Case study
Taken down to the studs. Brought back whole.
The Madbury Residence began as a Central Coast house that had been added to, patched, and worked around for decades — good bones under fifty years of compromise. We took it back to the frame. Everything that followed, from structure and systems to the last cabinet pull, was carried by this studio: design developed with our licensed engineering partners, construction management of our own project, and interiors specified and procured room by room.
That continuity decided the outcome. The people who drew the floor plan sat in the budget meetings; the people who chose the white oak stood in the room when it was installed. There was no handoff between design and build, so nothing was lost in one. Decisions that usually die between three firms — a window moved four inches, a threshold detail resolved in the field — were made in a single conversation.
The renovation kept the house honest to its site. Rooms were reordered around the light instead of the old plumbing runs. The material palette is quiet and local in temperament — plaster, white oak, unlacquered brass — chosen to wear in rather than wear out. Nothing in the house asks for attention; all of it rewards it.
Madbury is the working proof of how SloIvy operates: development, design, construction management, and interiors under one name, on one project, answerable to one standard. It is the model for everything we take on next.
How the studio works