SJB Architects add to the face of St. Kilda’s street life with this exciting project.
July 23rd, 2009
So much of Melbourne’s architecture seems to engage in a cultural conversation with its people, history and surroundings. In the heart of St. Kilda, SJB Architects 30 The Esplanade project had some interesting neighbours to get to know.
Slotted into an irregular site between traditional terrace houses and a McDonalds restaurant, it is the adjacent iconic Luna Park and Palais Theatre to which the architects needed to answer.
Two distinct forms of the new building respond to the existing elements, with a rectangular section offering a traditional response to the terraces and curvilinear ‘ribbons’ of glass stretching across the eastern boundary.
“The prominent location of the site provided an opportunity for a sculptural expression which allows the built form to manifest its own personality within St. Kilda,” says SJB’s Michael Bialek.
The striking glass façade – a collaboration with DigiGlass Australasia and Pixels Per Inch – actually employs a super-imposed graphic, built into the double-glazed window units, with the semi-transparent image placed between each layer to ensure it does not fade over time.
“The image references several characteristics inherent to St Kilda’s cultural fabric; the fishnet stockings simultaneously speaks of sex, the seaside and the politics of the promenade,” Bialek explains.
This building is, without doubt, making a strong contemporary statement – but the site called for something to balance the adjacent historical elements.
“St. Kilda has a rich and varied history. From the artists in residence and the European immigrant community that settled in the 50’s, to the strong tourist numbers that visit the area throughout the year,” Bialek says.
“The street life has given St. Kilda its reputation as a hive of diversity and it is these characteristics that SJB wanted to celebrate.”
Hero Image: Gerard Warrener
Images 2, 3 and 4 below: Jaime Diaz Berrio
Images 6 – 10: Tony Miller
Photograph: Tony Miller
Photograph: Tony Miller
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
The new range features slabs with warm, earthy palettes that lend a sense of organic luxury to every space.
For Aidan Mawhinney, the secret ingredient to Living Edge’s success “comes down to people, product and place.” As the brand celebrates a significant 25-year milestone, it’s that commitment to authentic, sustainable design – and the people behind it all – that continues to anchor its legacy.
“Future Faces” is a committee representing the current cohort of graduating Bachelor of Design (Interior Design) students, presently completing the fourth and final year of their studies at the Queensland University of Technology. Previous interior design graduates have established a tradition of showcasing their talents through an annual end-of-year exhibition. This event has steadily gained popularity over the years and is now an occasion which is eagerly anticipated by the Brisbane design community with 400-500 industry alike attending throughout the night.
Designer Rugs hosted an Art & Rug Exhibition in its Edgecliff showroom last week, celebrating the luxury rug brand’s first collaboration with artists.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Mark Tuckey X Main Studio embrace the future with a new range of furniture that showcases the beauty of agroforestry timber.
The CBD and South Melbourne Precinct promises a day of design experiences that balance movement, wellbeing, innovation and hospitality.