The two Sydney transformations that are reimagining what a corner shop can be
When architect Catherine Downie first visited an 1888 Camperdown corner store, Chupa Chups and deodorants vied with empty displays for Anticol and Soothers in the derelict space.
Neil Mackenzie faced a similar scene when he bought a squalid Marrickville corner shop. “It was almost unliveable,” said Mackenzie, architect and cofounder of Mackenzie Pronk with Heidi Pronk.
Dating back to 1890, it had been home to 17 businesses before them. The names and business types tracked the area’s changing demographics, with a succession of greengrocers that had very English names; Greek corner shops, including that of Con and Maria Prodromakis, who also sold hot food; an auto repairer; and musician Phil Stack.
Now add architect. And in the case of Downie’s site in Camperdown, builder. The two corner store transformations both feature housing and commercial space, and they are both on the shortlist for NSW architecture awards.
Mackenzie says the growth of shopping centres killed shops on nearly every corner in the city’s inner west. Many were boarded up: “People put newspaper up in the front room and that was it.”
But as density has increased, and local community life has risen in value, the sites are becoming more valuable.
Corner sites such as his have become a “bit like the town square” where people stop to chat or look in the windows.
The two sites are shortlisted for different awards in the 2026 NSW chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects’ awards.
Downie North’s The Corner Shop in Camperdown has been shortlisted in the interiors and residential alterations and additions categories. Mackenzie Pronk with Make Projects – which owns the Crossroads site – have been shortlisted in the sustainable and multi-residential categories.
Downie, a cofounder of Downie North, said such corner sites were a “gift for an architect”.
“They have access to air and sunlight, and three facades instead of two very narrow ones,” she said.
This allowed them to design a new interior around the “movement of the sun”.
The owner of the Camperdown site, Will Blackwell, who also owns building company BCM, said it was love at first sight. Having worked on many terrace renovations, he knew it would not be as dark as a traditional terrace. It would also provide a “bigger canvas to do something a little more architectural”.
While Mackenzie Pronk’s project retained most of the old building’s structure, Downie North kept the Camperdown shop’s brick facade but gutted the middle.
Downie North designed a new 100-square-metre three-bedroom home, which went up behind the old parapet, and built an office for Blackwell’s business on the ground floor, which opens to the street.
Blackwell insisted on some of the exterior’s blue paint and old tiles being kept as a reminder of the site’s history.
In Marrickville, Mackenzie said their project turned one thing into three. It added a one-bedroom unit above the corner shop and a three-bedroom home next door for co-owners Tom Hume, a builder, and Jos Tarr, a designer, of Make Projects – above two rooms where shopkeepers once lived.
Mackenzie and Pronk love a corner shop. The practice used to operate in one nearby called Three Things. It sold coffee, cakes and architecture.
At the new Crossroads site, they have put gallery boxes with art in the windows, and with the doors often open, locals stop to chat. “I love it when people stop to look in the gallery,” he said.
These talks turn into questions about architecture projects that have fuelled a long list of local projects, evident in the piles of plans filed under M for Marrickville in the studio.
Mackenzie said they planned the site so it could be easily adapted by future owners. The two garages have built-in lofts, and they added extra plumbing and electrics to provide for a future conversion of the site to a cafe, for example, or the garages into granny flats.
“Our time here is a small blip,” he said.
During construction, they hung a sign that asked locals to guess what was coming: “A new bar? A goat cheese emporium? A surf shop brewery? Band rehearsal barber shop? Op shop? Miniatures gallery? Zombie apocalypse supplies? Dog gym? Onion distillery? Architect’s office? Well, it could be all of the above, and probably will be over the next 130 years.”
Julie Power is a lay juror on the Institute of Architects NSW Awards for multiresidential housing projects.
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