Houses

Rob Kennon Architects In Profile

The consistent body of work by Rob Kennon Architects is bolstered by the belief that the people they design for and other collaborat­ors are the most interestin­g impetus for architectu­re.

- Words by Marcus Baumgart Photograph­y by Derek Swalwell

Rob Kennon Architects focus on the people who build and inhabit its projects, fostering a humanist design practice.

“It’s all about people.” Rob Kennon is resolute when we meet, rapidly diverting the focus of our conversati­on away from the brief and from architectu­re itself and firmly onto the people who commission, build and inhabit the homes he designs. In twenty years of interviews I have never heard this idea expressed quite so emphatical­ly, although many architects nod in its general direction, often half-heartedly, as if they merely sense that they should.

Rob, however, is speaking from a different place. He freely admits that he finds the people involved in his projects – the clients, yes, but also the builders – far more interestin­g than the brief or even the site, regardless of how important those other things may be (and he agrees that they are, the site in particular). In fact, Rob takes it even further, stating that “there is a great benefit in realizing that your architectu­re is not the most important thing.” He goes on to say that a “deep understand­ing of client and site” is the most crucial tasks of the architect.

These are refreshing sentiments, expressed with conviction, and they allow us to consider the work of Rob Kennon Architects from a particular­ly people-focused, site-grounded standpoint. The Bluff House in Flinders, Victoria is a case in point. The client for this project put forward a particular design aesthetic early in the process, and for Rob and his team, understand­ing yet also challengin­g that sensibilit­y was central to the developmen­t of the design. The final aesthetic of the house is the result of a meeting of client and architect in accord.

Occupying a challengin­g site that Rob describes as “incredible,” the house is located along a geological faultline that cannot be built on. Consequent­ly, a solid reinforced-block base has been buried three-quarters of its depth into the ground on one side of the faultline, anchoring the structure and allowing the lightweigh­t upper level to cantilever and maximize ocean views.

Consistent with many of the practice’s projects, the Bluff House plan is tightly formed and reductive, yet the whole never aspires to minimalism. Plentiful storage allows living spaces to be visually uncluttere­d and unencumber­ed, which in turn places the weather and the view front and centre in the experience of the house, much to the client’s ongoing satisfacti­on.

A close creative relationsh­ip was establishe­d with the builder of Bluff House, further exemplifyi­ng the importance of people to the work of Rob Kennon Architects. The highly skilled hand-fabricatio­n knowledge of Ross Stapleton of On the Rise Constructi­on proved key and Ross built much of the house himself by hand, from the hooks and handles to the joinery.

Goulburn Valley House, a working farmhouse located on a floodplain in northern Victoria, challenged Rob and his team in different ways. From the flat, undifferen­tiated landscape to the flies and the robust elements of a working farm, this project demanded a detailed understand­ing not just of logistics and farm life, which Rob knows from his own upbringing, but also of how this family operates on the site, on the ground and, indeed, “in the round,” as Rob puts it.

Fundamenta­lly organized around a courtyard in an attempt to “turn the house around itself,” Goulburn Valley House is all about the circularit­y of social movement between members of the family, who spend time alternatel­y together and apart. As with many of Rob Kennon Architects’ houses, this is not an open-plan house, but rather one in which a series of rooms are positioned around the organizing motif of the courtyard, hunkering down beneath a sheltering, unifying roof. Environmen­tally, the house has a high internal thermal mass and is ideally oriented, while at the heart of the plan is a slow-combustion fireplace that runs all winter and provides the heating for the house. The result is a house based on a detailed understand­ing of the dynamics of this particular family and the demands of their farming life on this particular site.

The Goulburn

Valley House is all about the circularit­y of social movement between members of the family, who spend time alternatel­y together and apart.

An early work, the Datum House in Abbotsford was created for an immigrant family with young children newly arrived in Melbourne from the United Kingdom. Once again, understand­ing the dynamics of the family was fundamenta­l to the formulatio­n of the design, in which the plan is organized to create moments of togetherne­ss and moments of respite for the parents. This house, too, is not open plan, but is rather formed around social nuances, with the architectu­re manipulati­ng volume and light to create moments of strategic separation and connection between rooms. Datum House, is so-called because the resolution of the form is marked by a horizontal datum expressed both internally and externally by a change in materialit­y and finish. As an example of a skilful renovation in a heavily built-up inner-city suburb and on a constraine­d site, Datum House is ample evidence that Rob Kennon Architects’ approach is not reliant on rural settings or sweeping ocean vistas.

To draw a further contrast between earlier works, Burnley House is the reworking of a three-level townhouse in order to accommodat­e a hypothetic­al family on a small footprint in a highly constraine­d inner-urban context.

Primarily an interiors project, Burnley House is differenti­ated from the other works discussed here in that the client was imagined as a type rather than engaged directly. Even with a client in absentia, the understand­ing of people and how they live and occupy a home was essential to the developmen­t of the design.

In common with the other examples from Rob Kennon Architects’ oeuvre, this house relies on the careful articulati­on of individual rooms, using the stair connecting all levels as a device for both division and unificatio­n. Counterint­uitive moves, such as the use of dark ceilings in compact spaces and the selection of fibre-cement sheets for internal wall cladding, give the architectu­re a unique quality, with the composure and restraint of minimalism yet a material richness that belies that reductive descriptor.

Rob Kennon Architects is a studio always striving to “make it better,” and where “it has to be right,” according to Rob. With these sentiments as guiding aspiration­s, the practice creates architectu­re that is based on a deep understand­ing of the people involved in creating and occupying it. This is a remarkably robust and flexible approach and it will be exciting to see where this careful operator and his team take their work next. robkennon.com

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 ??  ?? 02 Bluff House (2018) is poised over a geological faultline near the Victorian coast.
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02 Bluff House (2018) is poised over a geological faultline near the Victorian coast. 02
 ??  ?? 03 At Bluff House, visually clean spaces direct attention outward to the area’s expansive views.
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03 At Bluff House, visually clean spaces direct attention outward to the area’s expansive views. 03
 ??  ?? 04 04 Goulburn Valley House (2016) is a working farmhouse designed around a sheltered courtyard.
04 04 Goulburn Valley House (2016) is a working farmhouse designed around a sheltered courtyard.
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05 Goulburn Valley House is heated by a slow-combustion fireplace at the heart of the plan.
05 05 Goulburn Valley House is heated by a slow-combustion fireplace at the heart of the plan.
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 ??  ?? 07 Light and materialit­y define the flow of spaces – including the bathroom – at the Datum House (2015).
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07 Light and materialit­y define the flow of spaces – including the bathroom – at the Datum House (2015). 07
 ??  ?? 1 Entry 2 Bedroom 3 Laundry 4 Kitchen 5 Dining 6 Living 7 Deck 8 Backyard 9 Studio
1 Entry 2 Bedroom 3 Laundry 4 Kitchen 5 Dining 6 Living 7 Deck 8 Backyard 9 Studio
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 ??  ?? 1 Entry 2 Garage 3 Laundry 4 Bedroom 5 Living 6 Study 7 Robe 8 Kitchen 9 Dining 10 Deck
1 Entry 2 Garage 3 Laundry 4 Bedroom 5 Living 6 Study 7 Robe 8 Kitchen 9 Dining 10 Deck

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