This light-filled home plays with bold curvature to create refined, purposeful spaces

Past, present and future collide in this exceptional residence, transformed from two apartments (originally built in 2001) into a three-storey family home. Melbourne-based Jolson Architecture and Interiors cleverly reimagined the dated spaces with a complete structural overhaul, opening up the floorplan to make the most of the site’s beautiful Bayside location via natural light and a vision to maximise the views.

That said, the building’s original inverted arch facade was one of the few design features that was retained, and its influence can be seen strongly in the look and feel of the finished renovation.

Network table by Henge and The Bottle table lamp by Massimo Castagna for Galotti & Radice from ECC.

From this exterior arch, a motif of movement continues throughout the residence, where gently-undulating walls, a circular skylight and rounded furnishings build to a crescendo in the curved, central staircase. Rising through a seven-metre void that cuts through the middle of the building, this staircase truly is a work of art — sensual, sculptural and designed in such a way that it would look altogether at home in a gallery.

Made from steel and encased in a reflective, polished plaster finish, this staircase sets an unapologetic tone for the rest of the home, which, despite its simple palette, offers up a number of bold, statement-making moments (from the tactile art to the double-height front door). 

The team at Jolson met the clients’ brief by arranging the spaces of the home so that the family were afforded as many opportunities to indulge in moments alone, as they could relish in time spent together. Inside, most of the bedrooms can be found on level one, while the master suite takes up level two and the communal living and dining spaces are positioned on level three — a split that ensures the shared spaces receive the full effect of the home’s enviable views, while the private ones benefit from a more quiet, calm atmosphere. 

Kalos Armchair by Antonio Citterio for Maxalto from Matisse.

That said, the idea of ‘calmness’ really is carried throughout the entire residence, with Jolson utilising a deliberately restrained, neutral palette to provide the perfect canvas on which to layer detailed joinery and high-quality materials.

From the stone benchtops and splashbacks to the eye-catching brass accents, to the recurring leathered marble and the American oak floors, the finishes deliver a sense of warmth in the way they feel almost handcrafted, and work together to give the overt simplicity of this house a spectacular sense of depth.

Poetic, playful and design-focused without ever losing sight of crucial functionality, stepping into this home is like walking into a gentle, enveloping hug.

It is a place in which there is ample space to breathe and take in one’s surroundings, without losing its refined, architectural quality. Jolson has managed to adhere to the clients’ family brief while still paying homage to the original building and establishing a much stronger relationship between the structure and its Bayside location — creating a forward-looking home that doesn’t shy away from its past. 

Image credit: Lucas Allen

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Nestled in a private wooded enclave, this spectacular home has far more to it than meets the eye

Studio Piet Boon has built its reputation on courageous, bespoke designs that go well beyond the ordinary. Throughout its impressive portfolio, the tenets of exceptional craftsmanship, superior quality and forward-thinking vision are clearly upheld, which has made it one of the most sought-after design entities in the world.

Here, Studio Piet Boon turns its deft hand to a family villa in the Netherlands, creating a home that, while sophisticated, calm and contemporary, still carries a few unexpected surprises. 

Mass Kitchen and Saar Stools by Piet Boon from ECC.
Left: Saar Dining Chairs by Piet Boon from ECC.

Occupying a generous plot of land encircled by a luscious, wooded area, the Landscape Villa gives a peaceful first impression. Its garden, designed by lauded landscape architect Piet Oudolf, is a verdant, natural oasis that surrounds the two-storey structure with beds of tonal flowers and greenery.

In the grounds, set just apart from the house, a large, recessed seating area complete with outdoor fireplace and barbecue offers the perfect place for the family to gather with friends for an al fresco drink or two — an activity that with this setup, is likely to last until well after the sun has gone down. 

Husk Dining Chairs by Patricia Urquiola for B&B Italia from Matisse.

This idea of easy, informal living is carried into the main house, thanks to the plethora of glass windows and doors that line its lower level, bringing the outdoors in. The exterior of the home was conceived by architect Marcel de Ruiter, and presents as an unassuming, slanted-roof structure that downplays the refined interiors that lie beyond.

From the natural stone staircase in the entrance hall to the layered textures of the predominantly dark furnishings throughout the house, the fit-out plays with light and contrast to make a bold and immediate impact.

