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Sumit Singhal
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.

Lower Tullochgrue in Aviemore, Scotland by Brown & Brown Architects

 
February 7th, 2022 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Brown & Brown Architects

Lower Tullochgrue is the refurbishment and extension of a traditional house in the heart of the Cairngorms National Park. A dilapidated steading has been replaced by a contemporary extension, with a timber and glass upper volume above a stone plinth, with the existing topography of the site maintained at all times.

The brief was for the creation of a home which could be used by numerous members of a large family, both collectively and in smaller family groups. This drove the creation of large social spaces, separate guest accommodation in the form of a small separate block, and refurbishment of the original house to provide bedrooms for different members of the family across a large age range, with varying levels of mobility.

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

  • Architects: Brown & Brown Architects
  • Project: Lower Tullochgrue
  • Location: Aviemore, Scotland
  • Photography: Dapple Photography
  • Project size: 370m2
  • Building levels: 3
  • Contractor: Spey Building & Joinery
  • Structural Engineer: Design Engineering Workshop
  • Bespoke Metalwork: Metal Manufacture
  • Site Site: 5315m2
  • Completion date: January 2021

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

The client originally came to us with the brief of extending the existing house into the adjacent steading, which was 3m lower than the house, and 6m away, in addition to being on an irregular angle to the house. Our approach was to take down the steading, reusing the materials from it, before creating a replacement stone plinth, atop which could sit the main body of the extension, allowing for consistent floor levels between the historic and contemporary elements.

An existing access track informed the limits of the extension, and was the driver for the building being larger at first floor, where it cantilevers over the track. The client keeps their grandparent’s 1960s Ford Falcon at the house, and the size of the car generated the spacing of the exposed steel column supporting the first floor, which had to leave a space wide enough to permit the passage of the car.

The clients were involved throughout the design and deliver stages, by ongoing collaborative design aimed at determining how they, and their wider family, intended to live and use the site. This led to the creation of the separate games block, a guest suite with enhanced accessible sanitary accommodation for elderly relatives, a small spill-out space for when the house is full, and many other elements.

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

Image Courtesy © Dapple Photography

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Categories: Extention, House, Private House, Renovation, Residential




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