New Zealand Commercial Design Trends Series NZ Commercial Design Trends Vol. 33/04C | Page 73

Below:Built in 1922, the Dalgety Wool Stores is an historically significant building on Fremantle’s eastern gateway. An innovative adaptive re-use project has seen it converted to an apartment development that makes the most of its character features. When the recent drive to increase the number of inner city residential units began a couple of decades ago, historical buildings were often in the demolition spotlight. Though located in prime positions, they were deemed expensive to reno- vate, with no easy way for developers to maximise returns by packing units into the available space. Luckily, not all of those heritage buildings fell victim to the wreckers ball, and some are again being considered for adaptive reuse. One such prominent building on Fremantle’s eastern gateway is Dalgety Wool Stores, recently converted to Heirloom apartments by Match. Match parent company M/Group managing direc- tor Lloyd Clark says the Wool Stores were one of Western Australia’s most recognised buildings. “Although a significant development challenge, the inherent classic warehouse form was proving extremely popular across Australia as an apartment environment,” says Clark. “The features of the building were such that you could not replicate them in any new apartment project. They were part of the building’s structure and heritage, and the prospect of incorporating them into apartment buyers’ homes was just an enormous opportunity.” But the biggest challenge in undertaking the conversion was still the commercial viability. “By their very nature, heritage buildings are expensive to adapt and reuse, so finding a way to do that while maintaining viability was critical,” he says. “But at the same time, retaining, reusing and capitalising on the existing fabric was a priority.” Working with architects Cameron Chisholm Nicol, Match went through a number of iterations for the project including looking at adding an extra floor to increase the number of apartments. “However, from a heritage point of view, this would have been extremely invasive, as well as structurally catastrophic.” Instead, Match took the unusual approach of working within the building’s existing structure. While this significantly reduced the number of apartments, it also reduced construction costs. search | save | share at