Heit Swivel Chairs by Piet Boon from ECC, Chester Moon Sofas by Paola Navone for Baxter from Cavit & Co.

Never forgetting the needs of the clients, Studio Piet Boon married the home’s sandy-toned palette with colourful accents and intriguing, sculptural details to reflect their personalities (an impressive bronze chandelier by Studio Molen is a stellar example).

They even created a bespoke dog shower for the family dog. Sleek and ceramic-tiled, the dedicated space boasts an adjoining bench and was designed with a contemporary, concrete feel that would put many (human) showers to shame. 

Kekke Stools by Piet Boon from ECC.
Kekke Chairs by Piet Boon and Isola Dining Table by Linteloo from ECC.

Continuing in this vein, the home’s basement level is an ode to the more niche interests of its owners. Upon entry, visitors are greeted with the gleaming copper vats of a private brewery, an impressive set-up that allows the owner the freedom to experiment with the art of crafting beer.

Similarly, a substantial wine cellar nearby, allows for the residents to collect and indulge in their favourite vintages in a cosy, elegant atmosphere.

Elsewhere in this subterranean level — nothing less than a modern-day Batcave — a fully-equipped gym, an indoor swimming pool with water jets and a generous sauna comprise a dedicated wellness area, while a custom-built garage houses the owners’ impressive collection of cars.

The meticulous attention to detail that dictated the aesthetic in the rest of the home continues here, as Pietra De Medici poco veccio (a natural stone) is paired with custom-made lighting to create serene, intimate spaces that feel like a break from the more open-plan living upstairs.

On the surface, Studio Piet Boon has created a home that caters to family living more generally — inviting living spaces, easy indoor-outdoor flow, plenty of opportunity for entertainment — but dig a little deeper and it’s clear that the design is far more bespoke. In fact, this residence is the perfect reflection of the people who call this exceptional property home. 

Architect — Marcel de Ruiter
Interior Design — Studio Piet Boon
Photography — Richard Powers

Image credit: Richard Powers

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Attention span stretched? These short story collections are the perfect distraction

You don’t have to be a lover of epic novels to be an avid reader. These short-story books exemplify the exquisite literature that can be created over limited pages and offer the perfect solution for those seeking a hint of escapism, or anyone who finds the prospect of a full novel altogether too daunting.

The Souvenir Museum by Elizabeth McCracken
Said to be a virtuoso of the short-story genre, Elizabeth McCracken delivers a vibrant new collection that explores the often-tested bonds of family. Brimming with the writer’s signature wit, each story examines our desires against the passing of time, to be transformative for both character and reader alike.  

100 Boyfriends by Brontez Purnell 
Embark on a devastatingly funny journey into queer dysfunction, as the narrator explores, with transgressive irreverence, the lives of gay men as they try to not fall into self-sabotage. The stories are revelatory but inherently vulnerable, as this iconoclastic writer ventures into corners of life that are often left unexposed. 

Are You Enjoying? by Mira Sethi
The lauded debut from a young Pakistani writer, this short story collection deals with ideas of identity and family in a way that is personal, wry and immediate. Taking a courageous look at the inner workings of the human heart, Sethi embraces our collective desire to be loved, and explores what can happen when that need remains unfulfilled. 

First Person Singular by Haruki Murakami
Comprising eight stories, each told by a first-person narrator, this new work by the globally acclaimed writer is mind-bending and contemplative. From musings on music to memories of youth, each story is told with its own classically Murakami twist, and will leave you wondering how much is memoir and how much is fiction.  

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This charming home delivers a masterclass in mixing classic details with novel ideas

When renowned French architects and designers Emil Humbert and Christophe Poyet were asked to reimagine a duplex in Paris’ Le Marais neighbourhood, they started by honouring its history. After all, the building itself dated back to the 17th Century, and its classic details made for rich foundations on which the dynamic duo could build contemporary spaces with their signature flair.

The first order of business was to reimagine the 250-square-metre floor plan to make it fit for the needs of a young family, which Humbert and Poyet did by adhering to a more traditional layout — positioning the living, kitchen and library spaces on the first floor, while the master suite, child’s bedroom and bathrooms were on the floor above. This allowed the designers to immediately add depth and dimension to the home, where one can just as easily imagine the rousing dinner parties that would enliven the apartment’s formal dining room as they can visualise the moments of quiet family connection that might take place in the kitchen every morning. 

