The Camperdown House by Carter Williamson Architects
Carter Williamson Architects have designed the Camperdown house in Sydney, Australia.

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Description from the architects:
The clients at Rowley St wanted their new home to capture something of the wistful adage “a man’s home is his castle”. On a tight budget, within a restricted, urban site the clients commissioned a refuge; a stronghold of family life and quiet living.
‘Addressing the street’ was crucial, the home needed to acknowledge and respond sympathetically to its surrounds yet be distinctly recognisable as a modern addition to the streetscape. The house takes its design cues from its neighbours, respecting scale and set back, height and form.
The tight budget, and a brief that necessitated robust materials, stimulated a rich dialogue resulting in the creative use of strong, inexpensive materials and simple yet elegant construction details.
The spaces, like the materials in this home are efficient. The laundry doubles as a wet-room, the over-sized corridor upstairs as a play-space and the deep windowsills as seats. In the children’s bedroom a wall slides away to reconfigure play /sleep spaces.
A series of saw-toothed rooves and carefully placed windows draw light deep into the internal spaces. Above the dining area hangs a double-height void that celebrates the nostalgic idea of the kitchen as the hearth, the heart of a home.
Visit the Carter Williamson Architects website – here.
Photography by Brett Boardman
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willie pittman on 28 Feb 2011 at 1:57 pm #
Simply Beautiful….
Steffen on 28 Feb 2011 at 2:51 pm #
nice work, does anybody know the carpet in the living room area?
Kim Mawdsley on 28 Feb 2011 at 6:47 pm #
Its wonderful to see a home that is beautifully sympathetic to the streetscape with an interior that is as good as the Architecture. Well done. A tight budget doesn’t mean a project has to be cheap!
Bjz on 28 Feb 2011 at 7:14 pm #
i love it! it’s so cosy, snug and private but at the same time warm/inviting. the way in which the living area opens onto the backyard would make for a nice small cocktail evening.
maybe a small waterfall or pond or firepit would’ve been a nice addition to the backyard.
but i love this one, i’d live here in a heartbeat.
Anthony on 28 Feb 2011 at 9:32 pm #
Hideous. I hate these cheaply constructed ugly houses. Totally out of character of the street and totally without character. Fence makes it look like a prison.
Nancy on 28 Feb 2011 at 10:08 pm #
Little gem.
Justin on 01 Mar 2011 at 9:27 am #
I love concrete, but in this house the blocks make it look like the inside of a jail cell.
David on 01 Mar 2011 at 10:16 am #
Great distinctive design for each room, but the simplicity creates a wonderful cohesive overall feel!
Great on 01 Mar 2011 at 10:56 am #
Loving this simple house. I like the vintage pieces in the living room.
A couple of things I’m not digging:
- awkward wall-mount kitchen cabinetry
- concrete wall finish
Maira Evans on 01 Mar 2011 at 2:06 pm #
an excellent example of what wonders you can work with small spaces. Livable and cute yet modern and simple. Well done!
George Carroll on 01 Mar 2011 at 2:12 pm #
OK house, but all the exposed concrete blocks look
too much like a prison cell. Did these guys do hard time?
This place makes P. Johnson’s Glass house (1949) look cozy.
slim on 01 Mar 2011 at 7:39 pm #
Interior looks like a dorm at a college in hell. Exterior is so awful it looks fake, a CAD mockup, and the photo where you can see one of the residents through the window is horrifying. Far and away worst thing I’ve seen posted here, ever.
azlan on 02 Mar 2011 at 1:14 am #
it has that minimalist style and warm. the brick wall is too much. could use the brick wall at one side in the living room
sicoy on 04 Mar 2011 at 1:54 am #
comperdown house very good…. simple..