De Bruyne


ISSUE #40 / F EATURED HOME

11

LILJENCRANTZ DESIGN

SIBYLLEGATAN STOCKHOLM, SWEDEN Photography Kvänum


THOMAS GELDOF & CARMINE VAN DER LINDEN

12

Photography Piet-Albert Goethals

PROJECT R BELGIUM


13

ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

JOSEPH DIRAND

PARIS APARTMENT PARIS, FRANCE

Photography Adrien Dirand


14

PIETER VANRENTERGHEM

RESIDENCE DD ADINKERKE, BELGIUM

Photography Tho


omas De Bruyne


15

SUSANNA COTS INTERIOR DESIGN

OXYGEN HOUSE EMPORDÀ, SPAIN Photography Mauricio Fuertes


16

ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

THE MIDDLE EAST

PITSOU KEDEM ARCHITECTS

OLD JAFFA HOUSE 4 JAFFA, ISRAEL

Photography Amit Geron


home.liebherr.com.au


Taking Food & Wine Preservation to a Whole New Level Quality, Design and Innovation

Monolith - Cooling Redefined Monolith from Liebherr stands for a whole new generation of fully-integrated refrigerators, freezers and wine cabinets, based on over 60 years of innovation and German engineering. Keep your food fresh and protect your coveted wine collection.


Photography Nicole Franzen


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

NORTH AMERICA & CANADA

ATHENA CALDERONE & ELIZABETH ROBERTS ARCHITECTS

17

COBBLESTONE TOWNHOUSE NEW YORK CITY, USA


18

SCOTT & SCOTT ARCHITECTS

NORTH VANCOUVER HOUSE VANCOUVER, CANADA


19

MANDY GRAHAM

PALOS VERDES ESTATES LOS ANGELES, USA

Photography Jasper Carlberg


Photography James Brittain


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

20

ALAIN CARLE ARCHITECTE

MG2 HOUSE QUEBEC, CANADA



OPTIMAL WINE CARE THE INTEGRATED COLUMN WINE CABINET PROVIDES THE IDEAL ENVIRONMENT FOR YOUR PRECIOUS COLLECTION

fisherpaykel.com


21

FLACK STUDIO

ELMORE HOMESTEAD COUNTRY VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA

AUSTRALIA

Photography


A

Sharyn Cairns


22

MATHIESON ARCHITECTS

RED HILL HOUSE CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA

Photography Romello Pereira


23

TEMPLETON ARCHITECTURE

LITTLE PARNDON MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Sharyn Cairns


SMART DESIGN STUDIO

24

INDIGO SLAM SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Photography Sharrin Rees


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

25

MADELEINE BLANCHFIELD ARCHITECTS

COOGEE HOUSE SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Photography Robert Walsh


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

26

RITZ & GHOUGASSIAN

EDSALL STREET MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Tom Blachford


27

ROB MILLS ARCHITECTURE & INTERIORS

ARMADALE HOUSE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Mark Roper


Photography


y Prue Ruscoe

28

LUIGI ROSSELLI ARCHITECTS & ALWILL INTERIORS

HOMAGE TO OSCAR SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA


29

HECKER GUTHRIE

Photography Shannon McGrath

TOORAK HOME MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

03

POLLY HARBISON DESIGN & ARENT&PYKE LINDFIELD SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Photography Anson Smart⁠


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

31

CARR

RED HILL FARMHOUSE MORNINGTON PENINSULA, AUSTRALIA

Photography Sharyn Cairns


23

BALDWIN BAGNALL

ANNANDALE HOUSE SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA Photography Tom Ferguson


Photography Felix Forest


3

ALEXANDER & CO

ILUKA HOUSE PALM BEACH, AUSTRALIA


43

ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

KENNEDY NOLAN

CAROLINE HOUSE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Derek Swalwell


53

GEORGINA JEFFRIES

VICTORIA HOUSE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA Photography Felix Forest


63

STUDIO PRINEAS

LONGWOOD APARTMENT SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA

Photography


Chris Warnes


73

ROBSON RAK

SPANISH QUEEN HOUSE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA ROBSON RAK Photography Felix Forest


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

83

B.E ARCHITECTURE

ST VINCENTS PLACE MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Derek Swalwell


93

ROBERT SIMEONI ARCHITECTS

POWELL STREET MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA

Photography Derek Swalwell


40

LUIGI ROSSELLI ARCHITECTS & DECUS INTERIORS

HILL HOUSE SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA Photography Anson Smart



the

detail The kitchen takes focus in our Detail edit. This resource curates quality materials,

fixtures and appliances to cater to how we live in our kitchens.

Product Vipp Kitchen Photography Anders Hviid


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Design K-Studio Project Villa Vora Photography Ståle Eriksen


THE DETAIL

Gooseneck Taps

YOKATO BASIN SE T BRODWARE

ARC MIXER TAP ZIP

590V MIXER VOLA

MINIMAX S KITCHEN MIXER VITRA GLOBAL

VIDO FLEXIBLE HOSE SINK MIXER PHOENIX TAP WARE

HALO PULL OUT KITCHEN SE T BRODWARE

1935 3-HOLE KITCHEN MIXER RVB

PROTON CONCEALED PULL OUT KITCHEN MIXER GESSI

PLUG SINGLE LEVER KITCHEN MIXER RVB

The elongated gooseneck profile unites form and function.