Nods to the building’s origins can be seen throughout the apartment in discrete mouldings, an imposing fireplace, newly-laid parquet floors, impressive high ceilings and double doors in timber with brass accents. From the entrance foyer, punctured by a vintage, mid-century pendant light, to a staircase rendered in black and white speckled terrazzo, the apartment invites those within it to lose themselves in its carefully-layered, textural design, where Humbert and Poyet have left no stone unturned, no detail unconsidered. 

This attention to detail extends to such a degree in fact, that most of the furniture and fittings in the apartment have been designed by the duo themselves, including the superbly unique brass dining table, pendant lights throughout the home, a sculptural floor lamp, a pair of white, wool and linen bouclé armchairs and a show-stopping ‘Grand Theodore’ sofa, rendered in sumptuous blue velvet and fashioned to curve around the cosy living room.

Drawing inspiration from the Modernist, Art Deco and Mephis design movements, Humbert and Poyet played with scale and proportion confidently, using geometric shapes, unusual finishes and unapologetic colours to inject a sense of character into every space and give the apartment a distinct aesthetic language. 

Elsewhere, chairs by Le Corbusier, ceramics by Georges Jouve and Olivier Gagnère and artwork by the likes of Keith Haring, Bertrand Lavier and Robert Mapplethorp turn each room into a memorable tableau, while the mix of materials used throughout works to keep everything connected — marble (to bring richness), timber (to add warmth), terrazzo (as a modern twist) and brass (for the way it enhances the materials around it). 

Cleverly utilising a neutral base palette of black, white and grey allowed the designers to start with a blank canvas, where spaces like the kitchen were made to feel as bright and fresh as they were warm and inviting, thanks to the careful deployment of colour, natural stone and pops of brass. Similarly, the master suite with a Flexform bed flanked by two Humbert and Poyet-designed side tables and backed by an Aaron Young triptych, has been designed to feel calm and tranquil, despite also being richly layered and detailed. 

There is much to be said about this apartment, mainly because each room is conversation-starting in its own right, but at its core, Humbert and Poyet have created a residence that balances coolness with character and that weaves exquisite design into functional, user-friendly spaces. An ode to the power of confident design, this Parisian apartment is making us reconsider our own assumptions about what can work in a space, and is inspiring us to make bolder choices.

Interior Design — Humbert & Poyet
Photography — Francis Amiand

Clockwise from left: Gallotti & Radice Bolle Orizzontale pendant from ECC; Mechanic artwork by Novocuadro of Spain from Sarsfield Brooke; Dane Accent vase from Coco Republic; Strips Sofa by Cini Boeri for Arflex from Studio Italia; Gallotti & Radice Nori coffee table from ECC; Samuel Health Landmark Pure Basin Mixer in Urban Brass from Robertson.

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Gucci Tennis 1977 Sneakers.

Step out in bold style with the coolest logo-loving luxury sneakers to buy now

Lending a touch of luxury to the everyday, these sophisticated sneakers are reminding us not to shy away from wearing our favourite brands boldly. From recognisable monograms to new shapes and silhouettes, it’s time to put your most confident foot forward and step into winter with aplomb.

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Gucci Tennis 1977 Sneakers

Gucci Tennis 1977 Sneakers

Gucci Tennis 1977 Sneakers

Gucci Tennis 1977 Sneakers

Available from Gucci

Givenchy Sneakers

Givenchy Sneakers

Givenchy Sneakers

Givenchy Sneakers

Available from Farfetch

Fendi Flatform Sneakers

Fendi Flatform Sneakers

Fendi Flatform Sneakers

Fendi Flatform Sneakers

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Dior-ID Sneaker

Dior-ID Sneaker

Dior-ID Sneaker

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Chloé Lauren Sneaker

Chloé Lauren Sneaker

Chloé Lauren Sneaker

Chloé Lauren Sneaker

Available from Workshop

Valentino Garavani Trainers

Valentino Garavani Trainers

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From Matches Fashion

Louis Vutton Time Out Sneaker

Louis Vutton Time Out Sneaker

Louis Vutton Time Out Sneaker

Louis Vutton Time Out Sneaker

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Saint Laurent Court Classic Sneakers

