Set within the wider Surry Hills Precinct that includes The EVE Hotel, Bar Julius – designed by SJB – is a sumptuous hospitality venue bursting with colour and materiality.
March 27th, 2025
Bar Julius greets visitors right at the point of entry to The EVE Hotel, a significant new addition to Sydney’s boutique hotel scene. It’s part of the broader Surry Hills Village precinct by SJB, and the bar itself maintains the design approach that finds inspiration in local, distinctively Australian colours and materiality. Bar Julius layers classic materials and adds a playful, modern twist to create a colourful space that feels at once refined, serene and full of energy.
Architecturally, the bar is defined by a formal dado and a vaulted ceiling. Balancing the rigour, order and formality of a dado with the vault’s lightness, the duality aims at an exciting balance that adds layers to the space as a whole.
“The design called for a statement piece, something bright, colourful and full of energy, so Louise was the perfect fit!” says SJB Director, Adam Haddow, referring to local artist Louise Olsen’s artwork, Still Life, which adorns the vaulted ceiling.

Related: The EVE Hotel, designed by SJB, is the talk of the town in Sydney
“Together, we worked on how the artwork would be displayed, landing on a dramatic ceiling installation for a bold and encapsulating effect. It was important to us that we embedded Australian art within the bar.”
Featuring the rich red-brown warmth of Australian timbers Jarrah and Ironbark, the bar’s design language draws on classic bistro design in both materiality and concept. Two-toned timber and stone patterns bring an inviting richness and energy to the space, while the room as a whole is full of intricate details such as the deep blue-grey accents or layered red-toned marbles.
“The design brings together timelessness with a fresh, modern energy”, says Senior Associate and Co-Lead of SJB Sydney’s interiors team, Victoria Judge. “Featuring the natural warmth of Australian timbers, bold patterns and playful artwork, the space feels both grounded and delightfully spirited – a place that’s cosy, uplifting and full of life.”
The backlit ceiling further adds to the atmosphere of the space by casting a warm, subtle glow, complementing the natural tones throughout. Inspired by the iconic Australian artwork, The Lacquer Room by Grace Cossington Smith (1936), the design is both cosy and playful.
SJB
sjb.com.au
Photography
Anson Smart
Styling
Joseph Gardner







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!
Now cooking and entertaining from his minimalist home kitchen designed around Gaggenau’s refined performance, Chef Wu brings professional craft into a calm and well-composed setting.
From the spark of an idea on the page to the launch of new pieces in a showroom is a journey every aspiring industrial and furnishing designer imagines making.
Sydney’s newest design concept store, HOW WE LIVE, explores the overlap between home and workplace – with a Surry Hills pop-up from Friday 28th November.
At the Munarra Centre for Regional Excellence on Yorta Yorta Country in Victoria, ARM Architecture and Milliken use PrintWorks™ technology to translate First Nations narratives into a layered, community-led floorscape.
Arranged with the assistance of Cult, Marie Kristine Schmidt joins Timothy Alouani-Roby at The Commons in Sydney.
Signalling a transformative moment for Blackwattle Bay and the redevelopment of Sydney’s harbour foreshore, the newly open Sydney Fish Market demonstrates how thoughtfully designed public realm and contemporary market space can unite to create a landmark urban destination.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
CBRE’s new Sydney workplace elevates the working life and celebrates design that is all style and sophistication.
From radical material reuse to office-to-school transformations, these five projects show how circular thinking is reshaping architecture, interiors and community spaces.