Construction Photography by Jack Carlin

Monet is a renovation and extension in Fitzroy North, currently under construction.

The screens, exquisitely detailed and executed by the builder’s sister company Bloombox Products, play a number of roles. From the street, they provide privacy and soften the scale of the addition. From within, they dissolve into a delicate veil, allowing unobstructed views to the city and surrounds from the main bedroom and ensuite while modulating light throughout the day. The result is a calm, filtered quality of light that shifts gently across the interiors.

Upstairs, the plan is simple and purposeful. The main suite is positioned to capture light and outlook, buffered by the scalloped screen. The ensuite continues the material language of the lower level, reinforcing continuity across floors while offering a more intimate expression of texture and tone.

Monet is a study in addition rather than domination. It demonstrates how a carefully considered upper level and a restrained material palette can elevate an existing home, preserving its character while quietly extending its life.

Set within a fine-grained inner-north streetscape, the project balances restraint and expression. The existing home remains the anchor, while a new second level hovers lightly above, shrouded in scalloped screens inspired by the curves and lacework of the original façade. The rhythm of these screens references the language of the house’s existing lacework, reinterpreted in a contemporary way.

Materiality plays a central role in shaping the project’s atmosphere. Textured finishes such as microcement and roughcast render sit alongside deep green window frames to create warmth and depth. The microcement gave new life to the existing kitchen benchtop, extending seamlessly into the adjacent fireplace hearth. This continuous surface anchors the ground floor, tying together cooking, gathering and living into a single, cohesive moment.

Rather than undertaking a wholesale reconfiguration, we piggy-backed off a ground floor that was already reasonably intact. The strategy was surgical: small moves with significant impact. New blackbutt cabinetry panels introduced warmth and tactility. The extended benchtop was seamlessly veneered in microcement, allowing old and new to merge without hierarchy. Junctions were refined, thresholds clarified, and moments of storage carefully integrated to improve flow without inflating footprint.

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