V I E W M O R E TA P S >


THE DETAIL

Bar Stools

RD BAR STOOL DOUGLAS & BEC

TRE MEZZO LEATHER UPHOLSTERY STOOL BIASOL

IVA STOOL GRAZIA & CO

BERTOIA BAR STOOL KNOLL

SPINE STOOL FREDERICIA

REA STOOL DEPADOVA

DEER ARMLESS BAR STOOL DE LA ESPADA

HIGH DOT STOOL FRITZ HANSEN

FONT LIGHT BAR STOOL MØBEL COPENHAGEN

Introduce supple texture and craftsmanship to the kitchen counter.

VIEW MORE BAR STOOLS >


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Design Madeleine Blanchfield Architects Project Tree House Photographer Anson Smart


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Design YSG Project Budge Over Dover Photography Prue Ruscoe


THE DETAIL

Drop Pendants

SHAPE UP CONE PENDANT LADIES & GENTLEMEN STUDIO

AKARI PENDANT 75A VITRA

CEILING LAMP N3 VALERIE OBJECT

MORI PENDANT RBW

INDI DOUBLE EXTRA-LARGE PENDANT ARTICOLO

STRING LIGHT CONE FLOS

HOTARU BUOY PENDANT LIGHT TWENTYTWENTYONE

SUL SOL VA PENDANT VIABIZZUNO

An atmosphere-enhancing pendant transcends shape and materiality. VIEW MORE PENDANTS >

TWIG 2 PENDANT APPARATUS STUDIO


THE DETAIL

Stone

PIE TRA GREY SIGNORINO

GRIS DU MARAIS SALVATORI

LAGOS BLACK HOME EARP BROS

CARRARA VENATO VICTORIA STONE GALLERY

ZAFIRO BLUE SURFACE GALLERY

COTE D’AZUR PIETRA STONE GALLERY

Materiality and form defined by nature.

VIEW MORE STONE >

TAJ MAHAL SENSA

ELBA MARBLE CDK STONE

MOLVENO BLANCO G-LUX


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Design Mim Design Styling Bea + Co. Photography Dave Kulesza


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Design Carole Whiting Project Tope Street Apartment Photography Shannon McGrath


THE DETAIL

Built-In Ovens

COMBAIR SLP V-ZUG

SERIES 9 | MINIMAL 76CM OVEN 17 FUNCTION FISHER & PAYKEL

PROFESSIONAL M SERIES SINGLE OVEN WOLF

70CM CLASSIC THERMOSEAL PYROLYTIC OVEN SMEG

SERIES | 8 COMPACT COMBINATION MICROWAVE OVEN BOSCH

PROFESSIONAL COMBISTEAM OVEN BERTAZZONI

BPX HANDLELESS ARTLINE PYROLYTIC OVEN MIELE

OVEN 400 SERIES GAGGENAU

45CM COMBINATION STEAM MICROWAVE OVEN BELLING

Integrated architectural ovens with a focus on function.

V I E W M O R E B U I LT- I N O V E N S >


THE DETAIL

Knobs & Pulls

CURVE PULL LINEAR STANDARD

R2012 FURNITURE PULL PIT TELLA

LEATHER BOUND PULL 03 MADEMEASURE

HUMBLE H03 AUHAUS

JULES FURNITURE KNOB VERVLOET

GALLERY DRAWER PULL THE SOCIETY INC

FURNITURE KNOB BUSTER + PUNCH

WRAPPED LEATHER SLIMLINE 02 MADEMEASURE

XX CENTURY FURNITURE KNOB PIT TELLA

Refined cabinetry hardware with enduring qualities.

VIEW MORE JOINERY >


ISSUE #40 / KITCHEN CULTURE

Kitchen

Architecture Cera Stribley Interior Design AV-ID Project Toorak House Photography Derek Swalwell


ISSUE #40 ESTLIVING.COM


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Articles inside

The Detail | Knobs & Pulls

1min
pages 218-219, 230-231

The Detail | Built-In Ovens

1min
pages 218-219, 228-229

The Detail | Stone

1min
pages 218-219, 226-227

The Detail | Drop Pendants

1min
pages 218-219, 224-225

The Detail | Barstools

1min
pages 218-219, 222-223

The Detail | Gooseneck Taps

1min
pages 218-221

40 Kitchens that Define Design

4min
pages 164-183, 186-191, 194-217

My Space | Amee Allsop

4min
pages 153-157

Return to Simplicity by Adam Kane Architects

2min
pages 140-149

Where Architects Live | Rosa Coy & George Yiontis

2min
pages 126-137

Worlds Collide by Sally Caroline Atelier

2min
pages 108-123

The Belgian Lens | Marie Stadsbader

1min
pages 86-87, 98-101

The Belgian Lens | Nathalie Deboel

1min
pages 86-87, 94-97

The Belgian Lens | Maister

1min
pages 86-87, 92-93

The Belgian Lens | Anne-Catherine Ramboux

1min
pages 86-91

Inherently Australian by Studio Esteta

2min
pages 70-83

Kitchen Compendium | B.E. Architecture

1min
pages 40, 66-67

Kitchen Compendium | Danielle Siggerud

1min
pages 40, 62-65

Kitchen Compendium | Auhaus Architecture

1min
pages 40, 60-61

Kitchen Compendium | Carole Whiting

1min
pages 40, 56-59

Kitchen Compendium | Framework Studio

1min
pages 40, 54-55

Kitchen Compendium | Smart Design Studio

1min
pages 40, 50-53

Kitchen Compendium | Keshaw McArthur Architects

1min
pages 40, 44-45

Kitchen Compendium | Niels Maier

1min
pages 40-43

Beauty in Balance by Susi Leeton Architects

3min
pages 20-37
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