Gone are the tropes of shell artwork on the walls and wabi-sabi décor. Instead, this holidaymaker on Broadbeach, Queensland looks to Miami Vice-meets-Gold Coast to define a playful retreat packed full of colour and party. Set within an Ian Moore designed tower built in the early 2000s, the apartment had previously undergone a series of clunky renovations with excessive built-ins. We stripped the double-height apartment back to its good bones and renovated the kitchen, bathrooms and lighting. We injected an expansive 80s pastel palette of lobster pink and baby blue throughout and celebrated crisp lines and dramatic verticality.

 

The lower level is for play, with divided living and dining spaces all perfect for entertaining. Upon entry to the apartment, a double-height void and a glass and steel floating staircase create a grand scale. The kitchen is centred around a chrome island on legs and a groovy purple lacquered cocktail cabinet, marrying the new elevator wall treatment. Beyond, a double-height dining room with views out to the Gold Coast high rises is positively metropolitan. Furniture selection meets the bright cacophony of wall colour but never intends to be competing, instead the perfect backdrop for life on your jollies

 

Upstairs, the palette is stripped back mostly to white and light grey with pops of colour throughout. In the master suite, the bed is centred in the room emphasising the room’s proportions and all the colour lies in the contemporary artwork. The passageway to a guest room is painted in ultramarine blue and we inserted a large porthole window out to the void – daring a day-club level of exuberance and bringing in the light. In the guest rooms, custom velvet-striped bed heads each in a primary shade define the individual rooms and keeps firmly in style with the home also with a subtle reference to the beach.