A Family’s Queenslander Cottage Is Cracked Open With an Airy, Shed-Like Addition

The extension by design firm zuzana&nicholas features a lofted interior and massive sliders, creating a space that flows into the surrounding gardens.

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When Zuzana Kovar and Nicholas Skepper set to work updating an aging worker’s cottage for a young Australian family, the first challenge was the home’s orientation. "We wanted to connect the interior of the house with its garden—a vital space for the family and their children, and one that the cottage previously turned its back on," explains Kovar.

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Located in the Annerley neighborhood of Brisbane, the small cottage was built in the traditional Queenslander style of the area, with a timber structure and corrugated metal exterior. Starting with the home’s existing compact footprint, zuzana&nicholas sought to make the space feel larger by creating visual and physical connections to the outdoors.

"These relationships not only provide an interconnectedness and improved access to light and ventilation, but also allow for a generosity of space within an otherwise small house," says Skepper.

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

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Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Using the garden as a touchpoint, the duo reconfigured the home’s previously introverted layout and designed a small addition inspired in form and materiality by a garden shed. The designers kept to a tight budget by working with what they already had. "The goal was to maximize the preservation of the existing cottage and garden space," says Kovar.

The new extension juts out from the back of the cottage, replacing an old lean-to laundry structure. A pitched roof in corrugated Zincalume echoes the roof of the original home, and gives the new addition the look and feel of an outdoor shed. A concrete base and stone-paved terrace anchor the extension in the verdant garden.

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Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Now, sightlines through the house connect interior spaces to the backyard, and an updated layout sets the kitchen, dining, and living room adjacent to the garden. "The cook in the kitchen can converse with someone in the garden, while a child reading in the bay window can interact with her sister playing in the living room, and a visitor at the front door can make eye contact with the host in the garden," explains Skepper.

The result is a comfortable home that spills outdoors, allowing the family to utilize their beloved garden as a multifunctional outdoor space.

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

When Zuzana Kovar and Nicholas Skepper set to work updating an aging Queenslander cottage for a young family in Brisbane, the first challenge was the home’s orientation. "We wanted to connect the interior of the house with its garden—a vital space for the family and their children, and one that the cottage previously turned its back on," says Kovar. Now, an updated layout sets the kitchen, dining, and living room adjacent to the verdant garden, and sight lines through the house connect the indoor and outdoor areas.

Photo by Christopher Frederick Jones

Related Reading:

A Classic Queenslander Bungalow Gets an Inky New Extension

A Queenslander Cottage in Brisbane Is Overhauled to Open to the Elements

Project Credits:

Architect of Record: zuzana&nicholas / @zuzana_and_nicholas

General Contractor: Contrast Constructions

Structural Engineer: NGS Structural Engineers

Landscape Design: Jonathan Kopinski / @jonathankopinski

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