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From the designer:

Design statement

The 555m² home is a master in contrasts, and the kitchen was purposely designed to be synonymous with the home’s marriage of history with innovation to provide a strong emotional connection.

The kitchen is located at the rear of the home, which features contemporary architecture that is in stark contrast to the front of the home, which echoes the original 1950s design.

What the homeowner wanted

  • An entertainment hub with the kitchen connecting visually, materially and physically to the outdoors for a year-round alfresco lifestyle
  • A sense of privacy mixed with hints of anticipation of other areas of the home, particularly the dining area
  • An innovative and welcoming wine cellar that is open and accessible, not in keeping with traditional design, which is generally delivered with a closed feel and deliberately hidden
  • Integrated scullery, laundry and craft workspace that is semi-private in relation to the main part of the home but still accessible to the day-to-day function of the kitchen and adjacent living areas
  • Areas to showcase personal effects, including family collectables and statement art pieces
  • A textural and inviting space that evoked feelings of warmth as opposed to a stark and minimalist design
Custom 3.6-metre steel sculpture divider partially separates the dining area while maintaining light and visual flow.
Humphrey Homes created a visual feature with a custom made 3.6m steel sculpture divider creating a semi-block to the dining area but still allowing a sense of intrigue and visual permeability.

How we delivered – highlights and innovations

  • A large galley-style kitchen that directly connects the alfresco via double stacker doors
  • Scullery in brushed nickel finish
  • Repurposing the family’s heirloom dining table into a tiered breakfast bar and staining it black to match the steel elements in the home, and taking off the legs (as they would be too cumbersome in the kitchen), and then cantilevering the table from the stone benchtop with steel supports
  • Creating a bespoke and thermally controlled 3.2m wine wall using recycled bricks, reeded and clear glass and steel with custom-made handles, pivot mechanism and tasting shelf
  • Dedicated ‘entertainment’ and ‘appliance’ zones, with the entertaining area purposely located near the dining space
  • Active cocktail/bar hub features a zip water cooler with sparkling water and hanging hooks for wine and champagne glasses (the rails are sprayed black to match the steel elements in the remainder of the home)
  • Appliance cluster for day-to-day use and access, separate from the entertainment zone

 

Custom 3.2-metre wine wall crafted with recycled bricks, reeded glass, and steel, featuring bespoke pivot doors and tasting shelf.
The bespoke and thermally controlled 3.2m wine wall using recycled bricks, reeded and clear glass and steel with custom made handles, pivot mechanism and tasting shelf.
  • Creating a visual feature with the fridge, standalone bar and custom made 3.6m steel sculpture divider – creating a semi-block to the dining area but still allowing a sense of intrigue and visual permeability
  • Modern dresser/sideboard installed flat and made from steel with glass panels to protect and showcase personal effects
  • Colour palette deliberately introduced warmth and soul to the home with contrasting 2 Pac cabinetry – White/ Dark Ink Green / Black 5% finish (matt finish)
  • Utility room with desk, direct outdoor access, plus window highlights that connect visually to the study – the utility room provides the perfect and private segue to the scullery and laundry area, also with direct outdoor access
  • Recycled bricks to some of the internal walls of the kitchen entry including the feature wine wall (part of 6,000 bricks re-used in total)
  • 3.6m ceilings
  • Roasted peet timber floor for a warm look to the but that didn’t have too much red base, as it would clash with the recycled brickwork

Take a tour of the kitchen and the rest of the house

Search similar articles


Credit List

Designer
Dean Humphrey, Humphrey Homes
Benchtops
Caesarstone in Organic White; raw concrete – Essastone, by Luna Concrete as benchtop and splashback to hotplate
Pull-out mixer
Brodware – Yokato Pullout Kitchen mixer, Knurled handle, Weathered Brass Organic finish
Cabinetry
Briar Dulux Cabinetry in 2 Pac – White/ Dark Ink Green / Black – 5% finish (matt finish); steel cabinetry doors with glazing – narrow reeded glass and clear glass
Bar
Bronze mirror to back of hidden bar niche inside cupboard – plus wine and champagne glass hanging rails sprayed black
Floor
Roasted peet timber
Awards
Housing Industry Association (HIA) – Kitchen Design winner

From the designer:

Design statement

The 555m² home is a master in contrasts, and the kitchen was purposely designed to be synonymous with the home’s marriage of history with innovation to provide a strong emotional connection.

