A courtyard with red brick walls, planter boxes, and a small tree, alongside a glass door leading to the interior of a building.
. The exterior of a two-story red brick building with a blue metal roof and large wooden framed windows.
. An interior view of large glass windows overlooking a courtyard with a tree and brick walls, featuring a long hanging light fixture.
. A courtyard area with a brick wall, a small concrete shelf, a tree, and plants, adjacent to large glass windows.
. A partially open red door reveals a glimpse into a courtyard with plants and an adjacent building featuring glass windows and stone parapets.

Stables House

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Architect/Designer: Rob Kennon Architects

Description

Set within a lively pedestrian laneway in Carlton North, Stables House is a reimagined service building with more than a century of layered history.

Originally constructed around 1900 as part of St Elmo—a private hospital later converted to a residence—the rear structure functioned as a laundry, storage and stables. It was never ornamental; it was built to work, defined by boundary walls, solid masonry and a direct relationship to the street.

Across the decades the building continually adapted, becoming a metal workshop, boxing gym and catering store, each use leaving traces that contributed to its raw character.

The current project transforms the former hay store and undercroft into a home for a long-connected retired couple, retaining the robust shell while inserting a new internal layer for living. The perimeter form and original openings remain legible, allowing the laneway context and corner condition to read as they always have. A courtyard carved from the plan bleeds into the lane, while a sunken kitchen and dining space negotiates low existing ceilings to create unexpected volume. Former storage areas accessed from the street now contain bedrooms, recalling their working past.

Stables House demonstrates how adaptive reuse can retain grit and memory while enabling contemporary occupation, embedding a new domestic life within an unapologetically utilitarian fabric.

What's On

Visitors will be able to walk through the laneway, courtyard and interior spaces. Key moments include the sunken kitchen and dining area, where low existing ceilings are transformed into generous volume, and bedrooms inserted within former open storage accessed from the street.

Children's Activities

Children are welcome to explore the laneway edge and courtyard with their families.

Images: (1-5) Mary St, Carlton North. All photos: Jesse Ewart.

Important Details

Tour/event summary information

Sunday 26 July
Tours running every half hour starting at 10am. Last tour departs at 1.30pm
Running for 20 minutes in groups of 15

Bookings

Bookings required—$7 booking fee applies
First release tickets: 12pm Wednesday 1 July
Second release tickets: 10am Saturday 4 July

Book

Meeting Point

Specific address provided to ticketholders in their registration confirmation email. 

Accessibility

Ramp or level (step free) entry

Visitors will experience stairs and tight spaces. Step-free entry from laneway into the courtyard. There are no toilets available.

Location

Carlton North VIC 3054

Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung Country

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