Homes

Emma Williamson and Kieran Wong

We’re excited to share another West Australian home today, with thanks to our WA team, stylist Anna Flanders and photographer Angelita Bonetti – thankyou ladies!

This family home in Fremantle belongs to architects Emma Williamson and Kieran Wong of CODA, and their three children Jemima (13 yrs), Milo (11 yrs) and Rupert (8 yrs).

Written
by
Lucy Feagins
Supported by Dulux

Emma Williamson and Kieran Wong in the garden of their Fremantle home with their children Rupert, Milo and Jemima. Vintage concrete pots collected from Verge, Gumtree and various junk shops. Cast aluminium ‘bamboo’ outdoor chairs from Old Values in Fremantle. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

View to dining room. Perspective paintings by Paul Hinchcliffe. Artek stool by Alvar Aalto from Anibou. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Salon hang art wall including works by Brian Yates, Trevor Richards, and Paul Hinchcliffe. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Kitchen area. Kitchen bench made out of formply. Pink landscape painting to the right by Brian Yates. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Dining room details. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Salon hang art wall including works by Peter Matulich,  Emma Lipscombe, Paul Hinchcliffe, Giles Hohnen, Bevan Honey and Rachel Salmon Lommars. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Tracey Moffatt artwork at end of hallway. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

View to kitchen from courtyard. Anchor ceramics grey planter on kitchen bench next to flowers. Porcelain parrot from carpark market. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Marble vase on coffee table from Willow and the Bowerbird in East Fremantle. Artworks from left by Jeremy Kirwan-Ward, Mitjili, Trevor Vickers, and Tony Nathan. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Garden looking through into lounge. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

View to sunken lounge. Sofa by Grant and Mary Featherston bought from Hunters and Collectors in Mosman Park. Flokati rug from Old Yella in Fremantle. B&B Italia glass coffee table and loor lamp by Henry Pilcher. Bricks for this floor and outdoor paving were collected for free via Gumtree, from a 1960s house undergoing a renovation. Concrete bowl made by Simone Goddard and coffee table made by Neil Durbach. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Milo’s room. Artec Aalto stool. Bed linen and throw from Remedy in Fremantle. Floor rug from Kmart. Bedside light from Corner Store and vintage orange Kartel caddy found for $2 in an op shop.  Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

‘View across deck shows our CODA brick that we designed for an invited competition. It was an ideas competition but through this we developed the product and were able to purchase some for our house. The design creates an interesting pattern’ says Emma. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

Writer
Lucy Feagins
9th of March 2016

When two architects join forces to design a dream house for their own family, the results are bound to be impressive. Such is the case with the Fremantle home of Emma Williamson and Kieran Wong, the husband and wife team behind CODA architectural and urban design practice.

Emma and Keiran’s home is ‘so new it’s not even finished!’. The pair designed the house together, with Emma even acting as builder for the project. During the build, the family lived in a tiny existing cottage on the front of their block, which meant Emma could meet the trades on site each morning before heading off to work. ‘As client, architect and builder, there were a lot of circular conversations!’ she recalls!

Of course, the downside of being your own builder, is that deadlines do have a tendency to be quite fluid…! Since moving in 7 months ago, though, Emma and Kieran have been on a mission to get things finished. ‘It’s been a real lesson in appreciation’ Emma says. ‘Rather than taking for granted simple things, like being able to enter the house through a front door (!) we have learned to celebrate these things as we have toiled away over weekends finishing the project.’

One of the interesting aspects of this house is that the kitchen and dining room ‘module’ is actually a self contained transportable building that Emma and Keiran already owned (long story!) which they had craned onto the site. This became the starting point for the house design – ‘kind of like a Mr Squiggle’ Emma explains!

Emma is a BIG collector of vintage furniture, and has enjoyed furnishing her new home with much loved pieces accrued over many years. ‘I love that everything has a story, and a certain feeling of confidence from having been around for a while’ she says. Most of her things have been found in junk shops and on Gumtree, but every now and then she falls in love with ‘something a bit more serious!’. She and Kieran are particularly fond of their B&B Italia Alanda coffee table, which they had shipped in all the way from Miami. ‘Getting it here was a series of comic disasters, so now that it is safely ours this story also adds to our appreciation of it’ Emma says!

The family are also passionate art collectors, with an eclectic collection of works especially from West Australian artists, many of whom are friends. One favourite piece is a Tracey Moffatt work, purchased with some prize money Emma and Keiran won in a design competition a few years ago.

‘We have really enjoyed so many things about the house – which is lucky, since we designed it!’ Emma says. They love the small split level between the kitchen and dining spaces, the ‘sunken lounge’, and the relationship to the garden. It’s also been really interesting for them to experience first hand how these design features influence the way the house is used by their family.

‘It’s a very modestly sized house, but we have been careful to create lots of spaces to sit, to connect or be separate’ Emma says, thoughtfully. ‘We have really enjoyed seeing our kids using the house in that way.’

Emma and Kieran’s Fremantle family home. Styling – Anna Flanders. Photo – Angelita Bonetti for The Design Files.

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