The New Zealand Herald

Retirement firm calls in architects

Positive reaction to Metlifecar­e site begs question of villages using more design

- Anne Gibson

Distinctiv­e rows of white brick and bronze aluminium-clad architectu­rally-designed sawtooth-roofed townhouses have risen at a Metlifecar­e project under constructi­on north of Auckland.

Shannon Joe — a master-planning, commercial and residentia­l specialist at Warren and Mahoney — was engaged to design the overall scheme and stage one of the buildings in the Red Beach developmen­t.

That includes five blocks of the 35 dramatic single-level adjoining townhouses which capture and keep the sun at Gulf Rise near Silverdale.

He used skillion roof-features, where the roof cladding and ceiling run parallel, to allow him to almost double internal volumes and the amount of light flooding living areas of the homes from the east, north and west. The series of ridges with dual pitches either side give visual relief to what could have been far more ordinary.

“I didn’t want those to feel like a cookie-cutter approach. Every frontage looks different but overall, the five blocks relate to each other and appear as part of a family,” Joe said of the townhouses.

Inside, the void created by that roof feature yields a soaring 4.3m stud, double the usual roughly 2m stud from traditiona­l designs. So although the new villas are only 115sq m to 128sq m in floor area, ceiling height makes them feel more spacious.

“This is the first time we’ve worked with Warren and Mahoney,” said Metlifecar­e chief executive Glen Sowry. “We just wanted it to look more contempora­ry and looked at a different way of designing and building, for example with the pitched ceilings and the cladding systems of aluminium and brick. What we have spent would be at the top end.”

Hayden & Rollett and NZ Strong are building on the ex-golf course site at 89 Symes Drive which could eventually be home to more than 300 people.

Joe said the internal height added “glamour” to the places and Red Beach was the first retirement village he had master planned “but I’m now also working with Metlifecar­e at Beachlands. You should see that!”

As one of New Zealand’s top architects, he was also the lead designer on the Waterview Connection which won a national NZ Institute of

Architects award, as well as the Los Angeles Business Council Architectu­re Award and the Chicago Athenaeum Award. Joe has won a string of other major awards in his role as lead designer on Auckland’s Bellus Apartments, Wellington’s Charles Fergusson Tower, Auckland’s Verto Apartments and the Pacific Games Village in Papua New Guinea.

“Before our involvemen­t, there was another scheme,” Joe said of a more block-like Metlifecar­e Red Beach plan, now ditched.

“Generally, retirement villages are very heavy. They feel impenetrab­le and you don’t feel welcome. They’re more gated communitie­s.

“Every person — when they’re retiring — fears losing their life, giving up their treasures. But if you move to a well-designed apartment, you love where you’ve gone. You don’t need to live in a 500sq m house. You can live in a smaller home and have everything you want,” Joe said, referring to baby boomers wanting a new style of village.

Marketing leverages the architectu­re: “Those who have already had the chance to view the completed villas have been really impressed by the spacious feeling given with the high raking ceilings and the amount of sunlight coming into the living area through the floor-to-ceiling glass.

“Solar tubes have also been installed in the bathrooms, resulting in an abundance of natural light.”

Even the less aesthetica­lly-interested investment community has noticed Joe’s work.

Jeremy Simpson, a senior equities analyst at Forsyth Barr, said: “Red Beach looks to be a good location [and it] will be a good asset for Metlifecar­e. It has an innovative design and the villas I have seen appear to be built to a very high quality and look unique in terms of what the other major operators are building.”

Metlifecar­e’s hurdle is “to get the staging right in terms of the level of new product it delivers to the market at any one point, which is the challenge for all higher density new villages in the Auckland metro area”, Simpson noted.

The Red Beach townhouses are being marketed from $855,000 to $925,000. They will soon be surrounded by apartments and a hospital block, with higher-rise buildings now under constructi­on.

Could retirement village owner/ operators put more of an emphasis on good architectu­re?

Graham Wilkinson of Generus engaged Sumich Chaplin and Boffa Miskell to design the six new blocks and surroundin­g landscape at Mt Eden’s Ranfurly Village.

But the owner/operators of largescale high-rise villages don’t always engage award-winning architects like Joe, sometimes resulting in little more than rudimentar­y domestic architectu­re on a vertical scale, with limited visual or design appeal.

John Walsh, Institute of Architects’ communicat­ion director praised Joe’s work but said the retirement village sector had not been “characteri­sed by innovative design thinking”.

Architect Julie Stout of Mitchell Stout and Paul Edmond of the Institute of Architects’ Auckland branch congratula­ted Ryman Healthcare for its co-operation in Environmen­t Court mediation on the design of the new Devonport retirement village, now under constructi­on.

“Ryman Healthcare was very responsive to alternativ­e layouts proposed by the appellants, which were designed to strengthen connection­s between the new village and the existing one, by breaking building blocks down around open spaces, building closer to the street, and reducing the sense of an out-of-scale institutio­n in the seaside suburb.

“It’s a pity it took an Environmen­t Court appeal to bring us to conciliati­on,” the two wrote in Architectu­re Now.

Every frontage looks different but overall, the five blocks . . . appear as part of a family. Shanno Joe (pictured)

 ??  ?? Metlifecar­e’s Red Beach townhouses, which boast soaring ceilings and let in abundant natural light, will sell for $855,000 to $925,000.
Metlifecar­e’s Red Beach townhouses, which boast soaring ceilings and let in abundant natural light, will sell for $855,000 to $925,000.
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 ?? Photos / David Bremek ??
Photos / David Bremek
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