Saint Laurent Court Classic Sneakers

Saint Laurent Court Classic Sneakers

Saint Laurent Court Classic Sneakers

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Burberry Vintage Check Sneakers

Burberry Vintage Check Sneakers

Burberry Vintage Check Sneakers

Burberry Vintage Check Sneakers

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Raffia is having a major moment — here are the most stylish accessories to buy now

You might associate raffia with bohemian slides and beach-ready totes, but a number of new-season styles are proving that this tactile textile doesn’t need to be reserved for summer. Adding texture to sleek, layered looks and giving darker outfits the lift they sometimes need, raffia handbags and shoes are staking their claim in our winter wardrobes and taking on a new, elegant life of their own.

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Prada Raffia Tote Bag

Prada Raffia Tote Bag

Prada Raffia Tote Bag

Prada Raffia Tote Bag

Available from Prada

Bulgari Serpenti Crossbody Bag

Bulgari Serpenti Crossbody Bag

Bulgari Serpenti Crossbody Bag

Bulgari Serpenti Crossbody Bag

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Fendi Raffia Colibrì Pumps

Fendi Raffia Colibrì Pumps

Fendi Raffia Colibrì Pumps

Fendi Raffia Colibrì Pumps

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Saint Laurent Raffia Shoulder Bag

Saint Laurent Raffia Shoulder Bag

Saint Laurent Raffia Shoulder Bag

Saint Laurent Raffia Shoulder Bag

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Proenza Schouler Raffia Tote Bag

Proenza Schouler Raffia Tote Bag

Proenza Schouler Raffia Tote Bag

Proenza Schouler Raffia Tote Bag

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Louis Vuitton OnTheGo Raffia Tote

Louis Vuitton OnTheGo Raffia Tote

Louis Vuitton OnTheGo Raffia Tote

Louis Vuitton OnTheGo Raffia Tote

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Vanessa Bruno Crochet Raffia Bag

Vanessa Bruno Crochet Raffia Bag

Vanessa Bruno Crochet Raffia Bag

Vanessa Bruno Crochet Raffia Bag

Available from Workshop

Bottega Veneta Raffia Mules

Bottega Veneta Raffia Mules

Bottega Veneta Raffia Mules

Bottega Veneta Raffia Mules

Available from Matches Fashion

Gucci Raffia Tote

Gucci Raffia Tote

Gucci Raffia Tote

Gucci Raffia Tote

Available from Net-a-Porter

Valentino Roman Stud Raffia Shoulder Bag

Valentino Roman Stud Raffia Shoulder Bag

Valentino Roman Stud Raffia Shoulder Bag

Valentino Roman Stud Raffia Shoulder Bag

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Saint Laurent Raffia Pouch

Saint Laurent Raffia Pouch

Saint Laurent Raffia Pouch

Saint Laurent Raffia Pouch

Available from Matches Fashion

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These simple men’s fashion updates will instantly smarten up your winter wardrobe

Seasonal change doesn’t have to mean sartorial reinvention. Make the switch simple by ensuring you have these easy-to-wear pieces on hand.

1. A Slouched Jumper
For the days you just can’t be bothered, take the hassle out of getting dressed with this relaxed, everyday style. 

Clockwise from left: Hermès Fall 21; Nudie Jeans Co. Frank Crew from Superette; Wool and cashmere crew-neck sweater from Prada; Fully fashioned 7GG Sweater from Workshop.

2. Some Trusty Trousers
A dapper pair of tailored woollen trousers is one of the best investments you will make this season. Wear to elevate your trusty white Tee or pair with your favourite blazer. 

From left to right: Our Legacy Chino 22 Virgin Wool Pant from Workshop; Marni Wide-Leg Pleated Virgin Wool Trousers from Mr Porter; Wool Silk And Cashmere Trousers from Ermenegildo Zegna; Street Style from Milan Menswear Fashion Week by Christian Vierig. 

3. A Simple Scarf
When an extra layer is needed, look no further than a scarf. Our advice? Don’t pay too much attention to placement, simply throw it on and go.  