The kitchen is located at the rear of the home, which features contemporary architecture that is in stark contrast to the front of the home, which echoes the original 1950s design.

What the homeowner wanted

  • An entertainment hub with the kitchen connecting visually, materially and physically to the outdoors for a year-round alfresco lifestyle
  • A sense of privacy mixed with hints of anticipation of other areas of the home, particularly the dining area
  • An innovative and welcoming wine cellar that is open and accessible, not in keeping with traditional design, which is generally delivered with a closed feel and deliberately hidden
  • Integrated scullery, laundry and craft workspace that is semi-private in relation to the main part of the home but still accessible to the day-to-day function of the kitchen and adjacent living areas
  • Areas to showcase personal effects, including family collectables and statement art pieces
  • A textural and inviting space that evoked feelings of warmth as opposed to a stark and minimalist design
Custom 3.6-metre steel sculpture divider partially separates the dining area while maintaining light and visual flow.
Humphrey Homes created a visual feature with a custom made 3.6m steel sculpture divider creating a semi-block to the dining area but still allowing a sense of intrigue and visual permeability.

How we delivered – highlights and innovations

  • A large galley-style kitchen that directly connects the alfresco via double stacker doors
  • Scullery in brushed nickel finish
  • Repurposing the family’s heirloom dining table into a tiered breakfast bar and staining it black to match the steel elements in the home, and taking off the legs (as they would be too cumbersome in the kitchen), and then cantilevering the table from the stone benchtop with steel supports
  • Creating a bespoke and thermally controlled 3.2m wine wall using recycled bricks, reeded and clear glass and steel with custom-made handles, pivot mechanism and tasting shelf
  • Dedicated ‘entertainment’ and ‘appliance’ zones, with the entertaining area purposely located near the dining space
  • Active cocktail/bar hub features a zip water cooler with sparkling water and hanging hooks for wine and champagne glasses (the rails are sprayed black to match the steel elements in the remainder of the home)
  • Appliance cluster for day-to-day use and access, separate from the entertainment zone

 

Custom 3.2-metre wine wall crafted with recycled bricks, reeded glass, and steel, featuring bespoke pivot doors and tasting shelf.
The bespoke and thermally controlled 3.2m wine wall using recycled bricks, reeded and clear glass and steel with custom made handles, pivot mechanism and tasting shelf.
  • Creating a visual feature with the fridge, standalone bar and custom made 3.6m steel sculpture divider – creating a semi-block to the dining area but still allowing a sense of intrigue and visual permeability
  • Modern dresser/sideboard installed flat and made from steel with glass panels to protect and showcase personal effects
  • Colour palette deliberately introduced warmth and soul to the home with contrasting 2 Pac cabinetry – White/ Dark Ink Green / Black 5% finish (matt finish)
  • Utility room with desk, direct outdoor access, plus window highlights that connect visually to the study – the utility room provides the perfect and private segue to the scullery and laundry area, also with direct outdoor access
  • Recycled bricks to some of the internal walls of the kitchen entry including the feature wine wall (part of 6,000 bricks re-used in total)
  • 3.6m ceilings
  • Roasted peet timber floor for a warm look to the but that didn’t have too much red base, as it would clash with the recycled brickwork

Take a tour of the kitchen and the rest of the house

Search similar articles


Credit List

Designer
Dean Humphrey, Humphrey Homes
Benchtops
Caesarstone in Organic White; raw concrete – Essastone, by Luna Concrete as benchtop and splashback to hotplate
Pull-out mixer
Brodware – Yokato Pullout Kitchen mixer, Knurled handle, Weathered Brass Organic finish
Cabinetry
Briar Dulux Cabinetry in 2 Pac – White/ Dark Ink Green / Black – 5% finish (matt finish); steel cabinetry doors with glazing – narrow reeded glass and clear glass
Bar
Bronze mirror to back of hidden bar niche inside cupboard – plus wine and champagne glass hanging rails sprayed black
Floor
Roasted peet timber
Awards
Housing Industry Association (HIA) – Kitchen Design winner

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