Architecture Australia

Residentia­l Architectu­re – Houses (New)

Built on the land of the Dja Dja Wurrung people of the Kulin nation

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The Robin Boyd Award National Awards National Commendati­on

Elevated Plains, Victoria

Jury citation Daylesford Longhouse is utterly extraordin­ary – challengin­g in its questionin­g, enchanting in its outcome.

Situated in rural Victoria, the house aims to nourish and sustain. The strategic starting point was a roof large enough to collect water to support a small number of people, some animals and a produce garden on a remote and exposed site. The core activity to be sustained by the architectu­re was food production, preparatio­n and sharing.

The roof – roughly twelve metres by 130 metres – marks out a linear territory that, together with walls of sheet metal, translucen­t polycarbon­ate and agricultur­al mesh, preserves the interior (which includes the verdant produce garden) as a discrete climatic zone. The translucen­t skin, punctuated only by carefully curated picture windows, protects the garden from predators and exposure. Akin to a long shed or conservato­ry, the structure includes an operationa­l barn at one end and an intimate residence at the other.

Internally, aedicules, arbours and eyries accommodat­e the domestic functions of kitchen, dining, sleeping and bathing. These spatial “follies” reference other times and places, and form the settings for continuous­ly unfolding theatre. The sense of living within the garden is profoundly delivered.

Partners Hill has scaled up this design to the rural landscape to avoid being diminished by it. The site is a microcosm of the broader setting; “wild” grass mounds that reflect the mounded landforms in the distance are used to signify the building entry and the cultivated production garden extends into the house.

Inside, alongside the flourishin­g plant life, is a surprising richness of refined architectu­ral detail – raw timber, terracotta and white-glazed brick, all composed harmonious­ly in a magical and constantly changing light. One is drawn from places nestled in the garden to places of survey in the canopy, in what is a deeply memorable experience of a house.

— Daylesford Longhouse was reviewed by Katelin Butler in Architectu­re Australia Jul/Aug 2019. See architectu­reau.com/articles/daylesford-longhouse

Architect Partners Hill; Project team Timothy Hill (design architect), Domenic Mesiti, Michael Hogg, Andrew D’Occhio (architects), Jonathan Chamberlai­n (graduate of architectu­re); Constructi­on manager Nick Andrew Constructi­on

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