33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Facade
© Peter Clarke
Melbourne, Australia

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Windows, Table33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Image 3 of 3433 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Image 4 of 3433 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Facade33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - More Images+ 29

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Facade
© Peter Clarke

Text description provided by the architects. Elenberg Fraser’s new residential project, perfectly positioned at the edge of Melbourne’s CBD, creates a vertical village that follows a story of ascendance and transcendance, inspired by the ancient myths of the angel Metatron (or Enoch, or Elijah) and Pandora’s Box.

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Cityscape, Windows
© Peter Clarke

This project’s massing is crucial to its design. Broken into a series of six white, concrete towers of varying heights, and bound by a central lift core, 33M’s profile mirrors Melbourne’s skyline, creating a city within a city – a juxtaposed silhouette of its geographic context.

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Facade
© Peter Clarke

The buildings are clad in Metatron’s feathers, at the lower levels the loose feathers wrap around all four sides of the podium, forming a sunshade around the bronze glass. The upper levels of the tower are abutted with white concrete panels that also feature feather-likeforms, giving them nap and grain. Balconies are recessed into the tower blocks so that the eye reads the full form.

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Facade, Cityscape
© Peter Clarke

The feathers cue you to look skyward – 33M’s vertical villages culminate in a variety of shared social spaces at the top of each tower, giving residents the convenience of apartment living with an unexpected luxury of space. There are four rooftop garden areas, designed in collaboration with Oculus, which have garden walls, sun lounges and a pool.  your schedule, you can make the most of the precious daylight hours as different gardens receive maximum sunlight at different periods throughout the day – morning, mid and late afternoon. Other rooftop areas include a spinning room, where you can ride off into the distance, leaving the worries of the day behind you, as well as an opulent private dining room with fabulous views. This area is perfect for entertaining large groups, it comes complete with an articulated boardwalk and sunbaking area where you can soak up the gentle rays of early evening. Activating the rooftops as habitable spaces completes the social organisation of 33M’s vertical villages.

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Chair
© Peter Clarke

As you enter the lobby you open Pandora’s box and ascendance shifts to transcendance, as infinite mirrors create the sensation of a body suspended in space. The overall impression is of a box cracked open, bronze and patterned light forming a path through the black depths. The apartments themselves are white and bronze light. Adaptable, their sliding doors enable the space to be reconfigured, residents can choose whether to integrate the front room into living environments.

33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser - Image 26 of 34
© Peter Clarke

33M gives you the bird’s-eye perspective and convenience of the inner-city high-rise lifestyle, with the amenity of a house or large complex. The sky really is the limit here!

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Project location

Address:Melbourne VIC, Australia

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
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Cite: "33 MacKenzie Street / Elenberg Fraser" 30 Aug 2013. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/421845/33-mackenzie-street-elenberg-fraser> ISSN 0719-8884

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