Houses

RYDE STREET HOUSE BY BENCE MULCAHY

The expansion of Hobart was facilitated in part by the tram network established in the Tasmanian city during the 1890s. The arrival of the network and the city’s burgeoning population saw clusters of modest brick and timber cottages built in the suburb of North Hobart, a hilly area that benefitted from increased accessibility. More than 100 years later, architect Shamus Mulcahy purchased one of these worker’s cottages: a modest one-storey, single-fronted, co-joined house that had been typical of the area before the slum clearance program of the 1950s

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Houses

Houses5 min readArchitecture
House Lupe By Lintel Studio
In the inner-Sydney suburb of Leichhardt, small terraces and cottages jostle for light and air. Homes cluster below large trees that have precariously grown between walls in the small pockets of gardens and side passages. Many homes suffer from damp
Houses4 min read
Breathe Architecture
When founding directors Tamara Veltre and Jeremy McLeod tell the story of Breathe, they emphasize the modest nature of the alterations and additions projects that carried the practice through its early years. As Jeremy explains, “We had very humble b
Houses1 min read
Houses
Editor Alexa Kempton Editorial enquiries Alexa Kempton T: +61 3 8699 1000 houses@archmedia.com.au Editorial director Katelin Butler Editorial team Georgia BirksNicci DodanwelaJude Ellison Production Goran Rupena Design Janine Wurfel

Related Books & Audiobooks