Feature: 10A Gerald Crescent
“The textured rock wall anchors the double-volume living area, grounding the home with an organic counterpoint to its sharp geometry; it draws the eye upward while keeping the mood warm and tactile.”
Old Bones, New Rhythm
This 3-storey corner terrace, born in the 90s with traces of Deco flair, finds new rhythm through contrast, craft, and light. The once-heavy facade now wears a crisp monochrome palette — black and white, calm yet confident — paired with new composite roofing, updated windows, and an extended wet kitchen that finally makes full use of the backyard.
Inside, every line and surface was reconsidered. Carpentry, bathrooms, and flooring were completely reworked in a unified language — stone meeting timber, dark woods balancing light, and subtle textures layered to create depth without noise.
At the heart of the home, the dining hall now features a new dry kitchen island — designed not just for cooking, but for connection. The open plan encourages conversation and flow, while the former backyard is now an island-style wet kitchen, extending functionality and fully utilising the rear of the house.
Upstairs, the private quarters were completely redefined. The master suite now separates wardrobe and sleeping zones, using the back of the wardrobe as a projection wall for movie nights. A dedicated dresser and a fully revived master bath complete the transformation — serene, layered, and personal.
Throughout the home, lighting acts as a quiet sculptor — tracing edges, recesses, and transitions to accentuate the architecture’s rhythm. It doesn’t just illuminate; it defines space and guides mood from day to night.
Past meets present — where light reveals texture, structure hums with soul, and a 90s terrace comes alive in calm.