Architecture

An Elegant 1875 Home Reimagined Around A Central Courtyard

When the owners bought this 1875-built property, it had been used as an architect’s office for a few decades.

They engaged architectural practice BUNSTON with a relatively simple brief, asking for a new kitchen, bathroom and more storage. But the real challenge was turning a former workspace into a familial and functional home.

The resulting Kesterson House has been reconfigured around a central courtyard garden, where original bricks and bluestone have been given a new life as part of the building’s inviting new iteration.

Written
by
Christina Karras
|
Photography
by
|
Styling
by

Millie Morton

Kesterson House by BUNSTON is a renovation of an old Victorian in St Kilda.

The rear facade covered in Boston ivy was one of the main reasons the owners fell in love with the property.

The elegant two-storey facade.

Sliding doors open the new living room to a central courtyard. Stonemasonry by Breccia.

Hard landscaping by Core Pave.

The living room features a fireplace. Bust by Angus White.

Boat Party (After Medusa) by Angus White.

The new kitchen.

A ‘glass link’ connects the existing spaces to the newly built zone.

‘Our intentions were to reuse the existing building materials wherever possible and thus the demolition was conducted with extreme care.’

Zac Bunston, founder BUNSTON

‘From the moment the front door is opened, views are cast through the existing hallway onto a window seat which frames the courtyard garden,’ Zac says. 19 Acres by John Waller.

‘We went to great lengths to source and fabricate hand-patinated blacked steel as our kitchen cabinetry’.

The pantry internals and a pull-out ladder are powder-coated in an un-expected orange shade. Joinery by Fenn Interiors. Metal fabrication by SteelScale.

Boat Party (After Medusa) by Angus White.

Flower no. 2 by Adam Stone.

The tartan wallpaper in the powder room nods to the owner’s Scottish background.

The bathroom is hidden behind an arched door.

The bedrooms enjoy the balcony outlook upstairs.

The century-old house hasn’t lost any of its heritage beauty.

Pink toned tiles and stone feature in the new bathroom.

Writer
Christina Karras
Photography
Styling

Millie Morton

9th of December 2024
Architect
Location

St Kilda, VIC/Bunurong Country

Reinventing a heritage building requires a certain sense of restraint, sensitivity and innovation.

This was especially true when it came to the renovation of Kesterson House, a home built in St Kilda about 150 years ago.

While the property has mostly served as a residence over the years, in 1982 the house was purchased by architect Allan Powell, who turned it into a robust yet elegant office for his busy studio Powell & Glenn Architects.

So by the time the current owners bought the old Victorian in 2020 with hopes of making it their family home, it required some work to make feel like a residence again. The couple tasked emerging architectural practice BUNSTON with an initially ‘simple brief’: design a new kitchen, a bathroom and some cupboards for storage.

‘Whilst simple in nature, the real task was to create a home,’ BUNSTON founder Zac Bunston says.

‘The house felt worked in and the ‘living’ was less apparent; there was certainly no sense of a family home.’

Luckily, the sizeable 289-square-metre floorplan didn’t need to be extended, allowing BUNSTON to focus on a series of considered updates and alterations. Most of the existing dwelling remains, with the narrow, south-facing rooms or ‘offices’ being subtly reworked into a contemporary living space.

Everything was rearranged around a central courtyard garden, which highlights the enchanting wall on the rear facade covered in Boston ivy — one of the owners’ initial attractions to the property.

In addition to carefully working with these existing elements, the renovation salvaged as many of the building’s original materials as possible. The bricks from the demolished walls were cleaned and re-laid; the original windowsills are now used as steppers across the courtyard garden; and the pendant light in the kitchen repurposed from the offices.

‘By salvaging the existing fabric, the proposed design acknowledges the buildings past both as an office and as the historical Kesterson House,’ Zac says. ‘Without a doubt, the most successful architectural element of this project is the link between the old and the new.’

‘A glass link sits at the end of the originally dwelling and below the mass of ivy; it is the only built junction between the old and new. And as the light changes throughout the day, shadows are cast through the ivy and into the living spaces.’

But perhaps most importantly, the renewed house now reflects the client’s personality.

Hand-patinated blacked steel joinery is paired with playful orange internals in the kitchen, and the ‘hidden’ powder room reveals a tartan wallpaper highlighting the owners’ Scottish background.

Many of the material selections come as a surprise without appearing ‘out of place’ — bringing a brand new feeling to the old house.

Latest Stories

Recent Architecture