Homestyle New Zealand

Deep in thought

The meaningful makeover of this former state house considered both whānau and whenua.

- WORDS Claire McCall PHOTOGRAPH­Y Patrick Reynolds

The meaningful makeover of this former state house considered both whānau and whenua.

This two-storey former state house on a Lyttelton hillside sports an exterior paint scheme that’s loud and proud for good reason. Boaties navigating the harbour use it as a landmark and the citrusy orange speaks a similar visual language as a neighbouri­ng state house in apple green.

Although the owners — a couple and their two teenagers — are community-minded, they don’t have mana whenua here. They moved south from Auckland for study and then work, and ended up here “by happy accident” because they wanted to be close to the water and found this then three-bedroom home after renting in the area. When they asked architect Michael O’Sullivan for help with a renovation, they were driven to create somewhere their extended family could stay, and to make the home so desirable that their near-adult children would never want to leave.

The port town of Lyttelton lies on the side of a giant caldera, so every section is vertiginou­s. Forcing a generic state-house plan onto this site had been awkward; the reframe needed better integratio­n with the land.

The owners met Michael when he was working on the build of his South Island home/studio of his practice Bull O’Sullivan Architectu­re. Wandering down to take a look, “we thought it was some sort of ‘out-there’ house,” says one of the homeowners. “And then we saw it had won the Sir Ian Athfield Award for New Zealand architectu­re.”

It wasn’t difficult for Michael to convince the family to rearrange the interior of the state house for more fluidity. The idea of an additional pavilion was more unexpected, but not unwelcome. “We walked to the back of the section, lay down and looked north, up towards the edge of the caldera,” recalls Michael. Building here represente­d an opportunit­y to connect with the sun — and with each other.

The owners showed Michael a photograph of one of their treasured moments: whānau congregate­d around a barbecue on a deck, laughing and eating kai. The concept of manaakitan­ga (hospitalit­y) became a driving force in the design; they also wanted it to reflect the feeling of being on a marae.

In bringing this to life, the relationsh­ip moved beyond that of client and advisor. One of the homeowners is a trained draughtsma­n unafraid to get hands-on with a project, and Michael is a like-minded spirit — a maker as much as an architect. Many decisions were made away from the drawing board, as great ideas often are. Michael and the family worked alongside the builders on the addition, as bit by arduous bit, the pavilion wedged into the hillside. “The site’s too steep for heavy machinery, so my son and I became labourers, carrying materials up,” says one of the homeowners.

The result is a crafted interweavi­ng of long-standing Māori values with a contempora­ry overlay: two buildings linked by an internal staircase but also an ātea — a transition zone reminiscen­t of the open ground that fronts a wharenui.

The original home already had enough bedrooms and bathrooms for its occupants, but several walls were removed to create a music/theatre space. Here, Michael took inspiratio­n from Adolf Loos’ American Bar in Vienna, lining the walls with dark wenge timber to make it moody and intimate. “I was a DJ for a long time, so I have a lot of records,” says one of the homeowners. “It’s where I can go to put on some music and not be distracted.” Three shelving units were designed to accommodat­e his sizeable collection, but there are still more records that don’t fit. “I think I’m in trouble — I might have to sell a few.”

In contrast, the pavilion is light, bright and made for gatherings. Embracing kitchen, dining and living, its asymmetric­al form traces the outline of the site, and bench seating beneath the windows maximises the view. Here again, the palette strays from neutral, with the kitchen bench and island featuring Formica in shades of nostalgic green and yellow that hark of a happy history. “They’re the sort of thing you’d see on a 1950s caravan table,” says Michael.

Window joinery powdercoat­ed yellow is a nod to the more recent past; the couple bought the home from a painter

who used vivid yellow on the exterior. The plywood wall linings are warm and textural in this space that opens up on both sides — to the glittering harbour in the south and a bush backdrop facing north. “We were also fortunate to secure some old kauri beams from a warehouse that collapsed in the earthquake,” says Michael, who incorporat­ed 25mm-thick layers of heart kauri as ceiling detail. While the building progressed, he tackled making a dining table and bench seat in his workshop. “We do that for most of our projects,” he says. “As the heart of the home, it’s critically important that the table speaks to the rest of the architectu­re.”

Outside, where a deck basks in newly captured northern light, some shelter was called for: a pergola based on the shape of a Māori motif, the niho taniwha (teeth of the taniwha) — a saw-edged triangular form that predominat­es in wharenui. Instead of the straight lines that were Michael’s initial thought, this shifted to a diagonal geometry, and while the architect welded the steel skeleton, the family went off in search of kōrari fronds to top it.

Traditiona­l values and new materials collide in this transforma­tion that balances poetry with practicali­ty.

It’s easy to be mesmerised by the weather rolling in over the ocean from the south and east, and when whānau from Auckland and Australia visited last Christmas, the home embraced 15 or 16 people with ease. Some occupied the bedrooms, others hunkered down on the bench seats, and still more slept on mattresses arranged on the floor. The flexible form of the home echoed with togetherne­ss.

When Covid-19 made such gatherings impossible, the whare donned a different face. Members of the household could retreat to a quiet corner to reflect on the new normal, or meet in the pavilion with its grandstand view overlookin­g an amphitheat­re of homesteads in a community the owners now feel very much a part of.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE The former state house stands proud in all its Resene Outrageous glory — a beacon on this Lyttelton hillside that boaties coming into the harbour say they sometimes use as a navigation point. OPPOSITE It was a case of all hands on deck when it came to the constructi­on of the outdoor space, a collaborat­ive effort between Michael and the homeowners, with the architect making the coffee-table bench and the family crafting the long seat built for the whole whānau.
ABOVE The former state house stands proud in all its Resene Outrageous glory — a beacon on this Lyttelton hillside that boaties coming into the harbour say they sometimes use as a navigation point. OPPOSITE It was a case of all hands on deck when it came to the constructi­on of the outdoor space, a collaborat­ive effort between Michael and the homeowners, with the architect making the coffee-table bench and the family crafting the long seat built for the whole whānau.
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