Living in Paris fundamentally changes you. The way you dress. The way you live. And for Rosa Coy and George Yiontis, the husband-and-wife team behind Coy Yiontis; the way you design.
Years spent working with some of the most influential architects in Europe gave the team at Coy Yiontis the lived experience of how to instil their refined design aesthetic into very limited space.
The tall ceilings, the long, elegant windows, the luminous airiness that we all associate with a Parisian pied-a-terre are signatures they brought back with them to Australia. But their antipodean upbringing also infuses all of their designs, with sustainably sourced native timbers a key element of their signature look.
When it came to designing their own home, that European apartment-living sensibility became essential, as the timber workman’s cottage that caught their eye was big on potential but very short on space.
The heritage façade, painstakingly restored, creates a synergy between this beautiful home and the rest of the heritage streetscape. But that was about all that was salvageable as the knock-down interiors were too far gone, giving this architectural dream team carte blanche to create the perfect space for their family of six.
The home constantly has to work double-duty to accommodate this big family. A delineation between public and private spaces gives everyone their own as well as the freedom to have friends around without impacting on other members of the family. Fresh thinking is the hallmark; where space is reclaimed by the occupants, rather than being wasted in the provision of rarely used hallways. Traditionally sized rooms are either halved or enlarged, depending on the duty that is required of them.

A reclaimed conference table and Thomas dining chairs by Metrica for SP01. Art by Helen Kennedy.

In the living space, the two-sided fireplace is a signature Coy Yiontis detail. Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves store their extensive library of books. A drop-down media system brings the entire family and friends in for movie nights, curling up on the BEND sofa by Patricia Urquiola for B&B Italia.
Convention has been turned on its head in Rosa and George’s home. It’s an extraordinary design feat that is grand and intimate all at the same time. As the French would say, ‘Grande et petite, et très très intelligente.’
This feature originally appeared in est Magazine issue #40.

Rosa Coy and George Yiontis
