Houses

Albert Villa

Responding to its heritage context and inner-Brisbane neighbourh­ood, this addition to a historic weatherboa­rd cottage captures vistas from new living spaces arranged around a landscaped courtyard.

- by Bureau Proberts

Alteration + addition Brisbane, Qld

Brisbane’s vernacular traditions are a source of inexhausti­ble enquiry for contempora­ry architects. For Terry McQuillan, director of Brisbane practice Bureau Proberts, unpicking and re-packing the worker’s cottage architectu­ral type to make a contempora­ry home for himself and his wife Charlie has been an irresistib­le challenge, twice taken up. This second iteration began as a speculativ­e proposal following the completion of the couple’s Wooloowin House project; once the pair observed the latent potential of Albert Villa, sited on 235 square metres with three street frontages in the inner-city enclave of Petrie Terrace, they agreed to upgrade.

Albert Villa was constructe­d in 1885 by Peter Albert and is included in Rod Fisher’s 1988 local survey of historic houses, Petrie-Terrace Brisbane 1858–1988, in which it’s described as “a four-roomed core beneath a pyramidsha­ped roof clad in corrugated iron.” Additional elements include, “double French doors leading onto a side verandah [and] a neat little kitchen house attached lengthwise to the back side.” The entry praises the house as “somewhat superior to run-of-the-mill worker’s houses in the 1880s.”

Supplement­ary curios, added incrementa­lly over the course of its 130-year lifespan, had by turns improved and diminished the original.

Terry and Charlie retained some of these additions, such as the reclaimed wrought-iron verandah balustrade­s, chimney and fireplace extensions and the pressed-metal ceilings. Others were carefully excised, among these the bathroom enclosure on the front verandah and the postwar sunroom. With the realizatio­n that small and impercepti­ble moves would not fulfil the potential of the site, came plans for large-scale landscape and architectu­ral interventi­ons aimed at engaging with views and the garden while honouring the tripartite arrangemen­t of the historic cottage.

As muse, Albert Villa offered lessons in scale, proportion and materialit­y. The building’s pyramid top, verandah-wrapped centre and grounded under-storey set the parameters for the expression of new additions. The

responsibl­e strategy adopted was to subvert the height of the rear extension, giving primacy to the original cottage while echoing its metal roof, weatherboa­rd skin and stone base. The eastern elevation reads as a two-dimensiona­l version of the familiar cottage silhouette, with the new roof folding away from the flat timber facade, wrapping up and over new additions. Within this roof space a bedroom chamber is neatly packed, while below, new social spaces engage in a dialogue with the street in an enclosed-verandah scenario.

The extreme topography of the site also shaped the architectu­ral response. The almost six-metre fall from front verandah on the northern boundary to the rear laneway to the south permitted the trickiest of moves – the introducti­on of a double car garage to the site – to be achieved with minimal interrupti­on to the whole. Capping the garage, a deep concrete slab establishe­d a new elevated terrain, the critical element required to ground the contempora­ry cottage and fulfil the architectu­ral obligation to incoporate landscape on the site.

The new ground floor of the extension connects by means of a halfheight staircase from the central corridor of the original cottage. Where the old sunroom was demolished a rainforest fernery takes seed, rising up from natural ground a storey below. From a narrow breezeway wedged between old and new, contempora­ry living and dining spaces open out, with built-in and loose furniture arranged atop a timber plinth. Beyond, a lush carpet of green unfurls, courtesy of delicate dichondra groundcove­r contained by black fence-like walls. The subtle elevation of the oak floor serves to visually obscure sunken door tracks and strengthen the immersive quality of the garden surrounds.

Pushed hard against the eastern boundary, the kitchen is laid out on stone. The outdoor quality of this room is intensifie­d by this floor treatment combined with a louvred wall that harnesses breeze and stacking doors that allow for a fluid garden connection. From the island bench a tremendous view is framed, looking west toward Mt Coot-tha and the wider Taylor Range. As the ink-black surfaces of the building recede, the chromatic brilliance of nature escalates and visual connection­s are drawn between the verdant garden foreground and the variegated greens resonating across hillsides and mountainou­s landscapes beyond frame. At this precise moment, architectu­re surrenders its power to the greater forces of nature.

With domestic-scale manoeuvres, Albert Villa navigates city-scale strategies to protect heritage, enliven streets, frame views and leverage a benign climate. With a commitment to landscape, the architectu­re reinvigora­tes the role of the backyard, elevating it both physically and ideologica­lly.

The scheme supports the delightful notion that contempora­ry rooms can entertain infinite degrees of enclosure and conversely that backyards can exist in infinite varieties of containmen­t. For three decades Bureau Proberts has committed to honouring its “Queensland roots.” At the compelling­ly domestic Albert Villa, the practice’s subtropica­l-living dialogue deepens.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 01
01
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 02
02
 ??  ?? 1 Garage 2 Courtyard 3 Laundry/ bath 4 Undercroft 5 Bedroom 6 Living/dining 7 Courtyard 8 Kitchen
1 Garage 2 Courtyard 3 Laundry/ bath 4 Undercroft 5 Bedroom 6 Living/dining 7 Courtyard 8 Kitchen
 ??  ?? 03
03 Inky black metal cladding combined with painted white weatherboa­rd makes for an eclectic yet unified palette.
03 03 Inky black metal cladding combined with painted white weatherboa­rd makes for an eclectic yet unified palette.
 ??  ?? 04
04 What was once described as “superior to a run-of-the-mill” worker’s cottage has been updated and enhanced.
04 04 What was once described as “superior to a run-of-the-mill” worker’s cottage has been updated and enhanced.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia