Behind This Plain Facade Lies a Light Filled Interior

A minimalist white façade in Glen Iris becomes a canvas for shifting oak tree shadows, proving that simplicity can create the strongest architectural statement.

On a quiet street in Glen Iris, a suburb of Melbourne, a white rendered wall stands almost silently among its neighbors. Designed by Australian architecture and interior design firm studiofour, the house does not announce itself with ornament or elaborate gesture. Instead, its front facade acts as a canvas, catching the shifting shadows and reflections of a large oak street tree.

The entry is marked by a single full height puncture in that otherwise blank facade. It is a deliberate incision. Step through it and the modest exterior gives way to a spatial experience that feels unexpectedly expansive.

This long window lined hallway guides you through an interior garden and pool before reaching the living space, turning arrival into an experience rather than a doorway.

A long hallway unfolds ahead, lined with windows that draw the eye forward. This corridor is a transitional space that guides visitors through the interior garden and past the swimming pool before revealing the main areas of the home. Rather than arriving immediately at a living room, one moves through landscape first.

This long window lined hallway guides you through an interior garden and pool before reaching the living space, turning arrival into an experience rather than a doorway.
This long window lined hallway guides you through an interior garden and pool before reaching the living space, turning arrival into an experience rather than a doorway.

This sequencing reflects the project’s core idea. The house is conceived as a framing device for outdoor space, with architecture acting as a backdrop to the family’s engagement with the garden. Stripped back to white rendered planes and restrained forms, the building recedes, allowing light, greenery, and sky to take visual priority.

This long window lined hallway guides you through an interior garden and pool before reaching the living space, turning arrival into an experience rather than a doorway.

The main social area brings together the living room, dining room, and kitchen in an open plan arrangement. Large windows stretch across the walls, offering uninterrupted views of the garden and pool. Northern light pours in, washing over the white interior and amplifying its brightness. The effect is calm and immersive. The boundaries between indoors and outdoors feel softened, almost suspended.

Flooded with northern light, the open plan living, dining, and kitchen space feels bright, calm, and deeply connected to the surrounding garden.
Flooded with northern light, the open plan living, dining, and kitchen space feels bright, calm, and deeply connected to the surrounding garden.
Flooded with northern light, the open plan living, dining, and kitchen space feels bright, calm, and deeply connected to the surrounding garden.
Flooded with northern light, the open plan living, dining, and kitchen space feels bright, calm, and deeply connected to the surrounding garden.

Behind the kitchen, practical life continues quietly. A pantry fitted with shelving for spices, a countertop, and open drawers below keeps everyday items within reach yet out of sight. Tucked into this same zone is the laundry, designed with the same minimalist clarity that defines the rest of the home. Utility spaces are not treated as secondary but integrated seamlessly into the overall composition.

A streamlined kitchen flows into a hidden pantry and minimalist laundry, showing how practical spaces can feel just as considered as the main living areas.
A streamlined kitchen flows into a hidden pantry and minimalist laundry, showing how practical spaces can feel just as considered as the main living areas.

Across the hallway, concealed behind the fireplace in the living room, is a home office. Tucked neatly into an alcove and sized generously enough for two, it remains visually separate from the main living area. This balance between openness and retreat runs throughout the house. Public areas are fluid and connected to the garden, while private zones are carefully shielded from direct sight lines.

Tucked behind the fireplace and hidden from view, this double home office balances openness with privacy in a modern family home.

In one bedroom, the wall behind the bed is entirely glazed. Lying there, it feels as though sleep happens beneath the canopy of trees. A full wall of cabinetry provides ample storage, maintaining the pared back aesthetic without sacrificing function.

With an entire wall of glass behind the bed, this bedroom feels immersed in the treetops while maintaining clean lines and generous built in storage.

The bathroom continues the language of light and simplicity. A large window draws in daylight, reinforcing the sense of openness. A streamlined vanity and a freestanding metal towel bar underscore the restrained material palette.

A large window, simple vanity, and freestanding towel bar create a serene, light filled bathroom that reflects the home’s restrained aesthetic.

The floor plan reveals how a central hallway and internal garden organize privacy, light, and movement within this compact suburban block.

The floor plan reveals how a central hallway and internal garden organize privacy, light, and movement within this compact suburban block.

Behind a plain white facade, studiofour has designed a light filled modern home built around an internal garden, balancing privacy, family life, and seamless indoor outdoor living.


Photography by Shannon McGrath | Architecture, landscaping and interiors: studiofour