Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The roof of this extended house in Melbourne sweeps outwards to create an exterior canopy and curves steeply upwards over a double-height dining room.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Clifton Hill House was refurbished and extended by Australian architect Sharif Abraham to provide new living areas and bathrooms.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The curves of the roof fold down into the living rooms and are wrapped in striped black and brown veneer.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The bowed ceilings of the new bathrooms are covered in either black or bronze tiles, matching the walls.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

A door from the bronze bathroom leads to a decked courtyard, which in turn leads up to a terrace on the roof.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Two other Melbourne houses recently featured on Dezeen are a steel-plated bunker with a lowering drawbridge-like flap and a cantilevering concrete residence that appears to balance on top of a bronze garden wallsee all our stories about Australian houses here.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Photography is by Matthew Stanton.

Here are some more details from Sharif Abraham:


Clifton Hill House

Located on a site with two street frontages, about 5 Km from the central business district, the house is part original and part addition- linked by a corridor and separated by a courtyard.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The original fronts a picturesque street-scape, rebuilt in sympathy with its Art Deco architecture.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The new work, containing the living spaces, is designed to operate as a facade to the rear street and as “sculptural form” to a future garden. It is constructed of a series of dynamic volumes oriented to capture sunlight to the interior.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Conceptually, the interior is an abstraction in black and white- curved black veneer punctuates the space vertically and white walls modulate the space horizontally.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Although the use of curves connects with the natural form of the tree, bending the timber across its grain introduces tension and abstraction not normally associated with “feature” decoration.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The timber is sourced from the trunk of a single tree- allowing the entire variation of natural grain to be represented. The outside of the trunk, where the grain is younger, is located high in the space and it progressively descends to the joinery and intimate spaces where the core is dense and dark.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The exterior is detailed to reflect the finesse of a line drawing. Edges are defined by aluminium sections giving the mass a lightness of tectonic representation. In some instances steel windows are positioned to sit in line with the façade so as to appear drawn on the wall rather than penetrating the wall.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

A corridor with a continuous fluorescent beam intervenes the original part of the house, and connects the living spaces with two new bathrooms.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The first bathroom is clad in black tiles. The universal and consistent application of the tiles, which also includes the ceiling, alludes to an idea of cave, whilst its blackness visually magnifies and exaggerates the occupant’s naked flesh.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

The other bathroom, finished in reflective bronze tiles, is open to the courtyard. Here the tiles were chosen because of their sensitivity to change in natural light, allowing the “mood” of the exterior to be represented throughout the day.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

When one closes the door of these spaces its as if they exist independent of the utility of domestic life, allowing a moment to engage in an intimate dialogue with the new architecture.

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Architect: Sharif Abraham Architects
Location: Melbourne Australia
Main Contractor: Rossi Constructions
Structural Engineer: Kennedy Cox

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

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Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

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Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

Click above for larger image

Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

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Clifton Hill House by Sharif Abraham Architects

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See also:

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Cité de l’Océan et du Surf by
Steven Holl and Solange Fabião
V-House
by GAAGA
Moebius House by
Tony Owen Partners