Houzz Tours
My Houzz: An Australian Circus Family's Home Juggles Extra Room
With a new extension and a main-cottage overhaul, this busy foursome now has plenty of sustainably minded space
Many people would like high ceilings in their home. But Australian couple Nigel Martin and Louise Clarke required the extra headroom. Circus performers with Bamboozled Productions, the couple updated their 1890 bluestone cottage with an extension to allow plenty of space for juggling, practicing show routines and accommodating a constant stream of traveling performers.
The home is within, ahem, unicycling distance of the Adelaide central business district, and the couple collaborated closely with designer-builder Philip Monaghan to tailor it to their needs. But unlike the couple's carefully orchestrated and practiced circus routines, the design process was more organic. "Home design is instinctual for me," Clarke says. "I don't have any set formula; I just go with what I think will work and hope for the best."
Houzz at a Glance
Who lives here: Louise Clarke and Nigel Martin with their children, Jai (age 16) and Onni (2)
Location: Norwood, South Australia
Size: 140 square meters (1,507 square feet); 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and a home office
Cost: Extension: $354,000 Australian (about U.S.$339,521); garden: $61,000 Australian (about U.S.$58,895)
The home is within, ahem, unicycling distance of the Adelaide central business district, and the couple collaborated closely with designer-builder Philip Monaghan to tailor it to their needs. But unlike the couple's carefully orchestrated and practiced circus routines, the design process was more organic. "Home design is instinctual for me," Clarke says. "I don't have any set formula; I just go with what I think will work and hope for the best."
Houzz at a Glance
Who lives here: Louise Clarke and Nigel Martin with their children, Jai (age 16) and Onni (2)
Location: Norwood, South Australia
Size: 140 square meters (1,507 square feet); 4 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and a home office
Cost: Extension: $354,000 Australian (about U.S.$339,521); garden: $61,000 Australian (about U.S.$58,895)
A connected layout helps the family members keep an eye on one another's routines. Clarke, in the bathroom here, says, "I can stand at the kitchen bench and watch Onni in the bath while chatting to Jai in the living room and others in the kitchen, and see outside all at the same time." That's Onni on the bench and Jai in the doorway.
Sink: Oliveria; sink fixture: Methven; sofa: Jardan; tiles: Eco Tile Factory
Sink: Oliveria; sink fixture: Methven; sofa: Jardan; tiles: Eco Tile Factory
The counters are custom made using recycled jarrah wood, a very sustainable and durable hardwood from Western Australia. High windows help bring northern light in despite a close neighbor on that side.
Benchtops: Complete Joinery
Benchtops: Complete Joinery
Philip Monaghan built the 10-seat dining table, windows and door frames out of recycled jarrah.
Artwork: David Bromley, Flourish Gift and Home; kimono storage: Church Studios; pendant light: David Turbridge
Artwork: David Bromley, Flourish Gift and Home; kimono storage: Church Studios; pendant light: David Turbridge
This teenager's retreat has a loft bed, creating extra space for music and circus practice.
Pendant light: Ikea
Pendant light: Ikea
The music room features built-in storage for circus equipment and a foldout bed for guests.
Rug: hand-tufted Persian, Kavir Rug Gallery
Rug: hand-tufted Persian, Kavir Rug Gallery
The master bedroom has original hardwood floors, a traditional Victorian fireplace and ceiling roses, an Indian bedspread and a Chinese brush painting.
Nighstands: Like Butter; table lamps: Ikea
Nighstands: Like Butter; table lamps: Ikea
The contemporary bathroom features Moroccan-style wall tiles in a striking shade of turquoise and a hand-crafted silver-plated light shade. The floor tiles are rough-cut slate.
Tiles: Eco Tile Factory; fixtures: Methven; basin: Villeroy & Boch
Tiles: Eco Tile Factory; fixtures: Methven; basin: Villeroy & Boch
The home office is a transitional room between the old cottage and the new extension at the back. It was the original lounge room and has a combustion woodstove.
The sofa and trestle table are secondhand finds, and the storage cabinet is an old painted Tibetan cupboard. The artwork is by John Lunghi.
Rug: Birds of Passage; wall stencil: Scandinavian Design Center; chairs: Hans Wegner replicas, Church Studios
The sofa and trestle table are secondhand finds, and the storage cabinet is an old painted Tibetan cupboard. The artwork is by John Lunghi.
Rug: Birds of Passage; wall stencil: Scandinavian Design Center; chairs: Hans Wegner replicas, Church Studios
As frequent travelers living in a drought-prone area, Martin and Clarke needed a self-sufficient garden with drought-tolerant plants. The couple worked with designer Caroline Dawes and Stuart McHaffie of Garden Partner to create a low-maintenance landscape fed by rainwater tanks.
The couple wanted the layout of the backyard to reflect the house, so the decks and gathering areas are all set at different angles and use many different materials.
When Clarke isn't on the road, her favorite place to be is on the patio, sitting on a beanbag with the fire lit and looking back at the house. "I always think: I live here; that's amazing; it's beautiful," she says.
The couple wanted the layout of the backyard to reflect the house, so the decks and gathering areas are all set at different angles and use many different materials.
When Clarke isn't on the road, her favorite place to be is on the patio, sitting on a beanbag with the fire lit and looking back at the house. "I always think: I live here; that's amazing; it's beautiful," she says.
A small courtyard connects the main house with a fourth bedroom, currently set up as a music room. The main bathroom also overlooks this private courtyard.
Corrugated iron, a classic Australian building material, partially clads the new extension. Hebel was also used as cladding for its insulating qualities. The window frames were all made by Philip Monaghan by hand from recycled jarrah wood.
The symmetrical bluestone exterior is heritage listed and has an original California bungalow gate. Wisteria trails over the classic Australian veranda.
See more photos of this home
See more photos of this home
Sofa: Jardan; Persian rug: Kavir Rug Gallery; chairs: Flourish Gift and Home; side table: handmade, Council of Objects; credenza: Danish, Hans J. Wegner; Roman blinds: Rainfords