More room, less rooms – Edition Office’s Melburnian replaces linearity with a lavish labyrinth

The Melburnian is an apartment designed by Edition Office, located in Victoria, Australia. The armchair and ottoman belong to Magis' Officina collection.

Melburnian, a unique high-rise apartment designed by Edition Office, invites you to explore and interpret living space from a new perspective, without traditional room divisions. The simultaneously open and intimate space creates an experiential framework for both core everyday activities and rest.
  • Design: Edition Office

  • Location: Southbank, Victoria, Australia

  • Completed: 2020

  • Gross area: 160 m2

  • Lead architects: Kim Bridgland, Aaron Roberts, Erin Watson

COMPLETELY RENOVATING AN APARTMENT can sometimes be an even more complex process than designing a new space from scratch – how to create something new and unique in a space whose central structures already define the spatial soul of the apartment? The Melburnian, a high-rise apartment designed by Edition Office and located in Victoria, Australia, is a masterful example of how the constraints of an existing space have been transformed into something truly remarkable.

The client's wish was to abandon traditional recto-linearity – instead of a restrictive division of the space into rectangular sections, they wanted their apartment to offer a more creative, experiential framework for everyday basic needs and a reflection of their own, eccentric lifestyle.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

Instead of a traditional room division, sculptural wooden elements and stone columns define the space.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The dismantling of the original floor plan was also planned to serve the apartment's stunning views of the King's Domain and the Victoria Botanic Gardens.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The restrained color palette emphasizes the harmonious, grounding feel of the space.

Curved lines diffuse and soften the boundaries of the space, at times creating optical illusions. The dining chair is Bollo by Fogia.

The original plasterboard rectangles were replaced by enigmatic wooden elements that guide the activities and the movement in the space but never limit them. The curved shape of the timber bodies creates continuous, smooth movement instead of stagnant, closed-off rooms, inviting you to perceive space in a completely new way.

Curved lines effectively shape the experience of the space’s limits – or limitlessness.

However, a singular, unified space does not necessarily mean a lack of privacy. The wooden elements are carefully placed in relation to each other – and the curved glass wall offering a breathtaking panoramic view of the garden landscape – to create shorter lines of sight and intimate sanctuaries of shadow inside the space. Light and airy curtains are also used to demarcate the singular volume and create temporary limits.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

Light curtains add intimacy to the open space when needed.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The sophisticated, tactile details of the unique apartment capture the senses.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The wooden elements are fitted with core functions and storage requirements.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The irresistible appeal of the Melburnian stems from the courage to deviate from the norm.

The massive wooden elements have another unique spatial function: they provide a separate space for necessary core functions and storage, which are generally integrated into the rooms. 

The inside of the enigmatic timber bodies reveals a stunning stone interior, in which, among other things, a workspace completely enclosed in its own peace is embedded.

“The design is inherently simple, refined, and calming – which restores and creates freedom.”

By removing some of the functions and separating them into their own, independent entities, the remaining space appears unencumbered and pure – free from the demands of functionality, free to function almost purely as a stage for aesthetic pleasure.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

Refined leather surfaces add yet another fascinatingly tactile layer to the apartment's multi-sensory, experiential essence.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

Textures and materials play a substantial role in Melburnian's interior design: stone, wood, and leather create textural maturity to the space, making it humane and warm.

Image of an apartment in Australia named the Melburnian, designed by Edition Office.

The beautifully constructed apartment offers its residents a framework for a more unconstrained life, a reflection of their eccentricities.

The choices of material crystallize the core essence of the apartment. Classic materials such as leather, wood, and stone perfectly respond to the very human need to surround oneself with gracefully aging and comfortingly patinated surfaces that carry meaningful memories and signs of a life lived. With materials that do not corrode, but become more and more mature and charismatic as the years go by.

Melburnian will offer its residents a framework for a more unconstrained life, humane in its everydayness and yet abundantly nuanced. The residents have described their new home to Edition Office in the following words:

“The design is inherently simple, refined, and calming – which restores and creates freedom. So, a sanctuary for rest and recharging, but also a space that challenges the mind to perform.”

See also:

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Read also: A multisensory sanctuary – Federal House stretches the concept of indoors and outdoors >

Text: Mira Ahola Images: Kim Bridgland, Ben Hosking, Dave Kulesza

Published on 18 Jan, 2023

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