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Before & Afters Design House Tours Interviews Real Renos RENO ADDICT

Self-taught owner builder transforms Melbourne home

Today’s before and after project is brought to us by one of our readers, Ivy Huang, who despite her lack of formal design training has delivered something really special in her newly renovated Melbourne home. With a degree in engineering, and a background in project management, Ivy was experiencing something of a career crisis before quitting her full-time job to give her full attention to this amazing reno.

BEFORE front elevation
BEFORE front elevation
AFTER front elevation
AFTER front elevation

Sitting on 400 square metres in the Melbourne suburb of Armadale, the Edwardian weatherboard abode needed some serious love when Ivy spotted it back in 2017. “The renovation combined my project management, technical and site experience but with a really awesome element of creativity,” says Ivy who lives in the home with her fiancée Adrian and their rescue dog, Queenie.

BEFORE bedroom
BEFORE bedroom
AFTER bedroom
AFTER bedroom
AFTER ensuite
AFTER ensuite

“I wanted to create a beautiful, functional family home that would also feel like we were on holidays all the time! I also love entertaining and we receive visitors often, so we really focussed on creating sanctuary-like spaces for bedrooms and bathrooms, and big open shared living areas with an emphasis on natural light and greenery. We leveraged every opportunity for indoor-outdoor spaces too,” says Ivy.

BEFORE backyard
BEFORE backyard
AFTER backyard
AFTER backyard

Ivy specified all of the interiors herself and project managed the build using a variety of contractors. Prahran’s Karl Degering & Associates drew up floor plans and assisted with town planning and a variety of other aspects of the renovation, which cost over $600,000 in total and took eight months to complete.

BEFORE lounge
BEFORE lounge
AFTER lounge
AFTER lounge

“As a professional project manager in business, I was always going to oversee the build myself. It was only when the project started that I realised how much I was loving the experience and started to think I could this as a full-time thing!” says Ivy who reached out to Buildher Collective! (which aims to support female builders) throughout the build. “It’s a great support network of women who are going through, or have been through similar frustrations, trying to succeed in what is a male-dominated industry,” says Ivy.

BEFORE kitchen
BEFORE kitchen
AFTER kitchen
AFTER kitchen
AFTER kitchen
AFTER kitchen

As for the renovation, the home now boasts an eye-catching cathedral ceiling, in the kitchen/living room, that echoes the 3.5 metre ceiling heights found in the rest of the home. “That ceiling has got to be one of my favourite features of the house. Walking in, your eyes are immediately drawn upwards and it’s a ‘wow’ moment,” says Ivy of the space that is entirely glass on one side and opens out onto the lush backyard.

AFTER lounge
AFTER lounge

The main bathroom is another standout space; it features a black cast iron clawfoot bath centred on French doors that open onto a private jasmine-clad courtyard. “If the living room extension isn’t drama enough, we also wanted to do something a bit special for the main bathroom, which is the one used during the day and by dinner guests,” says Ivy.

BEFORE bathroom
BEFORE bathroom
AFTER bathroom
AFTER bathroom. The bath was sourced from Canterbury Sink and Tap.

Three of the home’s bedrooms also have ensuites and the fourth bedroom doubles as a second living area, depending on whether the couple have guests staying. And as for the home’s location, Ivy had always wanted to restore a heritage house in a blue-chip suburb and Armadale is one of her favourite parts of Melbourne. “It’s got boutique shops and cafes, gorgeous streetscapes and stunning period homes, all without being ostentatious, which I love,” says Ivy who has been seriously bitten by the reno bug and already has her eye on the next one.

AFTER bedroom
AFTER bedroom
AFTER ensuite
AFTER ensuite

Photography: Dylan James Photography | Styling: The Real Estate Stylist

Follow Ivy’s reno journey | More about BuildHer Collective

Coloured ceiling pops in Melbourne bathroom!

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Art

Artist Madeleine Stamer’s inspiration and her new series Midnight Tricks

Artist Madeleine Stamer’s work is hugely influenced by a Melbourne shop her mum took her to as a child and her dad’s love of birds.

ghost orchid
Ghost Orchid

It just goes to show what a profound impact our childhoods, where are parents take us and what they introduce us to can have, and I think that’s rather wonderful!

madeleine stamer
Madeleine

My mum has always been my style guru,” says Madeleine. “She’s a needlework champion and used to work part time at Priscilla’s Tapestry shop in High Street, Armadale near my favourite shop. Market Import, in the iconic Moray Street retail strip. Mum first took me to Market Import when I was a child. I have fond memories of the pure white walls encrusted with vibrant Mexican handcrafts, bedazzling like precious jewels. I recall being enthralled by the ladies’ gift-wrapping skills which involved wrapping even the teeniest of objects in layers and layers of rainbow-coloured tissue paper topped with fancy adornments that would make any recipient’s heart swoon.

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Interiors Addict

An afternoon with Jean Pierre Heurteau

If you love a bit of bling, as most of us do, then, interiors addicts, I have just the man for you!

Jean Pierre Heurteau 1

Jean-Pierre Heurteau is one of Melbourne’s most celebrated interior designers and owner of antique furniture store Jean-Pierre Heurteau Design. Over the years he has built a solid reputation for delivering one of a kind pieces sourced from all over the world, as well as his fabulously flamboyant design concepts for members of Melbourne high society. “Work is booming at the moment. Client trust comes with age and as my clients get older, beautiful design becomes more attainable.”

At 22, Jean-Pierre had just finished college and begun work as a ‘slave’ at high-end department store Georges on Collins. “I was fascinated by the clientele and all the housewives that came in from the countryside; we would talk jewellery, diamonds and fur. I loved it.” He admits he does have a penchant for the finer things in life saying: “I want my diamonds to be as big as possible, so as I get older I can see them.” Can I get an amen?