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The Iwanoff Project House

Posted Tuesday, April 16, 2013 in: Home Envy Before & After

When I wrote about this iconic Iwan Iwanoff house in Floreat a few weeks ago, it quickly became one of House Nerd’s most popular Home Envies yet. The story got a great response and showed me there are even more Iwanoff fans in Perth than I was expecting!

Posting that story led me to meet and spend a lovely afternoon with two very nice Iwanoff fans – they not only own and renovated one of Perth’s best architect’s most iconic homes, but they also started one of the most unusual real estate marketing campaigns to hit Perth – The Iwanoff Project.
 

ABOVE: The house today.

IWANOFF VIEWS: Donna says there are five Iwanoffs in this pocket of Dianella. Marsala House, recently purchased by street artist Stormie Mills, is just around the corner and is in fact one of two Iwanoffs visible from the Madaschi Residence.


ABOVE: Coolest-looking garage ever?

ABOVE: Concrete blocks to the wall by the side of the house. Iwanoff painstakingly designed this feature and meticulously oversaw it to make sure it was exactly as he had envisioned.

ABOVE: I ask Donna if people stop to look at the house. "All the time!" she laughs. "There's an Iwanoff society and I've found out that so many people join these cycle tours that go around looking at Iwanoff buildings. I only found out about the last one after it happened. Afterward I told them, 'If I'd known you were coming I would have invited you in!'"

EVERLASTING IMPRESSION: Although he is one of our most lauded architects, Donna says Iwanoff was forever “a frustrated artist”. He created the panel to the front of the home himself from recycled materials. The front door handle is Murano glass from Italy, one of the many things the first owners imported from Italy to finish the house.


THE SUNKEN LOUNGE: As an organising nut, one of my favourite things about this house is in the detail – like the double-sided cabinets flanking the TV with built-in shelves, even to the doors. All original! “Now it’s got things like the kids’ Wii in it,” laughs Donna.

Real estate agent Donna Curnow, her renovating whiz husband Paul Hampton, and their daughters Maia and Georgia moved into this 1970 Iwanoff home in 2006. As soon as Donna and Paul walked into the house, they fell in love with it – despite the fact that they knew straight away it would require a bit of work. “I like unusual homes and I don’t like living in new homes,” says Donna. “The house was in good condition but had purple and blue carpets - with pink velvet furniture!”

She and Paul have since spent more than $200,000 doing up the place ($60,000 on the jarrah kitchen alone), modernising the décor by introducing more neutral colours to let the standout architectural features – like the open floor plan, expanses of marble and intricate handcarved woodwork – to take centre stage.

Known amongst the Iwanoff crowd as the Madaschi Residence, the home was designed by Iwanoff in 1968 and completed in 1970 for then-owners Gino and Lina Madaschi, a 50-something Italian couple who wanted to build their ‘forever’ house.

The story goes that Gino and Lina were holidaying in Italy in 1967 when they asked their daughter Armanda to find them a block of land in Perth. Armanda, who lived in Dianella, found a lovely, elevated block with sweeping valley views and a For Sale sign out the front. She knocked the sign over so that no-one else could see it, immediately rang her parents in Italy and they bought it without even seeing it. I laughed at the thought of the Italian woman trying to surreptitiously pull down a For Sale sign then realised that is the sort of thing I would do.

ABOVE: The house and its stunning, laidback pool and outdoor area reminds me so much of my aunt and uncle's house in Orange Country. It has a really nice feel to it.

DINE ALFRESCO: Enjoy a glass or bottle of wine on the deck in a corner of the garden with spectacular valley views – nice spot to relax in the evenings! “When you’re here you don’t feel like going out,” admits Donna. Underneath the deck is a 10,000 gallon reticulation tank for the home’s shared bore. ABOVE RIGHT: Paul made the very cool conversation pit. 

ABOVE LEFT: Paul and Donna made the gorgeous sunken conversation pit by the pool. ABOVE RIGHT: Donna and Paul's dogs, Buster and Ace, were clearly ecstatic to have their photo taken. But I was happy because Donna and Paul gave me an official Iwanoff Project T-shirt! Excuse how tired I look, was up for hours the night before blorgghing (caffeine-less blogging).

BEFORE: The lounge before its update.

AFTER: The lounge today. When the house was built, Carrera marble was teamed with a walnut-panelled ceiling. The built-in marble TV unit divides the room and features double-sided cabinets and a TV on a pivot that can be spun around so you can watch TV from whichever lounge area you choose.

ABOVE: The main bedroom opens up onto the balcony and has valley views. During The Iwanoff Project open times, the house was finished with furniture, art and design from names including renowned furniture designers Adam Cruickshank and Jon Goulder and sculpture from George Kosturkov, who was one of the late Iwanoff’s best friends.


