Contrary to most design practitioners where floor-to-ceiling views are obligatory, here there’s only a fine slither of clear glass. After nearly 30 years, writing on architecture is second nature. But when the subject is your own home, being objective takes on a different meaning.
The 1930s duplex that is now my home, couldn’t have been more rudimentary when purchased in 2011. Rented out for decades, the building’s sickly pale yellow rendered façade was as unenticing as the spindly garden, comprising concrete and a few weeds. Developers were eyeing the South Yarra block for demolition. My partner and I saw something else. Subsequently, so did architect Robert Simeoni, and furniture and lighting designer, Suzie Stanford.
“It was virtually intact, with a quiet elegance to the building,” says Robert, who has been…
