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Design Statement

The three-level Imperial Hotel Erskineville is a ‘palace of pleasure’. This project represents the relaunch of one of Australia's most revered LGBQTI safe-havens. As a cultural icon, it was the birthplace of the movie Priscilla and plays a pivotal role in the greater Sydney community as a historic theatre and event space. It is dynamically programmed and responsive, turning from dining to dance floor with ease.

The ground floor is made up of a 250-seat restaurant called Priscillas and has been conceived as a lost palace, a cabaret dreamscape of haphazardly replaced stone floor tiles and detailed timberwork. Various hand-forged steel-framed glasshouses and skylights throw shadows over broken brickwork, hand-laid masonry arches, and bespoke tile patterns. The melted wax from the central fireplace and hearth in contrast to the vivid colour ways of the furniture and the dirty pink tones of the detailed ceilings and walls.

The project is illuminated by various repurposed lampshades and brass wall sconces. Carefully curated fringed pendants throw a shadow upon table settings whilst the main entry is notably illuminated by broke-down chandeliers. The space also features a private dining area with large paper sculptures and an open kitchen. The main bar features a bespoke cathedral-esque/Biblical fresco ceiling mural with the adjoining theatrical cocktail bar opening out onto a glazed enclosure to an inner courtyard and winter garden.

The project is careful to reimagine this cultural building icon into a place of fantasy whilst respectfully acknowledging its LGBQTI custodians. It is outrageous, inclusive and fantastic but not light. Amongst its array of colour and shape is the gravity of its legacy, the shadow of history cast upon its many surfaces. This is a place to celebrate and rediscover, but also a place with significant legacy, grit, sometimes even heaviness.

Although the project feels immediately decorative, it is in fact a collection of robust building materials faced in makeup. Brickwork, concrete, steel, all represented in colour and high fidelity. Something in the metaphor of Priscillas restaurant is the ability for this rawness to never feel like a construction site, but instead a theatre of colour, a visual outrage.

The upper-level pizzeria and bar is called Imperial UP and features an outdoor golden pizza oven, bar, and an indoor cocktail bar, a private dining room, lounge, and seating. There is also a lower-level nightclub and Australia’s first same-sex marriage Cathedral is due to open in 2019 on the rooftop.

Location: Erskineville, Sydney, Australia

Principal Architect: Sophie Harris

Interior Design Team: Jeremy Bull, Larissa Raymond, Madison Faye, Lucy Forlico, Rouda Taouk

Date of Completion: February 2018

Project Size: 583 sq m

Photography by Anson Smart

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The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
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The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel
The Imperial Hotel

About the
Professional

We believe in the spirit of place.

We make timeless, beautiful spaces for those who care deeply.

We are architects, interior designers and furniture makers.

We are driven to inspire our clients and our global village.

At ArchiPro we recognise and acknowledge the existing, original and ancient connection Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have to the lands and waterways across the Australian continent. We pay our respects to the elders past and present. We commit to working together to build a prosperous and inclusive Australia.