BUILDINGS
SPACES
ENVIRONMENTS
RESEARCH

THE JANE

> VIC-TAS | BASS STRAIT 2013

 
150213 The Jane 1101.jpg

Words by Clare Kennedy
for Green Magazine.

The Jane, a sweet 46-foot cruiser, is as beautiful inside as out, thanks to the very personal involvement of architect Rodney Eggleston of March Studio.

The sun is caressing the horizon, the sea turning silvery grey as I hurry up St Kilda pier. Usually dotted with people, tonight the pier is emptying as an Arctic chill settles over Port Philip Bay. It’s hard to imagine I will soon be thawing out beside a fire blazing in a Sardine cast-iron stove, nestled in the lower cabin of a 46-foot Cruising Smack with a sprung keel.

The magic lies in the detail. A curved dining booth edged with brass, a snug writing nook with personalised stationery (a birthday gift to the captain), and a tightly packed bookshelf, secured with leather straps. It’s romantic; it feels like a miniature log cabin.

I am aboard the Jane, hunkered down below the waterline, sharing a tin of salty oysters and a tipple with boat-owner Chris Sinn and architect Rodney Eggleston, who designed the boat’s interior. The director of March Studio, behind projects like the stunning grand entrance at Canberra’s Hotel Hotel and Aesop stores from Paris to New York, says this has been his most satisfying project yet. For him, this boat holds deep emotional resonance.

 
IMG_8005.JPG
150213 The Jane 0158.jpg
150213 The Jane 0512+515.jpg

The Jane was built to celebrate the life and memory of his mother and Chris’s wife, fashion designer Jane Hodgkinson, ‘a fierce and wonderful woman’, whose personality shaped the design. ‘It would have to be lean, yet slightly indulgent, functional yet absolutely beautiful,’ Eggleston says.

The Jane sailed into existence when Sinn asked Eggleston to plan an extension to the family’s beach house, which was bursting at the seams with family staying over summer. Rodney’s response? Why not preserve the holiday house, avoid the chaos of a building site – and build a boat instead? Clip it to the house’s amenities over summer and, for the rest of the year, plan sailing adventures to Tasmania and beyond.

The idea was music to the ears of Sinn, former President of the Sorrento Couta Boat and Sailing Club, and the passionate owner of a Couta boat (traditionally used as a fishing boat) for about thirty years.

The Jane took four years to build and was a labour of love for all concerned. Tim Phillips, a long-time friend of Sinn and Hodgkinson, and owner of Sorrento’s Wooden Boat Shop – an unusual business, as most boats are now made of fibreglass – had designed the hull some twenty years earlier with the late Ken Lacco, his one-time mentor.

The main boatbuilder was Tim Helliwell, and it was he who hand-carved Jane’s blown up signature on the boat’s transom. It’s unusual for an architect to work with a boatbuilder, but the result is ‘a really special boat’,

150213 The Jane 0450.jpg
150213 The Jane 0692.jpg
150213 The Jane 0478.jpg
150213 The Jane 0529.jpg
150213 The Jane 1291.jpg