DeiCota luxury apartments are a magnificent architecturally designed tower.
The ground floor will consist of retail, the first floor RSL Club, 2 levels of commercial and 14 levels of residential comprising of 81 apartments.
Situated in the heart of Redfern, DeiCota is only 3km south from the Sydney CBD and located across the road from Redfern Train Station.
DeiCota is within easy reach of UTS, Sydney Uni and Sydney TAFE. Darling Harbour and Victoria Park are also within close proximity to this development.
DeiCota offers modern, spacious and natural light filled apartments with versatile layouts, most with large terraces for outdoor entertaining, quality inclusions and envious living, plus floor to ceiling windows to capitalise all the views DeiCota offers.
The Deicota building will be a significant step in the urban renewal of the Redfern Station Precinct. It will bring new commercial and retail life to the streets of Redfern, reinforce the connection between Redfern Train Station and the High Street shopping area and bring new residents to the area who will contribute to the social and commercial life of the area.
The project encompasses the revitalisation and re-establishment of the Redfern RSL Club. The new Redfern RSL will be housed in the first floor podium structure which spans boundary to boundary and incorporates open floor to floor glazing on Gibbons and Redfern Streets. These facades will activate the surrounding streets, particularly at night, when the lights and entertainment in the club will be visible across the railway station, and the retail colonnade will create opportunities for cafs and shops for people coming to work and walking to the railway station during the day and night.
The architectural treatment of the tower has made use of wide wrap around balconies and a pattern of counterbalanced geometries, balustrade treatments, colours and deep recesses. These devices give the facades a variety of scales by incorporating single and multiple story elements. The architectural effect of this treatment is that each of the apartments will have a personalised identity and that collectively the building will present as a collection of individuals rather than a faceless monolith.