From left to right: Street Style from Paris Fashion Week by Dan Roberts; Acne Studios Canada Scarf from Workshop; Cameron Baby Cashmere Wrap from Elle + Riley.

4. A Cashmere Tee
Replace your well-worn, cotton t-shirts with some luxurious cashmere iterations. Whether layered on cold days or heroed on warmer ones, this versatile piece is a basic you need. 

Clockwise from left: Harry Short Sleeve Cashmere Polo from Elle + Riley; Burberry logo-embroidered cashmere t-shirt from Farfetch; Cashmere Tee from Dadelszen; Gabriela Hearst Bandeira Cashmere T-shirt from Matches.

5. An Everyday Boot
Time to switch out your summer shoes and step into a pair of boots. Beyond being weather-appropriate, these solid shoes will up your sartorial ante like nothing else.

From left: Street style from Paris fashion week by Dan Roberts; Evidence ankle boot from Dior; R.M. Williams Dynamic Flex Craftsman Boot from Commercial Bay; LV Formal ankle boot from Louis Vuitton

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This beachside home juxtaposes relaxed Antipodean vibes with sophisticated European design

Standing proudly on the water’s edge of Sydney’s Gunnamatta Bay, this sprawling family residence was designed to reflect the sensibilities of those residing within — an Australian husband and Spanish wife and their three young daughters. Born from a collaboration between Jorge Hrdina Architects and the renowned Akin Atelier design (most known for its high-end hospitality and retail fit-outs) this house, much like its owners, harmoniously pairs a laid-back, Australian aesthetic with a sleek, European vibe and the result is truly delightful. 

Lounge Chair by Pierre Paulin for Artifort, 529 Rio Coffee Table by Charlotte Perriand for Cassina from Matisse.

With the owners inspired by a mid-century, Brazilian sensibility and wanting their home to capture the feeling of a luxurious, boutique hotel, the brief called for a creative and custom approach. Considering the home’s seaside location, the team at Jorge Hrdina focused on connecting the house to its surrounds, grounding it in its coastal landscape via materials like sandstone, concrete and timber and maximising the abundant natural light that would bounce off the undulating bay.

The five-bedroom home virtually cascades down to the water, with 14 transitional levels — 10 of which make up the house itself — providing a spacious, flowing floor plan that affords the family of five plenty of opportunity to enjoy time together or time to themselves.

Mr Chair by Mies Van Der Rohe for Knoll from Studio Italia.
Flos Snoopy Lamp by Achille & Pierre Giacomo Castiglioni for Euroluce from ECC, F598 Groovy Chair by Pierre Paulin for Artifort.

Inside, Akin Atelier utilised a foundation of polished concrete, walnut timber, rattan and bronze on which was added warm, textural details, pops of colour and intriguing, often well-known furniture pieces (think Faye Toogood’s Roly-Poly Chair, a Castiglioni Snoopy table lamp and a Pierre Paulin Groovy chair in cream bouclé).

There is a simultaneous strength and softness to the interiors here; the former communicated via colourful marble (each bathroom is rendered in its own tone), bold art, solid timber lines and unapologetic material layering; the latter, created using sumptuously curved furnishings and rounded joinery. By embracing the idea of contrast, the team at Akin Atelier has perfectly captured the intriguing dichotomy between the owners’ Australian and Spanish roots — which is part of what makes this home feel so inherently unique. 

Counterweight Rectangle Sconce by Fort Standard for Roll & Hill from ECC.

Highlights include the spacious master bedroom, which, from its incredible views, generous ensuite, walk-in-wardrobe and separate sitting room and study, feels like something you might expect to find in a high-end hotel; the poolside bar, made from polished form concrete and rounded stone and set into its own recess on the side of the house; and the daughters’ bathroom, rendered entirely in Norwegian rose marble. 

From the outset, this spectacular residence delivers a masterclass in colouring outside the lines. In playing with how various tones and tactile layers might fit into a home that is both mid-century-inspired and inherently contemporary, the designers discovered a middle ground that has resulted in this warm, inviting and unique ‘forever’ home for a discerning family to cherish. 

