Creative heritage
This Victorian home in Cape Town has been given a sophisticated update that brings out all its loveliest historic features, while also adding light-filled layers of elegance and ease
WORDS Robyn Alexander PHOTOGRAPHY Greg Cox
Renovating an historic home is not a task for the faint of heart. From securing heritage and council committee approvals to dealing with unforeseen structural challenges and placating neighbours located at close proximity while noisy equipment does its necessary work, it’s a process that is both complex in design terms and costly in execution – overall, a major challenge. And so it was with this Victorian cottage in Tamboerskloof, Cape Town, built in 1904 and set in a terraced row of houses on one of the suburb’s most charming tree-lined streets.
Fortunately, the home’s careful and multi-year renovation process was overseen by one of the city’s top interior designers, who also happens to be its co-owner and the founder of his own quantity surveying practice to boot. Dawid Augustyn has been combining left-brain precision (in the form of his quantity surveying expertise) with right-brain creativity as the managing director of his interior design business for the past 18 years. “We keep it very small, and don’t run a lot of projects at a time; it remains personal.” It’s also something of a labour of love – or at least, of fun. “I always say my grown-up job is being a quantity surveyor, and interior design is my playground,” Dawid adds.
The house was originally purchased by Dawid’s husband, Zane Stevens, an endocrinologist, before the couple first met. Zane was attracted both by its location – “I was drawn to the neighbourhood and remain completely in love with it and its feeling of community”, he says – and the home’s heritage appeal. “I’ve always loved Victorian houses and was excited about the idea of giving this little old lady a new lease of life,” he explains.
Fast-forward a few years during which they lived more or less between their two respective properties in the city, the couple made the decision to renovate Zane’s “little old lady” so that she truly suited their lifestyle and needs.
interior design is my playground
As Dawid suggests, it’s absolutely necessary to sensitively bring period homes up to date in order to make them work for their current inhabitants – and into the future. “We’re very strong in our opinion about having to be able to modernise these older homes, because otherwise they get left for ruin,” he says, “and in that case, you don’t have any preservation of the buildings at all.” The planning process here included carefully weighing up each aspect and element of the house, from the characteristic cast-iron trim on its façade to its original wooden floors, mouldings and fireplace. All of these aspects have been retained and renewed, and with the addition of further wall panelling and mouldings as well as cleverly revised room arrangements, have enabled the interior to be brought up to date in a manner that elegantly acknowledges the past while also extending it practically and aesthetically into the present.
Completely new aspects of the design include the substantially expanded and updated kitchen, and the creation above it of a first-floor bedroom suite with a private balcony courtyard. The overall idea linking these areas, says Dawid, was to work with “two boxes, linking to each other seamlessly, even though contrasting”. As he suggests, this “highlights the old and the new, celebrating both the heritage and the new, modern way of living”.
While the kitchen had always been situated at the rear of the house, it was enlarged, and a glorious flood of light invited into the space by enclosing it on two sides with framed sliding panes of glass. The result draws the eye out and up towards trees and sky, blurring the boundaries between internal and external, while simultaneously taking on the feel of a vitrine in which precious objects are displayed and celebrated. And the choice of black, multi-paned window frames also gives the space a vintage-industrial feel – one that subtly complements the home’s heritage – rather than a starkly contemporary one.
Upstairs, the bedroom suite has the private, contained feel of a small apartment set within the wider house. Entered via an adjacent micro study and dressing space with lots of built-in storage, the bedroom is open plan to a bathroom area finished in sophisticated wooden panelling and featuring a luxurious enclosed shower and double vanity counter clad in black marble. “I wanted quite a masculine, more traditional feeling, but still contemporary, modern and soft,” says Dawid, and this is precisely what has been achieved here.
The bedroom also leads out onto a spacious garden deck that sports a pergola over which climbers are starting to scramble, plus a built-in pair of outdoor daybeds – and delightful urban views of the city as well as Table Mountain. Says Dawid, “It was very important to me to have a garden. We love the High Line in New York, so some of the inspiration was from there, with the grasses and plants that cascade and move in the wind.” Along with a patch of grass for Lilly, the couple’s English Pointer, naturally.
Essential alongside the creation of the upper floor was a stairway leading up to it. Again, rather than trying to make this element compact and contemporary, Dawid created a solid yet graceful design that feels as if it must surely have always been in situ – although, of course, it has not. “I like a staircase that feels like it’s not ashamed to be a staircase,” he says with a smile. The curvaceous, fully handmade plastered balustrade has, like the adjacent multi-paned windows, a real touch of 1930s elegance to it.
In a relatively small home such as this one, it’s essential that spaces work hard and, where possible, serve more than one function. So, it is in the bedroom suite, which combines relaxation and sleep with the practicalities of bathing, dressing and even laundry, too – this is where Dawid and Zane chose to discreetly situate their washer-dryer setup. Several rooms in the downstairs part of the home combine various forms of double duty. The kitchen-diner area is also well suited to working from home, for example. Similarly, in Zane’s “personal sanctuary”, private study space blends with library, music room and aesthetic treasure box in its own right, for which, he says, “We chose a somewhat daring colour – a rich burnt terracotta – for both the walls and ceiling, which provides an emotive and creative environment.” And right at the front of the house, a luxe TV and reading den with a sliding door has been conceptualised to double as a guest bedroom when required, complete with a petite guest bathroom and toilet nestled almost invisibly alongside it.
The house combines its public and private spaces in beautifully considered ways. It is finished with a sophisticated blend of furniture, plus a mix of collectables and art put together by the couple over a number of years.
Urbane yet historic, combining contemporary verve with vintage elegance and an unerring eye for detail, this home blends old and new in a manner that respects both the past and the present, and looks set to nurture and delight its occupants for many years to come.