Take the basic elements of an Aussie home, then add the impressive scale of a contemporary build and the busy lives of a modern-day family and this is what you get â a modern build that feels well established on its high-set perch. Light, bright and airy, this home is the epitome of relaxed summery style âIt was important to us that the house feel comfortable and relaxed. The timber helped achieve thatâ say the current home owners.
âThe kitchen is definitely the heart of the home and it gets and major daily workoutâ. A spectacular waterfall edge island bench is the star attraction of this kitchen, the heart of a busy family. âThe ability to sit around the bench was really important. We spend so much time around that hub.â
Refreshing and relaxed, the lounge area is incredibly inviting thanks to the natural finishings and raked ceiling constructed from timber boarding and inset with downlights, that dance light across the room on an angle.
Enticing, inviting, warm: thoughtful materials and layering make for rooms that wrap you in their welcoming embrace. It is modern but unique and showed how different materials could be implemented into one house and made to work.
The vendors love to entertain, so they designed stacker doors to connect the living area and kitchen with the large alfresco area to allow crowds to spill outdoors. Through clever design the angled roof of the alfresco floats above the house roofline allowing breezes to drift into the outdoor living area and making excellent use of the homes elevated position and cooler air flow.
The brief of this home was for open spaces with easy flow to maximise natural light; mission accomplished.
This property is proudly marketed by First National David Haggarty. For further information or to book your private inspection contact Michael Haggarty 0408 021 921 or Andrew Lange 0403 142 320. First National – We Put You First
Disclaimer: All information contained herein is gathered from sources we deem to be reliable. However, we cannot guarantee its accuracy and interested persons should rely on their own enquiries