Architect — Jorge Hrdina Architects
Interior Design — Akin Atelier
Photography — Anson Smart

Clockwise from left: Haberdashery by Molly Timmins from Sanderson Contemporary, 1968 Table by Gallotti&Radice from ECC, Flos Snoopy Lamp by Achille & Pierre Giacomo Castiglioni for Euroluce from ECC.
Clockwise from left: Ming’s Heart Chair by Poltrona Frau from Studio Italia, Sea Fog Paint from Resene, Typography Staff Wall Sconce by Rakumba from ECC, 529 Rio Coffee Table by Charlotte Perriand for Cassina from Matisse.
Image credit: Anson Smart

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Meg Mason.

With a novel poised for big screen success, NZ-born author Meg Mason shares her most influential reads

“It’s strange to sit down and say, ‘oh well I’m going to be an author now’,” Meg Mason tells me of the transition she had to make from magazine writer to fully-fledged novelist over the last few years. “For me,” the New Zealand-born, Sydney-based author continues, “the prize was definitely writing fiction and it felt like such a lofty goal… it was hard to think of it as something I could just do.” But do it she has, and to a level that most writers can still only dream of. 

It was with her third book (and second novel) Sorrow and Bliss, that Mason seemed to find her literary feet, penning what she describes as a 350-page confession from a place of wild abandon, truly believing that no one would actually read it.

This came after a year-long false start which had seen her struggle to write a novel that, in the end, even she didn’t like. “The harder I tried, the more I could see that effort on the page,” Mason says, “and I could feel my confidence bleeding out.” Ironically (but, as is so often the case) it wasn’t until Mason relinquished the expectations around her new work, that it was able to morph seamlessly into the narrative that has since captivated so many.

“There were a couple of things that let me suspect that Sorrow and Bliss was different,” Mason divulges, “for one, I still really loved it at the end of the two years it took me to complete, and for another, I had found the whole process of writing it such a joyful experience.” 

A book that is told through the self-effacing and humorous voice of its searingly honest narrator, Martha, Sorrow and Bliss handles heavy topics like mental health and the dissolution of a marriage with a balanced, relatable realism. It is the way Mason has confronted her tough subjects with an energetic, almost light humour that has seen this novel find such quick success — and not just with the everyday reader. 

Last year, after an impressive bidding war, Mason finalised a deal with New Regency that would give the US-based production company the rights to turn Sorrow and Bliss into a film.

And considering that it was the company responsible for such blockbusters as 12 Years A Slave, The Revenant, Birdman and Bohemian Rhapsody among many others, Mason was so confident in New Regency’s ability to adapt her story with respect that she is leaving the screenplay up to them too.

Sorrow and Bliss will be challenging,” she tells me, “because its time span is massive, and it has been written as an internal monologue, which is hard to translate onto film. I would like to do a screenplay one day but this isn’t the one I want to learn on.” 

For Mason, then, while Sorrow and Bliss continues to grow, it’s time to move on to something new. “I’m writing a new book,” she says, excitedly, “and it feels like I’m back at the beginning. I don’t want to write another book like Sorrow and Bliss, I want to explore other ideas that will force me to learn. So now, it’s just me and a word document, feeling weird about my job,” she pauses, “but I’m constantly grateful. Someone is going to make me do a real job if I stop being able to do this one, and I’ve managed to avoid that for so long, so I just have to keep going.”

Meg’s 5 Favourite Books
Owls Do Cry by Janet Frame
“For its beauty, for the way it plays with form, for Frame’s concerns as a writer which, having read this book first in my late teens, clearly made a huge, lasting impression on me and I am similarly obsessed (without being similarly gifted!) with family, loss, motherhood, memory, madness. (And especially at the moment, for the connection to New Zealand.) The thing that was most striking to me when I picked it up again last year, twenty years after that first reading, is how incredibly brave it was. A woman writing in Palmerston North in the 1950s being as bold in style, as completely unconcerned with the rules and, it seems, no thought for who the audience might be.”

Brother of the More Famous Jack by Barbara Trapido
“This novel came out in 1982 but feels so contemporary. It’s the one that when I was setting out to write Sorrow and Bliss, I thought of as the goal as far as mixing humour and pathos in the same book/paragraph/single line. The beautiful female protagonist loses a baby in the course of the narrative and yet, you come out of it thinking of it as a funny book which is quite an astonishing feat.”

