When it comes to choosing a home, location, age and condition are usually the determining factors. Yet for Jacqui Senior, interior designer and director of Studio Senior, there was a fourth element at play. The magic confluence of events we call serendipity.
Having grown up in the village-like surrounds of Sydney's inner west, Jacqui was on the lookout for a forever home in the area where she could raise her two daughters, Margot, five, and toddler, Greta. "It's close to my family, has great schools and it's easy to get into the city or anywhere in Sydney," she says. "It's also full of parks and playgrounds."
When this circa-1910 two-bedroom home came on the market, she could see it had great bones and room for improvements that aligned with her talents as an interior designer. She also had an enduring connection to the home: her grandparents had once lived there.
No historical house is without problems; although for Jacqui there were aspects that made her planned renovation easier. "The house is freestanding with a generous width to it," she says. "And the old part of the house still had many original features, which was great." Fortuitously, it also had a rear extension that, although badly executed, meant she didn't have to start from scratch with an addition. Instead, she could focus on remodelling, adding windows and doors and introducing more light.
The family lived in the home for three years while Jacqui planned a transformation that brought in sun, colour and joy. She went about redesigning the home and was ready to set to work in October 2021. But life also likes to throw in a few curveballs. A six-month rebuild, timed for completion before the birth of her second daughter, was first hit by a rainy summer that created a minor flood, which meant redoing the damp-proofing. Then, when the sun appeared, so did the Covid pandemic, adding three months to the project.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2023-Ausgabe von Australian House & Garden Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2023-Ausgabe von Australian House & Garden Magazine.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Megan Morton's - RURAL IDYLL
The stylist and author reveals the secrets to her decorating journey with Mimosa Moon, her home in the Northern Rivers region of NSW.
RURAL RETREAT
A Colonial-look 1970s property on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria is gently renovated with an English-country aesthetic in mind.
Michael Reid OAM
The renowned art dealer and entrepreneur, who runs a congregation of creative businesses across the globe, shares the moments and muses that have shaped his extensive career.
MASTER peace
Gallery owner Michael Reid has created his own living paradise, a rambling garden he keenly shares with fellow art lovers who visit the Murrurundi, NSW, gallery location.
GARDENS of the world
Up close and personal with the most memorable gardens in Morocco and Spain.
INTO the wild
Three words inspired the rework of this Kangaroo Valley, NSW, home among the gum trees: embracing, vibrant and Animalia.
COUNTRY kitchen.
Flavourful and warming dishes from The Cordony Kitchen with seasonal vegetables as the stars of the show.
HOLIDAY at home
Missing the Indonesian villa they enjoyed on a recent holiday the owners decided to recreate their own retreat at home.
STATEMENT piece
For a holiday home that embodies the coastal beauty of Bermagui, NSW, minimalist bricks were the natural choice, inside and out.
EFFORTLESS charm
With a discrete street frontage, this home fulfils the brief to keep its visual impact on the lush surrounds to a minimum.