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Ivy, Sydney Building, Venue, Project, Photo, News, Design, Property, Image
Ivy Sydney : Architecture Information + Images
Development by Woods Bagot in Sydney, Australia
Australia's Ivy in a league of its own
8 Jul 2009
A venue unlike any other, Sydney's Ivy is not only a hit with the
city's socialites (such as Hugh Jackman and Nicole Kidman for example)
but is garnering design awards in the southern hemisphere as an urban
playground.
Designed by Woods Bagot and interior designers Hecker Phelan Guthrie,
Ivy includes 18 bars, nine restaurants and a rooftop pool but the
scale of the complex is "deftly understated" according to
the awards jury of the Architects Institute of Australia (AIA).

Located in the tight urban fabric of Sydney's central business district,
the 20,000 m2 building offers a dazzling constellation of bars, dining
facilities, shops, lounge areas and lifestyle indulgences. It functions
as a night out, a meeting place, function venue, and an escape from
reality.
The venue has drawn widespread recognition with awards from Interior
Design magazine and most recently the AIA's awards for Urban Design
and Commercial Architecture Award. Most tellingly, Sydney-siders have
given their seal of approval, with crowds of 4,000 locals descending
on it every weekend.
Nik Karalis, Principal at Woods Bagot and lead designer on Ivy , said:
"A reprieve for the public within a predominantly commercial
domain, Ivy has been conceived as a house for the people of Sydney
which redefines Palm Spring glamour and nostalgia. As green oasis
in the city centre, it draws inspiration from the modern houses of
California and Florida created by architects such as Paul Rudolph,
Richard Neutra and John Lautner."
Key elements of the idealised 1950s modernist residence have been
reinterpreted and over-scaled into a sequence of indoor and outdoor
rooms across two adjoining buildings. It combines retail fashion,
street life, art and architecture, music, work, gastronomy, horticulture
and a love of water into an extraordinary ensemble.
Nik Karalis explained: "Cities require a diversity of use among
their buildings that respond to a new work-life balance. Inspired
by the heady spirit of the 1950s, an age which led to significant
innovation and lifestyle experimentation, Ivy creates a new hospitality
model based on an enticing ability to de-construct and re-assess work,
play and pretty much anything else you want to experience."
In creating Ivy's architectural spine Woods Bagot has produced an
entirely self-contained internal world. A central courtyard and void
allows guests to see and be seen as they move through the surrounding
bars and restaurants. To offset its size, the space is broken into
a string of discrete, domestically scaled pods.
The building presents itself as two wings coming from a central street
level corridor lined with fashion stores. To the right is an internal
lane of restaurants and a grand concrete staircase, elevators. To
the left is the darker, softer world of honeyed wood tones, caramel
and gold. This is the reception area for the more exclusive venues:
the ballroom, the penthouses. A lavish rooftop pool, an internal courtyard
and a spiral staircase work to connect the interactive indoor/outdoor
spaces, and define the essence of the veritable playground.
The interior design stems from a careful understanding of the interrelationship
between architecture, landscape and interiors, right down to the considered
decorative layers throughout.
Paul Hecker from Hecker Phelan Guthrie commented "A strong focus
of the design was placed on creating the illusion of a domestic environment
through a series of interconnecting rooms, each with its own character
and function. With soft furnishings and lighting there is an atmosphere
of intimacy to feel like one is in the comfort of their very own living
room"
Also voted Time Out's Bar of the Year, Ivy has been described by the
AIA's Awards Jury as follows: "Most of Ivy's venues retain a
sense of intimacy more akin to a domestic environment, albeit an extravagant
residence of the late 1950s."
Ivy Sydney Architects : Woods Bagot
Australian Architect
Offices
Restaurant Interiors + Nightclub
Venues
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Sydney Architecture -
Selection
Barangaroo Waterfront : Public Domain
Design Competition

image courtesy of Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority
Barangaroo
Green Void
LAVA

Customs House Sydney Installation
Silk Road Melbourne by Woods
Bagot

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Ivy Sydney Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Ivy Sydney Building : page - adrian welch /
isabelle lomholt |
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