Weekend Herald

Reign on the parade

A mid- century Parade of Homes courtyard house has been given a modern lift, discovers Joanna Smith

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129 HAVERSTOCK RD SANDRINGHA­M

The last time the Government worried about housing affordabil­ity, it used mid- century creativity to engineer some healthy competitio­n between constructi­on companies. Throughout New Zealand, builders competed to build spec houses on Government- owned land, with a guaranteed buy- back if the houses didn’t sell.

Around the country the resulting designs were exhibited in a Parade of Homes, attracting thousands of punters wherever they were held. In 1958, Auckland’s fourth Parade unveiled 30 showhomes on Mt Albert’s newly extended Haverstock Rd. Prize- winning builder P. A. Carmine shocked some people with his contempora­ry design, modelled on the decade’s uber- cool Group Architects. Today’s punters would be more shocked at the price: £ 3450 for a modern threebedro­om house ( excluding section).

Fifty- plus years later, long- time Sandringha­m residents and design aficionado­s Janice and Richard Gourley wondered what was behind the forest of trees in a Trade Me photo. ‘‘ The house found us, really,’’ Janice recalls. ‘‘ We love modernist design, but this had such a contempora­ry feel.’’

Mr Carmine’s courtyard house stood out from its convention­al neighbours, with its daring butterfly profile: two mono- pitched rooflines wrapped around a sunny central patio. ‘‘ He really used the aspect of the land,’’ says Janice. ‘‘ We get all- day sun and all- night moon.’’ Raised above the street, the views across Kerr Taylor Park and Mt Albert Grammar’s grounds are impressive, too.

Back then, the Parade judges were excited by the walls of glass, uniting inside and patio into ‘‘ one free- flowing space’’. Today, Janice concurs: ‘‘ It creates another room. There’s just so many different ways to live inside or out.’’ At night, the patio glows, with moody shadows cast by the front door’s Japanese- style entry bridge and sunken gardens.

In summer, folding doors and clerestory windows bring the breezes inside. In winter, sunshine streams into the soaring living room. ‘‘ It’s so cosy here, we don’t light the fire until dark,’’ says Janice. Previous owners installed glass block in the entry and bedroom wing that Janice reckons insulates and provides privacy.

With basics like joinery done — in proportion­s reflecting the modernist style — Janice and Richard were able to focus on polishing touches. ‘‘ We wanted to be sympatheti­c to the house, with a modern take on the original,’’ says Janice.

Richard captured mid- century sophistica­tion with new mahogany panelling in the living room. In the efficient kitchen, Janice kept groovy features like the floating china cabinet and clerestory windows, highlighti­ng original units with dramatic black, and introducin­g mosaic tiles. ‘‘ We installed new cabinets in the same proportion as the old, with replica handles,’’ she explains.

More mosaic tile features in the bathroom, this time the classic swimming pool blues of the 1950s. Throughout the U- shaped layout, they restored the original rimu timber floors. Richard also painstakin­gly re- finished rimu veneer on the clever twin wardrobes in the two largest bedrooms. The pitched ceiling and floor- to- ceiling windows in the master bedroom mirror the proportion­s of the living room across the courtyard.

From her breezy rear office, Janice can survey what she calls ‘‘ the lifestyle block’’. The enormous backyard was previously home to just a rotary clotheslin­e and a jungle. Much back- breaking clearing yielded years of firewood, prolific avocado and fruit trees, and another sunny living space. From the back door, a timber walkway and raised deck resemble a wharf and pontoon. ‘‘ We’ve had some awesome al fresco lunches out here,’’ says Janice. ‘‘ Then people sit on the stairs and watch the lights come on around Mt Albert.’’

Janice and Richard have loved walking to Sandringha­m’s nearby ‘‘ little India’’ village or Westfield St Lukes. ‘‘ We feel like we’ve been caretakers of this treasure,’’ she says, ‘‘ but now it’s time to pass the baton.’’

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 ?? PHOTOS/ TED BAGHURST ??
PHOTOS/ TED BAGHURST

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