Architecture

A Refined Transformation Of A 1980s Sunshine Coast Townhouse

The owner of this 1980s townhouse purchased the property out of a love for the environment of Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

The building itself, however, had few redeeming features, and the interiors were particularly unpleasant to occupy, according to architects Zuzana&Nicholas.

The architects proceeded to completely transform the townhouse by gutting the interiors, flipping the two-storey floor plan, and enhancing the immediate landscaping.

It’s now a refined and functional home that embraces its coastal locale.

Written
by
Amelia Barnes
|
Photography
by

Zuzana&Nicholas completely transformed this Sunshine Beach house and garden.

The client’s brief was to renovate and reconfigure the townhouse to improve its liveability and functionality.

The kitchen, living and dining area were relocated downstairs, along with a laundry and pantry tucked under the stairs.

The living spaces now directly engage with the garden outside via new large windows.

Gutting the interior revealed the home’s original robust building shell of masonry exterior walls, a concrete ground floor slab, and a hardwood framed upper floor.

Zuzana&Nicholas were inspired by the original building shell to introduce a similar palette of robust and ‘natural feeling’ materials.

‘The ground floor ceiling was also removed to reveal the timber framing of the floor above, which was painted and left exposed, adding texture and additional height to the space,’ says Nicholas Skepper, director of architects Zuzana&Nicholas.

Existing aluminium windows were replaced with new timber joinery. Doors and windows are painted Dulux Grey Pail.

Colour is used to unify the existing stairs with the library cabinetry and floor in shades of green including Dulux Roland.

Dulux Roland wall paint.

This soothing shade of green (Dulux Roland) has a calming effect on the home.

The view of the library and stairs from the study.

Sliding doors open to the library from the study as desired.

The small library in the upstairs hallway.

The library joinery incorporates concealed storage space.

The study/second bedroom.

Rectangular format Sarelle limestone in the bathroom.

The interior of the home is cohesive and refined.

Writer
Amelia Barnes
Photography
1st of November 2024
Architect
Builder
Landscape design

Jonathan Kopinski with Zuzana&Nicholas

Structural engineer
Location

Sunshine Beach, QLD/Kabi Kabi Country

The brief for this project was relatively simple: renovate and reconfigure the Sunshine Beach townhouse to improve its liveability and functionality.

‘The client was interested in a higher design quality than what was afforded by the original ‘80s building,’ says Nicholas Skepper, director of architects Zuzana&Nicholas.

The biggest challenge of the project was overcoming the poor quality of the existing interiors on a relatively low budget. It became apparent that the entire home needed to be gutted, and the two-storey floor plan reconfigured, to relocate the bedrooms to the upper floor, and the main living spaces on entry below.

This move made logical sense, allowing the living spaces to directly engage with the garden outside via new large windows and openings. ‘Prior to this, very little connection was afforded between interior and exterior,’ says Nicholas.

Gutting the home’s interior revealed its original robust building shell of masonry exterior walls with a concrete ground floor slab and hardwood framed upper floor.

‘The existing ground floor concrete slab was stripped of tiling, patched, and ground back to reveal a river stone aggregate, which was a nice surprise,’ says Nicholas.

‘The ground floor ceiling was also removed to reveal the timber framing of the floor above, which was painted and left exposed, adding texture and additional height to the space.’

Zuzana&Nicholas were inspired to introduce a similar palette of robust and ‘natural feeling’ materials in the new spaces, such as crazy paving in the courtyard, limestone in the bathroom, hoop pine plywood kitchen cabinetry, concrete kitchen benchtops (with waste porcelain decorative aggregate donated by Mud Ceramics) and a galvanised steel awning above the doors on the lower level. Existing aluminium windows were replaced with new timber joinery.

Colour is used to unify the existing stairs with the upstairs library cabinetry and floor in shades of green, including Dulux Roland. The new doors and windows are painted a blue-grey (Dulux Grey Pail), complemented by mostly Dulux Whisper White walls.

Zuzana&Nicholas collaborated with the client, and landscape designer Jonathan Kopinski, to create the garden, which was previously neglected. The planting scheme features species endemic to the local area, and climbing vines that will eventually cover the mesh screen walls wrapping the garden perimeter.

The architects say GTO Building were an invaluable collaborator on site in resolving details and preserving the existing building shell, which kept constructions costs down.

Within six months of design, and six months of construction, the townhouse was completely revived, taking it from ‘grim and introverted’ to sophisticated and uplifting.

‘We take satisfaction in having dramatically improved the quality of the spaces through simple planning moves,’ says Nicholas.

Latest Stories

Recent Architecture