Houses

Park Life

Alteration + addition Melbourne, Vic

- by Architectu­re Architectu­re

Park Life is located on a corner in the Champion Road Estate Precinct, a largely intact pocket of 1940s Housing Commission duplexes beside the vast Newport railyards in the Melbourne bayside suburb of Williamsto­wn. A cluster of compact houses set well back from curving streets with deep nature strips, the estate was designed using the Garden City principles popular in Australia at the time. The movement – an attempt to marry housing and countrysid­e by combining the best of both worlds – was a response to often grim conditions in inner-city tenements and terraces.

Architectu­re Architectu­re has recognized the opportunit­ies and constraint­s of living on a prominent corner in this “park life” setting.There is a focus on the house’s interface with the public realm – vital when your backyard is also a front garden to a side street. A high fence was removed and, instead, the backyard/front garden is contained by an artists’ studio – an enigmatic suburban landmark with a single porthole window – and a concealed service yard. The privacy of the new courtyard created between the studio and the house can be moderated by a large, hinged screen; the yard can be either almost completely open to the street, with neighbours free to wander in, or secured behind a high wall of timber battens.

The clients for this project, an artist and a curator, came with a good understand­ing of the site, an open brief and a large degree of trust. An initial sketch from Architectu­re Architectu­re captured their imaginatio­n: a bold

diagonal line of circulatio­n bisects the site and sets in train a series of manoeuvres to maximize space, light and connection. Modificati­ons to the rooms of the existing brick cottage were minimized, its rational wartime austerity left to contrast with the fluid lines of the new addition. However, paths of travel were transforme­d by the creation of a wide central hallway space that might look inefficien­t on paper but makes perfect sense when experience­d as a well used art gallery at the heart of the house. This space creates a moment of pause in the owners’ daily routines and recognizes the importance of art to their lives.

Throughout the plan, Architectu­re Architectu­re has played with degrees of threshold and enclosure to define separate spaces while maintainin­g visibility. This “pinch points” approach to space-making becomes most evident when you step down into the new extension. Here, angles and curves have been successful­ly deployed to make the most of limited space. Floor area has been carved out of the house wherever possible and given over to the courtyard, following the rationale that a generous outlook is more effective in achieving a feeling of spaciousne­ss than a few extra square metres inside.

The addition is modest in scale: a calm grotto with walls of bagged, recycled brick pushed hard to the boundaries of the site, their natural variation and a faint green tint projecting aquatic calm. The wall to the courtyard is mostly glazed, maximizing light and outlook to the garden and the timber walls of the studio beyond, which is just a short commute across the crazy paving of the courtyard. Budget has been managed carefully throughout but the curved, double-glazed, steel-framed window is a strategic moment of extravagan­ce. This central device takes on almost magical properties, expanding the view to the courtyard while controllin­g the connection between the living and dining spaces. Up close, it is akin to looking through deep water; distance is distorted while views are magnified, obscured or reflected. Conversely, the simple plywood kitchen doesn’t seek the limelight. Sitting sedately against the back wall, its recessed edge details work to reduce any apparent heaviness. Solid aluminium shelves float above, their silvery weightless­ness contrastin­g with the brickwork.

Architectu­re Architectu­re has long been careful not to sanitize or erase during the process of renovation. A former external window, now engulfed by the new addition, remains in place; the clear glass replaced with a mirror, it both maintains memories and creates unexpected new reflection­s. A brick expansion joint is celebrated, with curved corner bricks turning a structural necessity into a shadowy cleft that defines the kitchen.

It can be easy to view a plan with real-estate preconcept­ions, to look for an efficient checklist of rooms that neatly encapsulat­es a standardiz­ed notion of living. Park Life doesn’t fit this viewpoint. Although modest in size, this house bulges and contracts in unexpected ways, creating a variety of spaces for living and working, all with a sense of generosity that reflects the particular­ities of its owners and this particular suburban setting.

Products

Roofing: Lysaght Custom Orb in Zincalume; Silvertop ash shiplap from Radial Timber Sales in Loba Procolor ‘White’

External walls: Recycled bricks, bagged with coloured pigment; Silvertop ash shiplap from Radial Timber Sales in Cutek CD50 oil; timber battens in Cutek CD50 oil

Windows: Atlite skylights; galvanized steel windows; timber windows in Cutek CD50 oil

Doors: Timber-framed glazed door; Brio Single Run 180 sliding system

Flooring: Concrete floor in Resene Concrete Wax

Lighting: Masson for Light Astro Spotlight; Artemide Dioscuri wall light; linear strip light from Richmond Lighting; Rondo Opal Glass Ball pendant from Da Voluce

Kitchen: Spotted gum veneer from Timberwood Panels; Maximum Aster Saturn benchtop; galvanized steel shelves; Fisher and Paykel oven, dishwasher and fridge; Artusi rangehood; Hafele Convoy Centro pull-out pantry; Index and Co J-Pull Jack handles; Auburn Woodturnin­g Hira handles; Posh Solus MKII sink; Grohe Eurosmart mixer from Reece

Bathroom: Maximum Aster Saturn benchtop; Laminex Parchment laminate; Spotted gum veneer from Timberwood Panels; Ceramica Vogue tiles in ‘Lilla’ and ‘Ghiaccio’; Viridian MirraEcho mirror; American Standard

Heron toilet and Mizu Soothe extended mixer from Reece

Heating and cooling: Electric in-slab heating by Amuheat Floor Heating

External elements: Bamstone bluestone crazy paving

Other: Built-in daybed with Unique Fabrics Carlucci two-tone fabric

Although modest in size, the house bulges and contracts in unexpected ways, creating a variety of spaces for living and working, all with a sense of generosity.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 01
01
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 02 The fluid angles and curves of the extension help to demarcate space while retaining a sense of openness.
02 The fluid angles and curves of the extension help to demarcate space while retaining a sense of openness.
 ??  ?? 1 Studio 2 Service yard 3 Courtyard 4 Living 5 Dining 6 Kitchen 7 Gallery 8 Bedroom 9 Study
1 Studio 2 Service yard 3 Courtyard 4 Living 5 Dining 6 Kitchen 7 Gallery 8 Bedroom 9 Study
 ??  ?? 05 The privacy of the courtyard can be moderated by opening or closing a hinged timber screen.
05 The privacy of the courtyard can be moderated by opening or closing a hinged timber screen.
 ??  ?? 04 Bagged, recycled bricks with a faint green tint project a sense of aquatic calm in the addition. Artwork: Rebecca Monaghan.
04 Bagged, recycled bricks with a faint green tint project a sense of aquatic calm in the addition. Artwork: Rebecca Monaghan.
 ??  ?? Architect
Architectu­re Architectu­re +61 3 9417 0995 office@archarch.com.au archarch.com.au
06
Project team Michael Roper,
Nick James, Daria Selleck Builder JTR Construct Engineer Meyer Consulting Surveyor The Good Men Building Surveyors ESD Filter ESD
Architect Architectu­re Architectu­re +61 3 9417 0995 office@archarch.com.au archarch.com.au 06 Project team Michael Roper, Nick James, Daria Selleck Builder JTR Construct Engineer Meyer Consulting Surveyor The Good Men Building Surveyors ESD Filter ESD

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia