
7 Top Tips for Renovating Terrace Houses
Renovating terrace houses, particularly the grand old double-storey ones found in older suburbs of Sydney and Melbourne, presents a unique set of challenges due to their historical nature and often narrow, dark layouts. This guide, featuring insights from builder Daniel Mazzei of Mazzei Homes and architect Katrina Malyn of Design Projector, provides seven key tips to navigate the renovation process effectively, especially when dealing with heritage overlays.
One crucial aspect is increasing natural light, as terrace houses are typically dark and narrow. Strategies include installing skylights and lightwells, and innovatively placing windows. For single-storey terraces, skylights can brighten entryways and even run the length of hallways. Two-storey terraces can benefit from large floor-to-ceiling windows at stairwell landings to illuminate both floors. When incorporating such windows, frosted glass is recommended to maintain privacy.
Another significant tip is to strip back and open up the traditional floorplan. Terrace homes often feature long, narrow passages with segmented rooms, including cramped galley kitchens. To achieve a more open-plan feel, consider removing internal pillars to combine front rooms and opening the rear of the property to integrate the kitchen, living, and informal dining areas. For Victorian terraces, where kitchens are often half the width of the lot, extending to the boundary can create a spacious informal dining area.
Maximizing small outdoor spaces is also vital for inner-city terrace living, where large yards are rare. The use of varied materials, textures, and colors can draw attention away from the limited space. Recommendations include diverse outdoor flooring finishes, textured walls, slatted timber cladding, laser-cut screens, and potted plants of various shapes and sizes. Features like small fire pits or water features can create a sense of movement. Vertical gardens or fast-growing vines on trellises can introduce greenery in space-constrained areas.
Maintaining continuity in finishes and surfaces is essential to seamlessly blend new extensions with the original structure. Avoiding stark contrasts between old and new sections creates a natural flow. This can be achieved by echoing certain period features into new additions, such as decorative skirting and molding. Using the same floor finishes, lighting, moldings, cornices, and skirting boards throughout the home helps to synchronize the renovated spaces. A cohesive color scheme, such as all-over white walls, can unite old and new elements, or bold colors can be experimented with if similar tones are referenced in furnishings.
Creating a palette of textures is important for decorating the often cramped interiors. Instead of numerous ornaments, different surface paints can be used on walls. Polished renders reflect light, while rough textures work well with oblique lighting. When using a rich texture palette, restraining color to a neutral scheme is advised. If incorporating many objects, such as pots, maintaining a single color for them ensures coordination.
Enhancing indoor-outdoor flow is key, despite it not being a feature of 19th-century designs. French or bi-fold doors connecting living areas to outdoor spaces can bring the outdoors in. If outdoor spaces are intended for entertaining, strategically placing the kitchen near back doors allows for gas-strut window serveries or easy flow between indoor and outdoor kitchen areas.
Finally, thoroughly researching heritage overlays is paramount. Early awareness of restrictions prevents wasted planning efforts and potential design clashes with council regulations. This is particularly crucial for extensions, as the visual impact from the street is a significant factor in council approval processes.
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