Block secured, Iwanoff created a house that made the most of the views from the elevated site and that was also a dream home for the Madaschis. The house bucked tradition , being a large entertaining home with only two bedrooms, but that was all the Madaschis wanted as this house was to be just for them. I like that. “This was their dream home,” says Donna.

The house blended raw, rough elements from Iwanoff’s signature Brutalist style with a classic 60s Californian feel - it reminds me so much of the neighbourhood around my aunt and uncle's unpretentious, very relaxing 60s home in L.A. An open-plan layout encompasses an indoor atrium garden, a sunken lounge and a strong connection with the outdoors. It is classic Iwanoff house style – swanky, swinging bachelor pad meets funky family home.

In later years, the house was owned by Gino and Lina’s grandson Anthony Torre (the back garden pool was actually put in for his 13th birthday).

BEFORE: The atrium and entry when Donna and Paul bought it. The original owners, the Madaschis, bought many things for their dream home whilst they were on holiday in Italy, like the Tuscan tiles above the atrium garden.

AFTER: The atrium and entry now.

THE INDOOR ATRIUM: Donna and Paul revamped the atrium with its granite boulders, pulling out the tropical plants to give it a tidier, more modern look. It's one of the most unusual entry foyers I've ever seen in a house! The art piece by the water feature was by George Korstukov, one of the late Iwanoff’s closest friends.

BEFORE: Donna and Paul toned down the bright colours in the interior, letting the accents like feature lights and furniture speak instead.

BEFORE: A range of before photos with a whole lotta pink velvet.

AFTER: A more neutral palette lets the elaborate woodwork shine. The wood paneling was all made and assembled by hand, piece by piece.  The house features original commercial-grade acoustic ceilings.

ABOVE LEFT: "Can you leave now?"


THE IWANOFF PROJECT

Keen renovators, Donna and Paul are now selling the house to try their hands at a new project. And perhaps fitting with their unusual house, the Madaschi Residence has undergone one of the most unusual selling campaigns to hit the Perth property market.
One day Donna was chatting to her Melbourne-based friend and aestheticalliance* curator Marisia Lukaszewski who has organised exhibitions internationally. Marisia told Donna it would be great to have a home open in Perth that acted as a pop-up art gallery at the same time – with the idea that everything was up for sale – the furniture, artwork, textiles - and of course the house.

Donna loved the idea and The Iwanoff Project was born, with home opens showcasing an eclectic mix of the new and the vintage from furniture, clothing, glassware, jewellery, art, fashion and sculptures by established as well as up-and-coming artisans and altogether displaying the iconic home at its best – in a warm, inviting, contemporary meets retro style.

More than 600 people passed through the doors of the home during The Iwanoff Project. “It was a lot of hard work,” says Donna of the campaign. “We were working 12 and 16-hour days for three weeks and planning took about three months. We also had to move out, move all the pieces in and then out afterward. But I’d do it again… you just wouldn’t want to do it too often! What was really nice was that the original family actually came through - and they loved it.” Maya x


ABOVE: I like a more modern bathroom myself - but if you had to have a beige and pink 70s bathroom (some of you will know how much I hated our own 70s ensuite) this would probably the best you could have! Completely original, with pink wall tiling and marble floors, it's officially the best 70s bathroom I've seen. Iwanoff didn't just design the elevation and the rooms but what was in them - like the bathroom cabinetry here. Plenty of room for cluttering products all over the benchtop. I like.

ABOVE LEFT: The arresting panel by the front door. ABOVE RIGHT: The house is on gently rolling, elevated Shannon Road in Dianella, with sweeping inland valley views from the back garden. Back in the 60s, it's no wonder the house's first family were keen to snap the block up. BELOW RIGHT: A basement level encompasses the ‘art room’, which displays paintings done by Donna and Paul’s daughters when they were 8 and 9. I don’t think most adults can paint that well! 

HOME LOWDOWN

THE OWNERS

Real estate agent Donna Curnow, her renovator husband Paul Hampton, their teenage daughters Maia and Georgia Hampton and dogs Buster and Ace

THEIR HOME

The Madaschi Residence, an iconic Iwan Iwanoff home that recently attracted a new wave of admirers under The Iwanoff Project  

LOCATION

Dianella, Western Australia

DESIGNED

1968, built 1970

PURCHASED

2006

THE ARCHITECT

The renowned Iwan Iwanoff, 1919 - 1986

FEATURES

Sunken lounge, indoor atrium garden, swimming pool, wraparound balcony, Murano glass door handle, indoor pond and water feature, valley views (including glimpses of two other Iwanoffs in the area) three bedrooms, two bathrooms, garage, workshop, study, basement

PHOTOGRAPHY

Professional real estate photos supplied by Donna, others by me

THE SELLING AGENT

Home owner Donna is a real estate agent and selling the home, inviting expressions of interest from $1.5 million before an auction (date to be decided). For more information check out the real estate link  or contact Donna Curnow on 0417 778 639. You can like The Iwanoff Project on Facebook.


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