ArchShowcase Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination. Macdonald Road House in Applecross, Australia by Philip Stejskal ArchitectureMay 24th, 2021 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Philip Stejskal Architecture Our clients wanted a down-sizer home to accommodate, where they could age-in-place and occasionally accommodate their two adult children. This new house replaces a modest, single storey attached dwelling – one of a triplex built in the 1980s – and occupies a prominent position on a roundabout. They asked for something ‘iconic’, so we created a building that makes a significant contribution to its immediate setting, recognising the site’s role as unofficial gateway to the local shopping precinct.
We looked firstly to history – particularly the great Australian homestead – and also its mid-century counterpart; a type that was well represented in Applecross until the advent of the MacMansion. These forebears informed our response to climate, scale and form. Like the wide brim of an Akubra, the homestead verandah offers protection and reprieve from the heat. In this case, it protects the northern façade and wraps around to the eastern elevation – which overlooks busy Ardross Street – providing both solar protection and a privacy buffer. The verandah transforms into a vertical batten screen, which is operable in parts, to allow winter sun to enter the house. Internally, the parallelogram-shaped plan arose from orientation and street alignment considerations, with public spaces located closer to the outer edges. Upstairs, guest bedrooms and a second bathroom are accommodated under the cloak of the roof. The massing is arranged so the tallest, middle section addresses the corner, while the roofline tapers down to low tips that abut both neighbours. Despite its location beside the roundabout and commercial hub, the house offers a sense of quiet and retreat behind its solid brick fence and spotted gum veil. We worked closely with our landscape architect to create a sanctuary; a unified domain of building and garden. We also collaborated with structural engineers, energy assessors, lighting and air-conditioning experts on the design, which incorporates Passivhaus principles (sealed perimeter, lift&lock sliders) suited to this climate. Hydronic in-slab heating and a heat recovery ventilation system ensure warmth and good indoor air quality when the house is sealed in winter. In summer, it can be easily cooled at night thanks to cross ventilation via brick perforations in the central core. Generous internal thermal mass stabilises internal temperatures all year-round, while passive design principles (orientation, protection of openings) help to minimise heat-load in summer and maximise it in winter. Have we satisfied the brief to design an ‘iconic’ building? According to the Cambridge dictionary definition – “to represent something of importance” –then, yes, we believe so. Our work has the potential to transform our city in small and large steps, bit by bit, taking what is inefficient and undignified (perhaps lacking light, or ventilation, or joy) and delivering all of those qualities instead. This approach delivers benefits to our clients, and to the surrounding community; creating buildings that are generous in their interaction with the public domain, humble yet rich in what they contribute. This house is conscious of its place and the lineage of buildings that have embraced the same values throughout history. Contact Philip Stejskal Architecture
Tags: Applecross, Australia Categories: House, Residential |