Swan House
Stefan Postles

Swan House

Collins Pennington Architects as Architects

Champagne taste on a tap-water budget

When Grace and Fernando Ferreira walked into the meeting rooms of Collins Pennington Architects to meet with director Andrew Collins, their first sentence was this: we have champagne taste on a tap-water budget. A far cry from the opening statement architects dream of, Andrew and the team took it in stride – recognising in the couple an eye for the clean, timeless architecture the firm are known for.

 

The site
A 30-minute drive out of Canberra’s centre, just across the New South Wales border, are the sprawling hills of Googong. The area is dotted with properties: some hobby farms, some family homes, all filled with those after the kind of tranquil lifestyle rural life offers.

 

The property is on Swan Drive, an aptly named street as bird-life is plentiful in the area: black swans, ducks, swallows all in permanent residence. By chance on the first site visit in 2012, the retention dam on the property was flooded after recent heavy rain. This larger body of water roughly divided the site, and became an integral part of the design concept – sparking an idea that would lead to a truly modern piece of architecture.

 

“We suggested the dam become a permanent feature and the new dwelling could engage with it in a deliberate manner,” says Andrew, director and principle architect on the project.

 

The house
The brief was simple: to design a modest, modern home that integrated into the landscape, one that emphasised the connection to open space and the land. The clients described the house as one that would be used primarily as a retreat house. With this image and the budget in mind, all effort and expense was focused on quality and purity of space.

 

Once the concept was born, the edges of the water were formalised, so the building could extend into the water, widening the perspective and giving the impression of floating on water. The intent was to elongate the house and use it as a bridge connecting two previously isolated sections of landscape.

 

The dream
While the house contains three bedrooms, the primary focus was the entertaining hub. The long, low form created by bridging the water, and the glazed links between the elements, gives the living and dining room a focus and importance. Sitting gracefully atop the dam, the entertaining spaces are contrasted with exaggerated vertical elements: the chimneys to the outdoor fireplaces.

 

The construction methodology was as unique as the site itself. The clients own a form-working company, and hoped to reuse waste material from their projects. This included unlimited concrete, local stone boulders, and old plate steel form liners. This philosophy added to the already developed sustainability plan in place for the build, taking repurposing to a new level.

 

Awards:
AIA ACT Chapter, Residential Architecture - Malcolm Moir and Heather Sutherland Award Shortlist for HOUSES residential awards

Project Credits
Product Spec Sheet

Project Spotlight
Product Spotlight
News
Fernanda Canales designs tranquil “House for the Elderly” in Sonora, Mexico
12 Dec 2024 News
Fernanda Canales designs tranquil “House for the Elderly” in Sonora, Mexico

Mexican architecture studio Fernanda Canales has designed a semi-open, circular community center for... More

Australia’s first solar-powered façade completed in Melbourne
12 Dec 2024 News
Australia’s first solar-powered façade completed in Melbourne

Located in Melbourne, 550 Spencer is the first building in Australia to generate its own electricity... More

SPPARC completes restoration of former Victorian-era Army & Navy Cooperative Society warehouse
11 Dec 2024 News
SPPARC completes restoration of former Victorian-era Army & Navy Cooperative Society warehouse

In the heart of Westminster, London, the London-based architectural studio SPPARC has restored and r... More

Green patination on Kyoto coffee stand is brought about using soy sauce and chemicals
10 Dec 2024 News
Green patination on Kyoto coffee stand is brought about using soy sauce and chemicals

Ryohei Tanaka of Japanese architectural firm G Architects Studio designed a bijou coffee stand in Ky... More

New building in Montreal by MU Architecture tells a tale of two facades
10 Dec 2024 News
New building in Montreal by MU Architecture tells a tale of two facades

In Montreal, Quebec, Le Petit Laurent is a newly constructed residential and commercial building tha... More

RAMSA completes Georgetown University's McCourt School of Policy, featuring unique installations by Maya Lin
10 Dec 2024 News
RAMSA completes Georgetown University's McCourt School of Policy, featuring unique installations by Maya Lin

Located on Georgetown University's downtown Capital Campus, the McCourt School of Policy by Robert A... More

MVRDV-designed clubhouse in shipping container supports refugees through the power of sport
9 Dec 2024 News
MVRDV-designed clubhouse in shipping container supports refugees through the power of sport

MVRDV has designed a modular and multi-functional sports club in a shipping container for Amsterdam-... More

Archello Awards 2025 expands with 'Unbuilt' awards categories
9 Dec 2024 Archello Awards
Archello Awards 2025 expands with 'Unbuilt' project awards categories

Archello is excited to introduce a new set of twelve 'Unbuilt' project awards for the Archello Award... More