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Dive Into Streamline Moderne Elegance In This Sydney Residence
This article details the second major renovation of a 1930s Streamline Moderne house in Bellevue Hill, Sydney, by designer Greg Natale. The initial redesign, twelve years prior, transformed a two-apartment building into a 3,600-square-foot single-family home. This first renovation involved structural alterations, including a sunken living room and Juliet balconies, and adopted a Hollywood Regency aesthetic with a black-and-white palette, pops of color, checkerboard marble flooring, and rectilinear spaces.
In 2020, socialite Eleni Taylor purchased the property, seeking a softer, more feminine interior that would integrate the exterior's curvilinear forms. Taylor, inspired by Cycladic architecture, desired pared-down, fluid spaces. Natale was commissioned again, undertaking a complete gut renovation, a unique experience for him, allowing for a reinvention of his design approach. While structural changes were minimal, such as reconfiguring and extending the second floor to four bedrooms and three bathrooms, and updating exterior elements like balustrades and fenestration, the interior envelope underwent a radical transformation.
The renovated interior eliminates previous moldings, paneling, and ornamentation, replacing straight edges and angular corners with sinuous lines, swelling forms, and arching portals. The walls and ceilings are finished with a natural-clay plaster, imparting a silky tactility and creating organic, pristine living spaces that evoke a light-filled, sophisticated cave-like atmosphere. The entry features a custom bronze front door opening to a new sculptural staircase that ascends in a flowing arc. The entry hall is paved with Patagonia Verde quartzite, a Brazilian stone with sea-green and smoke-gray swirls, which introduces the home's extensive use of dramatic marble patterns and hues.
The client's preference for marble is evident throughout, with full-slab bathrooms featuring Verdi Alpi in the powder room and Arcadia in an upstairs bathroom. Breccia Capraia, a Carrara marble with pink, purple, and charcoal gray veins on a white background, was imported from Italy and used for kitchen countertops, an island, a backsplash, a vent hood, and in the main bathroom for flooring, the shower cubicle, and a custom double-sink vanity. American oak serves as the principal wood, used for chevron-patterned flooring, minimalist kitchen cabinetry, and millwork in the children's bedrooms, including a built-in desk with travertine pulls.
Furnishings blend mid-century classics, such as a Warren Platner lounge chair and a Vladimir Kagan Serpentine sofa in the living room, with contemporary pieces like Lara Bohinc’s Orbit chairs and Marco Pagnoncelli’s Masai pendant fixtures in the dining room. These selections, alongside items like Gio Ponti's Bilia table lamp and Grant and Mary Featherston’s Scape chair, reflect a spirit of 20th-century modernism. The overall design harmonizes the building's original Streamline Moderne exterior with a newly softened, curvilinear, and material-rich interior, creating a sophisticated and flowing residential experience.
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