Dept. of Speculation by Jenny Offill
“A few pages into reading it, just after it came out in 2014, I remember having to pause because I was so overwhelmed with the sense of having found the perfect book. It’s incredibly short, yet manages to capture the beginning, middle and end of a marriage. I have read it so many times and there is always something new in it that needs screenshotting.”

The Complete Patrick Melrose Novels by Edward St Aubyn
“This series deals with the darkest possible subject matter; the protagonist is a heroin addict and survivor of an abusive childhood, but he’s still — to flip that whole topic on its head — incredibly likeable. I don’t think I could ever read the books again but I remember roaring through them the first time. If I could write anything as compulsive one day, I’d be incredibly happy.”

Fox 8 by George Saunders
“I have no idea how you even sit down and begin another novel when your previous one just won the Booker Prize. This is Saunders’ follow-up to Lincoln in the Bardo and it is the most hilarious, amazing, surprising thing I’ve ever read. Just a few thousand words, told by a fox who has learned to speak English, all spelt as a fox might spell. It seems so light and funny to start with and then absolutely catches you out at the end with its huge emotional import.”

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This exquisitely peaceful private villa expertly balances opulence with openness

There is something about Casa Aviv, designed and executed by CO-LAB Design Office, that — even without having stepped foot inside — reminds you to breathe. Perhaps it’s the setting, a dense, leafy site near the glistening waters of Tulum beach and just a stone’s throw away from the area’s famed cenotes (natural pools).

Or perhaps, it is more to do with the house itself which, from its calm, stoic architecture to its earthy, textural palette, is a place that promises to connect those residing within to their abundant, natural surroundings.

Really, it is the potent combination of both of these things that has resulted in this exquisitely peaceful villa, where contemporary design has been given an understated twist, cultivating sophisticated spaces that feel unpretentious and refreshingly simple.

The living room features the Capitol Complex chairs by Pierre Jeanneret for Cassina from Matisse and the Neowall sofa by Piero Lissoni for Living Divani from Studio Italia.

Given the long, slender nature of Casa Aviv’s site, the house itself was constructed in two parallel bars, one single-storey, the other spread over two levels. The upper level contains two, intimate bedrooms connected by an elevated walkway that overlooks the more public spaces on the ground floor, which includes an uncomplicated (but beautifully-finished) kitchen and two ensuite bedrooms on one side, and double-height dining and living rooms on the other. The latter is one of the villa’s standout spaces, thanks largely to its direct connection with the swimming pool and garden via tall, pivoting glass doors that seamlessly bring the outside in.

Connection between the house and the garden was clearly an important design aspect for CO-LAB, where the landscaping is brought right up to the exterior windows, and verdant motifs are replicated and repeated inside, the two ideas reaching their pinnacle on the residence’s rooftop terrace, where large furnishings, potted plants and panoramic views create a tranquil, private oasis.

This relationship has been capitalised on elsewhere too, including in the home’s east-to-west aspect, which allowed the designers to take advantage of the prevailing winds and direct a gentle but revitalising breeze through the interior spaces. Spectacular views of nature are offered in abundance, thanks to cleverly-deployed apertures, plenty of glass and north-facing skylights that allow lights and shadows to interact inside and serve to reinforce the idea of celebrating the natural world that lies just beyond the walls.

This idea is continued in Casa Aviv’s grounded, earthy palette and refined finishes. From the striking, black terrazzo flooring (which was custom-made on site) to the walls made from concrete masonry units and finished with hand-polished cement, to the timber accents and charred cedar carpentry, every element of this villa has been assiduously designed to balance opulence with openness and temper luxury with an air of laid-back cool.

More practically, part of the brief given to CO-LAB was a requirement that Casa Aviv’s quality would withstand the comings and goings of guests, to ensure that it could also double as a holiday rental. This idea of durability and low maintenance permeates the villa’s design, from its easy tones to its sturdy materials and the restrained way it has been decorated, and is part of what makes this residence so universally appealing.

At its core, Casa Aviv is not the reflection of one person’s aesthetic, and is certainly not the vanity project of an architect, designer or client with a vision to make an indelible statement. Instead, it is a place that almost anyone might envisage themselves loving, and is the perfect setting for an escape into the wild.

Image credit: César Béjar

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