
The renovation of a Collingwood cottage by design studio Heartly has resulted in a home featuring 71 linear metres of shelving, transforming the interior into a prominent display of books and learning. [1] This project demonstrates how a home can serve as a gallery for knowledge, much like a converted warehouse.
A Library for an Academic Family
Principal designer and director Mikayla Rose says the project team and the long-time owners, a cardiologist and academic with three children, immediately shared a vision for this defining feature.
‘Our clients are an academic professional couple, so books, learning and culture are a part of their everyday lives. They wanted the home to reflect that, not just as a practical storage solution, but as a celebration of knowledge, curiosity, and the rituals that happen around reading,’ Mikayla says.
Rebuilding the Facade
The modest, single-fronted weatherboard had the charm expected of an early 1900s building, but the appeal was largely skin deep. Behind the lovely facade, most of the structure had reached the end of its life.
‘We ended up reconstructing the facade, including new framing and wall linings to the front two rooms, as there wasn’t much of the original fabric left to preserve,’ Mikayla says.
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The two rooms at the front were converted into the main bedroom, with a walk-in wardrobe and ensuite, as the rest of the compact 175-square-metre site was significantly reworked.
Reconfiguring the Site
Adding a new floor upstairs accommodated the family’s requested amenity, providing four bedrooms, two living spaces, and a stronger connection to the outdoors. At the rear, the resulting floorplan pushes out towards the boundary, foregoing the space for the original backyard in favour of a U-shaped zone containing a study nook, laundry, the long dining area, kitchen and living room — all arranged around a central courtyard.
It’s a home designed to evolve as the family grows, with plenty of spaces for new stories to be read, and written.
Concrete floors are paired with bricks in the extension; timber of the shelving and window frames is left raw for warmth; joinery and the bathrooms play with diverse shades of green, blue, and rich ochre. The tactile material palette gives the light-filled spaces a lived-in quality.
‘Whilst there were obvious essential inclusions, [the clients] did not want their home to be “over designed”,’ Mikayla adds. ‘We didn’t want to be restricted to a single colour story. Instead, we wanted the palette to feel layered and collected, much like the clients’ book collection.’


