Kervale reimagines the townhome with ELEMA Brighton
Brighton doesn’t often see medium-density projects with the level of design attention typically reserved for standalone homes.
Kervale, renowned for their premium boutique developments, has carved out a distinct niche in the market by introducing an innovative alternative to traditional Bayside housing with their latest project, ELEMA.
ELEMA's design aims to propose a different answer to the question of how residents want to live: one that values quality over size, natural light over square metreage, and shared outdoor space over isolation.
Architecture by Martino Leah, interiors by Brahman Perera, and landscaping by Acre work in tandem to reimagine the townhome not as a compromise on space, but as a more calibrated approach to quality, liveability and connection to place.
ELEMA is scaled to sit comfortably within its suburban context. A horseshoe-shaped layout creates a sense of enclosure around a shared garden space, which doubles as a green outlook and a soft buffer between homes.
Architect Martino Leah uses a minimalist yet tactile material language - one that privileges natural light, privacy, and environmental performance. A key feature is the use of operable metal screening, applied across the facades to control sun and shade throughout the day. The effect is subtle but striking: dynamic shadows, filtered light, and an impression of permeability, all without relying on heavy architectural gestures.
Inside, designer Brahman Perera has resisted short-term style cues in favour of something more lasting. His approach is subtle, intuitive, and highly resolved. Each residence has a muted base palette layered with material variation - stone, timber, textural joinery - that allows residents to personalise without starting from scratch.
Spatial planning prioritises flow over spectacle. Living spaces are open but defined; bedrooms are softly zoned. Large windows connect interiors to external gardens and, in some homes, private terraces or dip pools. Perera’s detailing - particularly in the joinery - elevates utility into something tactile and expressive.
While the architecture holds the bones and the interiors shape the tone, it’s Acre’s landscaping that completes ELEMA’s sense of cohesion. Acre’s founder, Brett Robinson, has curated the gardens with a naturalistic sensibility, favouring layered planting, minimal maintenance, and native species adapted to Brighton’s coastal microclimate.
The central courtyard does more than provide greenery; it offers passive amenity, shared connection, and a spatial break that enhances cross-ventilation and daylight access for all residences. The inclusion of private dip pools in select homes adds an additional layer of amenity without overreach - another example of ELEMA’s balanced design ethos.
ELEMA reflects a broader shift in how high-value suburbs are adapting to changing housing needs - away from uniformity, toward diversity in form, scale and function.
ELEMA comprises just 12 homes. The development also targets an average 7-star NatHERS energy rating, supported by solar panels, drought-tolerant landscaping and high-spec energy-efficient appliances.
Joel Robinson
Joel Robinson is the Editor in Chief at Apartments.com.au, where he leads the editorial team and oversees the country’s most comprehensive news coverage dedicated to the off the plan property market. With more than a decade of experience in residential real estate journalism, Joel brings deep insight into Australia’s evolving development landscape.
He holds a degree in Business Management with a major in Journalism from Leeds Beckett University in the UK, and has developed a particular expertise in off the plan apartment space. Joel’s editorial lens spans the full lifecycle of a project—from site acquisition and planning approvals through to new launches, construction completions, and final sell-out—delivering trusted, buyer-focused content that supports informed decision-making across the property journey