a throw away comment by one half of our clients, a gentleman in his late 70’s and an artist of national if not international standing; that he’d never had a house designed for him, for them, a home... this resonated with us his excitement and expectation of the possibilities was palpable as was the gentle understanding that time to experience this home was not open ended it reinforced the precious opportunity a client gifts their architect another inciteful ‘thought out loud’ moment was that the building should be designed such that it could be embraced by the neighbourhood our explicit role then was to gift the community a beautiful building given a triangular site bounded on two sides by pedestrian traffic, this makes for pleasing a lot of people then we have a not insubstantial brief for a not insubstantial home including basement, lift, car stacker and separate studio this brings us to the very disparate personal tastes of our clients one likes high volumes one likes intimate spaces one is a minimalist the other a collector of things…
natural, textured, patinaed, a love of objects with history, the scratches and bruises of past use both wanting an abundance of natural light, while loving the play of shadow wanting the inside to seamlessly shift to the outside while remaining private to the teams of passerbys to display their trophies of a life well lived the books, the art, the furniture, the collections, the objects, the records, the dog, the visiting family, the pots, the pans, the l can’t throw this away objects, the heirlooms, the trophy trophies... all needing a space, a home all this on an awkward block… with height restrictions and a flood level for good measure backing onto a park filled with substantial gums and rowdy galahs knowing that the site and program expectations were not the greatest of bedfellows, we chose our consultants carefully a builder not afraid of detail, materiality, or tight sites an engineer who would work closely with us we discussed the landscaping from the very outset of the project we measured and catalogued the entire list of the client’s objects…
as is usual, the plan works hard to resolve the constraints inherited to provide privacy from the passing parade, while presenting a generous, homely aesthetic on all sides to create vistas from room to room over fledgling landscaped spaces while the built form responds directly to place and the materiality which quietly mimics the colour and textures of parkland to its northern flank is carried through internally and the tall / small thing…. well, we played with height throughout using coffered ceilings to the primary living spaces to mediate the expectations of both clients where, from the corner of the room one registers the bottom of the coffers, giving a cozy, intimate feel and then when moving through the room the height of the ceiling becomes apparent… problem solved job done