Bathrooms: resplendent in black marble

This Devonport home by Bull O’Sullivan Architecture is dominated by timber. The clients’ brief for the bathroom was to create a luxurious escape from the rest of the house. Dark marble provides an enlivening contrast.

Michael O'Sullivan bathroom. Photograph by Emily Andrews.
This dark marble ensuite is a dramatic contrast to the sensual timber of the main bedroom. The recessed bath tub adds an exciting element of voyeurism. Photograph by Emily Andrews.

 

HOME The rest of the home’s interior is clad in timber – why did you choose marble for the bathroom?
Michael O’Sullivan, Bull O’Sullivan Architecture The ensuite is a masculine contrast to the sensuality and intimacy of the timber-lined main bedroom. It’s heavily driven by the Villa Karma by Adolf Loos on the shores of Lake Geneva, which had a richness of materials and used marble not dissimilar to this.

HOME What’s the view like from the tub, and why did you decide to set the tub below floor level?
Michael O’Sullivan The view to the city is dramatic and cheeky. The view into the shower alcove [not visible in this image] from the bath is an act of voyeurism, not dissimilar to the chaise that looks into the shower at Le Corbusier’s Villa Savoye near Paris. The act of bathing when one’s eye is at floor level becomes a lot more than cleansing, it becomes much more exciting.

HOME What do you think makes a good bathroom?
Michael O’Sullivan Contrast and excitement, sensuality and suspense. The bathroom is a chance to depart from ideas already determined in the public forum of the home.

Design details

Marble Nero macquina from Italian Stone.
Bath Designed by Michael O’Sullivan.
Basin By Vitra from Franklins.
Tapware By KWC from Franklins.
Mirror Recessed medicine cabinet by Morrow Furniture.
Pendant light By Focus Lighting from Firefly Light & Design.
Wall light ‘Tangens’ by Nordlux from Firefly Light & Design.

Latest video features

In the Coromandel, a home with a humble profile and a thoughtful design makes the most of a stunning location.

Built with awe-inspiring attention to detail, this Arrowtown home is a fresh interpretation of a familiar Otago rural vernacular.

This sculptural Northland bach is a perfect north arrow on a remote farm high above the sea.

With the sun on its bow and the community at its stern, this is a house in which the elements are always front of mind.

Trending articles

Design News

On Dorset Street

When interior designer, Campbell Johnson, returned to Christchurch from Europe, it was one of Sir Miles Warren’s Dorset Street Flats that caught his eye. It’s

Homes

City villa: A sleek Remuera renovation

Approach this 100-year-old villa in Auckland’s Remuera and there’s a beguiling sense of history and character, but there’s also a sense of something more.

Homes

Pavilion in the clouds

Five simple elements and the well-placed delivery of a stunning view define this minimalist, Hawke’s Bay home by Dorrington Atcheson Architects.