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Light, Space, and Proportion Coalesce in the Conrad Residence

Architecture often reveals itself most clearly when stripped back to its essentials. Space, light, proportion, and material—these enduring elements have shaped the discipline for centuries, yet they are rarely expressed with such quiet clarity as in the Conrad Residence in Malvern, a leafy suburb in Melbourne’s inner east. Designed by architect Paul Conrad of Paul Conrad Architects for himself, his wife, and their two children, the home operates as both a family dwelling and a distilled manifesto of the studio’s design philosophy.

Minimalist living room with light wood floors, modern furniture, a large wooden coffee table, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a green garden.

Minimalist living room with a black armchair, light rug, a black vase on a low shelf, and floor-to-ceiling sheer white curtains letting in natural light.

The project began with patience. Conrad spent two years searching for a site that could capture the garden character of the neighborhood while offering northern orientation—an important condition in Australian architecture for maximizing natural light. The opportunity finally appeared during Melbourne’s extended COVID lockdowns, when the property was purchased through a Zoom auction and the design process quietly commenced.

Minimalist living room with light-colored sofas, wooden coffee table, floor-to-ceiling sheer curtains, and a view into a dining area with black chairs and a round white pendant lamp.

From the outset, Conrad approached the house differently than many contemporary residential projects. Rather than allowing the façade or external form to drive the design, the project began with what he describes as “interior architecture”—the careful orchestration of spatial relationships, proportions, and views between rooms. In Conrad’s practice, this internal structure forms the connective tissue between architecture and interior design, determining how spaces feel, how light moves through them, and how occupants experience the home over time.

A round wooden table with a black sculptural centerpiece is flanked by two black chairs in a minimalist room with sheer white curtains and a suspended white light fixture.

Minimalist interior featuring three large wooden-framed doorways leading to a dining area, kitchen with marble backsplash, and a dark cabinetry storage area.

That internal logic ultimately shapes the home’s outward presence. From the street, the residence presents a restrained and almost reticent façade. Covered in Boston Ivy, the structure reveals little of itself beyond a limestone-clad portal framing a dark-stained oak door. The gesture is deliberate: an architectural quietness that allows the house to settle naturally into its established suburban context while hinting at classical proportion beneath its contemporary expression.

Modern kitchen seen through a light wood doorway, featuring a marble island, black chairs, pendant light fixture, and a vase of white flowers on the counter.

Modern kitchen with a marble island, four black chairs, a long black pendant light, and a marble backsplash. A bowl of white flowers sits on the counter.

Inside, the architecture unfolds as a carefully balanced sequence of spaces—formal and intimate at the front of the home, more open and contemporary toward the rear. Conrad describes the aesthetic as one of deliberate contradictions: minimal yet rich, restrained yet bold, poised yet relaxed.

A minimalist bathroom features a marble countertop and backsplash, a wall-mounted faucet, a black round vessel, and dark wood cabinetry.

Modern kitchen with black cabinetry, a marble island and backsplash, minimalist black chairs, and neutral decor, viewed through a doorway.

These tensions are expressed through spatial transitions. A study near the entry adopts a more classical sensibility, with tall steel-framed French doors emphasizing vertical proportion and symmetry. Part library and part gallery, the room functions as a creative retreat where Conrad develops his architectural work. Further into the house, the primary living, dining, and kitchen areas expand into a more fluid environment defined by floor-to-ceiling aluminum sliding doors that open toward the garden and northern sun. Here, architecture dissolves into landscape, with an oversized marble kitchen bench and custom brass pendant acting as sculptural anchors within the space.

Modern living room with double black doors, marble fireplace, large wall mirror, and minimalist decor in neutral tones.

Modern living room with a marble fireplace, large abstract mirror above, black sculptural decor, books, and a glossy black table with an open book, all set against white walls and tall windows.

The home’s material palette reinforces the same philosophy of restraint paired with richness. Limestone, Calacatta Paonazzo marble, aged brass, linen, silver leaf, and textured European oak form a tightly controlled vocabulary that appears throughout the house. Rather than polished perfection, the materials are chosen for their ability to age gracefully—limestone brushed to reveal its grain, oak floorboards hand-scraped and laid in varying widths, steel handrails beaten and blackened to emphasize their hand-crafted origins. Over time, Conrad expects these surfaces to accumulate patina, allowing everyday family life to become part of the architecture itself.

Minimalist living room with neutral tones, a low coffee table stacked with books, a marble fireplace, sheer curtains, and a modern black sculpture on a pedestal near a large window.

Minimalist living room with floor-to-ceiling windows, white sofa, marble fireplace, coffee table with books, modern art sculpture, and neutral decor.

Light, meanwhile, becomes one of the home’s most expressive materials. A sculptural stair beneath an elliptical skylight draws daylight deep into the interior, while expansive glazing toward the garden blurs the boundary between inside and outside. Artificial lighting is equally deliberate, with adjustable LED systems calibrated room by room. In the gym, color temperature shifts from warm tones for yoga and meditation to cooler daylight for more energetic workouts; in the bedrooms, lighting subtly follows the rhythms of the day, echoing the natural cycle of the sun.

Minimalist office with a black oval desk, single chair, modern wall lamp, abstract white artwork, books, and decor on a light rug in a bright room with large window and light curtains.

Minimalist bathroom with light wood walls, a marble bathtub with brown and gold veining, a modern faucet, and a partially open dark wood door.

Programmatically, the residence unfolds across three levels. The ground floor holds the primary living spaces alongside Conrad’s study and a children’s art and study room. Four bedrooms and Katrina Conrad’s study occupy the upper floor, while the basement accommodates a gym, playroom, wine cellar, and parking. Landscape architect Paul Bangay designed the garden, where lawn, pool, and plantings extend the home’s spatial composition outward into the site.

A minimal home gym with a stationary bike, two dumbbells, and a small shelf, set against floor-to-ceiling white curtains.

A curved white staircase with beige steps, a black round table with a white flower arrangement, and a modern hanging light fixture.

Designing one’s own home presents its own set of challenges. While Conrad’s studio frequently works on expansive luxury estates, this inner-city block came with tighter spatial and budgetary constraints. The project was developed largely after hours, evolving slowly between professional commissions over a year of design and eighteen months of construction. Yet Conrad notes that working for himself also simplified the process: the brief was already instinctively understood.

A minimalist interior with white curved walls, a light wood floor, a sculptural lamp, and a stone sculpture on wooden and white plinths.

A hallway with light wood flooring leads to a bright room featuring a carved wooden table near a large window with sheer white curtains.

Ultimately, the Conrad Residence reads less as a showpiece and more as a quiet architectural essay—an exploration of the enduring qualities that continue to define the discipline. Space, light, and proportion guide the experience, while materials deepen with time. The result is a home that does not attempt to shout its presence, but instead settles confidently into its surroundings, embodying the timeless ambition of architecture itself.

Minimalist bedroom with light-filled windows, sheer curtains, a modern black chair, neutral furnishings, and a small framed artwork between the windows.

A minimal bedroom with light wood floors, tall curtains, a canopy bed, a bedside table with a lamp, and a partial view of a bathroom vanity with a sink.

Minimalist bathroom with light wood cabinetry, a large wall mirror, a small black stool, and a framed picture on the wall. Natural light filters through sheer curtains.

A marble bathtub sits next to a window with sheer curtains in a minimalist bathroom, featuring light wood flooring and a small black stool.

A modern bathroom with a light wood vanity, a built-in sink, a mounted faucet, a mirror, and minimal decor including a small vase with flowers and a glass.

Minimalist bathroom interior with light wood cabinetry, marble countertops, a built-in bathtub, and soft ambient lighting. A pendant light hangs over a central island.

Minimalist wooden bathroom with built-in shelves, a marble countertop, a small stool, and modern pendant lighting. Decorative ceramics and a white orchid are displayed on the shelves.

A minimalist hallway with light wood flooring, white walls, a tall window with sheer curtains, and a modern sculpture on a pedestal at the end.

Modern interior with a curved staircase, a black round table with a vase of white flowers, and neutral-toned walls and flooring. Natural light enters from a hallway in the background.

A minimalist hallway with white walls, light tile flooring, a dark wooden door, brass wall sconce, and a table with a white floral arrangement.

A modern beige stone building entrance with an open black door, small overhang, wall-mounted light, balcony above, and minimalist landscaping.

A modern, minimalist two-story house with large black-framed windows, light-colored exterior walls, and climbing greenery along the facade.

Modern two-story house with large windows, black frames, and light-colored walls, surrounded by minimal landscaping and a tree in the foreground.

Modern house with large windows opens to a patio with a small rectangular pool, outdoor seating, potted plants, and minimalist landscaping.

To explore more works by the designer’s eponymous firm, visit paulconradarchitects.com.

Photography courtesy of Timothy Kaye.

With professional degrees in architecture and journalism, New York-based writer Joseph has a desire to make living beautifully accessible. His work seeks to enrich the lives of others with visual communication and storytelling through design. When not writing, he teaches visual communication, theory, and design.

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