Architecture

How Renovations Revealed The ‘Treasures’ Of This Sydney Sandstone Terrace

Sometimes the most transformative part of a renovation is what gets revealed in the process, rather than what’s added.

When sensitively updating this heritage terrace in Sydney, Virginia Kerridge Architect focused on peeling back the layers that had covered up the existing sandstone walls for many years.

Hidden treasures of the textural building are made new again with recycled materials, while a rear addition overlooking the garden gives this old home a breath of fresh air.

Written
by
Christina Karras
|
Photography
by

The Redoubtable by Virginia Kerridge Architect is an updated heritage home in Sydney.

A new addition helped reconnect the living room to the gardens.

The view of the rear.

Glass doors ensure the extension provides airflow and improved access to the outdoors.

A skylight is nestled above the kitchen.

Timber enhances the natural texture of the sandstone walls.

The interiors are pared-back but surprisingly spacious and cosy.

Jane Irwin Landscape Architect designed the gardens as a new hero feature of the home.

Upstairs showcases period details and elegant fireplaces in contrast to the rustic interiors below.

The top floor features the master bedroom, which was taken back to its original configuration.

Timber beams overhead have also been exposed in the renovation.

A modern bathroom.

All new materials were carefully selected to complement the existing interiors.

The laundry on the basement floor.

The facade is connected to the other Georgian terraces on the street.

Writer
Christina Karras
Photography
1st of December 2023
Project Architect

Alejandro Galdo Cora

Location

Sydney, NSW/Gadigal Country

Many of Sydney’s inner-city streets are lined with 100-year-old sandstone homes that have been altered and added to, in the decades since they were first built.

This Georgian terrace is one of them. As part of a group of five homes that date back to the mid-nineteenth century, the building is heritage protected. And while this means key parts of the home cannot be changed, some of its original detailing, sandstone walls, and overall charm had been covered over by the time the current owners purchased the property.

‘The house was only just liveable and was in dire need of work,’ architect Virginia Kerridge says. ‘The vision for the project was to create a new environment that was both rich and textural, fitting with the authentic nature of the existing building, as well as giving light and air to the previously dark spaces.’

The team took a restoration approach initially, peeling back layers to a delightful discovery of ‘old revealed treasures’ — including the internal sandstone walls and timber rafters throughout the house.

A fresh palette of recycled and raw materials like timber, patinated brass, and dark joinery were selected to complement the spaces, ensuring the latest redesign will stand the test of time.

Limited by strict heritage restrictions, Virginia sought to breathe new life into the compact floorplan with a new addition to the rear. The most major renovations took place on the lower level of the house, where floor-to-ceiling glass windows open the kitchen and living areas to the gardens. It’s a simple extension, but this modern pavilion now serves as a ‘lung’ for the old residence, maximising space, providing air flow and indoor-outdoor living that’s helped make the garden a hero feature.

Virginia says the reimagined house has become more of a comforting ‘home’, with an improved sense of place and connection to the past.

Want to see more from The Design Files? Sign up to our newsletter for your daily or weekly dose of home and design inspiration!

Similar Stories

Recent Architecture