Warm and textural, Studio Esteta present a hospitality space that offers a luxurious imagining of beachside dining.
August 2nd, 2020
The Beach House is located in Geelong’s heritage-listed Eastern Beach bathers pavilion, a local art deco icon built in 1930. In 2018, it was acquired by The Mulberry Group – known for its considered restoration of hospitality venues – with the view of creating a contemporary community hub that respectfully embraces its own historical context.
Created by Studio Esteta, the new design of this multi-faceted eatery and function space pays homage to the history of the area as it reimagines the traditional coastal café and kiosk.
The sophisticated, considered, and sustainable renovation sees the existing building retained. Studio Esteta injects new life into the pavilion through minimalistic design that embraces the nostalgic qualities of the structure with smart spatial solutions, and a refined material and colour palette.
Brightening up the space with all shades of sand and ocean foam, the simple and uncluttered interior utilises a palette of natural tones and light blue hues, along with contrasting textures of natural stone, soft linen and rendered walls that are warmed up by the carefully specified natural timber.
“Informed by the rural and coastal landscape of the surrounding Bellarine Peninsula, the design reflects a refined and modern, yet effortlessly relaxed space that remains sympathetic to the history of the site,” says Felicity Slattery of Studio Esteta. “This was achieved through the simple yet considered material palette and subtle yet high level of detail. This drove our selection of the George Fethers‘ Lignapal ‘Pippy Oak’, as we felt it reflected the raw, honest and humble textures of the Australian landscape and created a warm and inviting atmosphere while also being extremely durable in a commercial environment.”
Playing a pivotal role in creating an inviting atmosphere, Pippy Oak has been incorporated in a variety of ways throughout the venue. The light brown of the timber grounds the interior, while the matt open-pore texture continues the tactile dialogue with the surrounding landscape. Its notably superior durability is created by a clean acrylic polyurethane finish that allows the veneer to maintain the subtle and sought-after beauty of natural wood.
A true embodiment of the coastal landscape and a respectful celebration of the area’s past, the intention behind The Beach House is to enrich the lives of the local community. The considered and seamless flow of the building invites patrons to discover unique moments and experiences as they follow the visual connections between the theatre of the kitchen, the coffee bar and the dining space – all the way through to the pool area.
Thanks to the holistic, sympathetic and considered design approach, this reimagined beachside café is now a contemporary meeting place that offers a relaxed, coastal, multi-sensory experience – while retaining the atmospheric charm of the past.
Photography by Sean Fenessey
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!
BLANCOCULINA-S II Sensor promotes water efficiency and reduces waste, representing a leap forward in faucet technology.
Gaggenau’s understated appliance fuses a carefully calibrated aesthetic of deliberate subtraction with an intuitive dynamism of culinary fluidity, unveiling a delightfully unrestricted spectrum of high-performing creativity.
How can design empower the individual in a workplace transforming from a place to an activity? Here, Design Director Joel Sampson reveals how prioritising human needs – including agency, privacy, pause and connection – and leveraging responsive spatial solutions like the Herman Miller Bay Work Pod is key to crafting engaging and radically inclusive hybrid environments.
Maintaining the stately character of the dwelling’s 1880s origin, St Huberts’ most contemporary incarnation embraces the house’s traditional features while equipping the occupants with all the creature comforts and technological advancements a modern family of five may need.
Designed by Grimshaw Architects and built by Lendlease, the highly considered edifice is a transformational facility for the Faculties of Engineering and Information Technology, and an optimistic manifestation of sustainable design in the face of the environmental crisis.
Woods Bagot serves up the nostalgia of ‘now’ at Melbourne’s new Next Hotel.
They’re the innovators and the trend-setters, the brave-hearts of design who are breaking with tradition to spark new directions in creative practice. The torch is burning bright for these four design studios, nominated for The Prodigy in the INDE.Awards 2019.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
Leading through design with culture at the fore, Andrew Tu’inukuafe and Barrington Gohns as Luminaries in 2025 are making change that benefits people and place throughout our region.
In a market saturated with sameness, Studio P3 set out to raise the bar, creating four refined speculative suites for Mirvac in Sydney, with Milliken flooring playing an essential role in realising a space with broad appeal – all underpinned by a commitment to sustainability.