Architecture

An Architect + Interior Designer’s Coastal Home, Grounded In Nature

The lush natural environment of this family home in Sydney’s Northern Beaches served as the main inspiration in its transformative redesign.

Editor Interiors’ Bianca Martin and Architectsmith founder Richard Smith lived in the original house with their two children for seven years before embarking on a 20-month long rebuild.

The result is an unexpected beachside abode, enveloped in the trees tops of its sloping site, that strays from traditional coastal aesthetics.

Written
by
Christina Karras

Architectsmith founder and owner Richard Smith designed Chisholm House, alongside partner Bianca Martin who worked on the interiors. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

The rebuild was a five-year process from initial design through to council approval and construction! Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

After knocking down the existing home, they were able to build the new property into the sloped site. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘Although the floor plan is quite big, we wanted every space to be used, so the home only has three bedrooms and two bathrooms and I guess some people might think it’s missing some modern-day ‘must-haves’ like a butler’s pantry and media room!’ Bianca says. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘The most important thing for us was creating areas that connected us to the outside, which the previous house really lacked.’ Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

A striking concrete stair case leads to the lower level. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘We felt quite strongly that it be a timeless house, so the materials we kept coming back to are the ones Richard has long designed with – concrete, timber, brass and zinc.’ Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

The couple have renovated homes together in the past, but this was their first new home. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

Bianca says she set herself a ‘challenge’ to create a beachside home that was a bit unexpected, showing that coastal living ‘doesn’t have to mean all white’. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

The dining room makes the most of its incredible outlook. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

Australian hardwood timber lining covers the upper floor. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘The relationship between the bricks, timber and concrete of the lower levels is just so calming and it’s the best canvas,’ Bianca adds. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘The light changes so dramatically throughout the day and the seasons and the walls take on the most beautiful glow,’ Bianca adds. Photo – Pablo Veiga

Calming green vistas at every turn. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

‘I’m sure our builders will be happy to never work with timber lining again but the hard work was definitely worth it!’ Bianca notes. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

All the furniture was also kept quite muted and minimal, in order to hero the property’s surrounds. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

The new house manages to be both grounded in the garden and elevated like a tree house. Photo – Pablo Veiga. Editorial styling – Claire Driscoll Delmar

Writer
Christina Karras
1st of December 2022

There are a few clichés we’ve come to expect from the classic coastal Australian home. But when it came to redesigning their own dream home, Sydney interior designer Bianca Martin and architect Richard Smith wanted to create something ‘a little bit unexpected’.

The couple and their two kids, Xavier, 15, and Isla, 11, had lived in their elevated Avalon Beach property for seven years, before deciding to transform it from the ground up a few years ago.

‘We wanted to be sure that rebuilding was the right choice and understand the unique site fully before starting,’ Bianca says. Their vision was to feel grounded among the leafy trees of the 2600sq m block, rather than positioned atop it, which lead them to build their new home directly into the sloping landscape. Richard served as the project’s manager, client and architect, working closely with Alice Nichols Landscape Design to adapt and improve the design across the 20-month build.

‘The most important thing for us was creating areas that connected us to the outside, which the previous house really lacked,’ Bianca explains. ‘We really wanted every room to have a connection to nature, whether it was a view of water or bush or a deck or terrace to wander out onto.’

‘What we love most about the location is that although we live in a beach suburb, we essentially live in the bush, so the trees and the boulders definitely drove our material choices and the overall aesthetic for the house,’ she says. And one thing was clear: ‘it was never going to be a bright, white beachy home.’

These ideas are woven beautifully throughout Chisholm House’s lower floor, where a sleek combination of concrete and brick houses the kids’ bedrooms and a home office that opens out to a canopied west-facing terrace. Richard and Bianca approached upstairs as if it was a ‘covered verandah’, encasing the main living spaces, kitchen and master bedroom in Australian hardwood timber lining – covering everything from the floors and walls, to the ceilings and joinery.

‘Our dining room now feels part of the garden and when the doors slide back is completely open to the elements,’ Bianca adds. ‘We have friends who visit now who had no idea we had water glimpses!’

Now, in addition to their views of Avalon Beach in the east and Pittwater in the west, Chisholm House makes the most of its tree-top views at every turn, window and balcony.

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