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Sydney Architecture Images- Contemporary Non-Commercial
House by the sea |
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architect
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Walters & Cohen |
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location
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Bondi |
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date
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2007 |
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style
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Millennium Minimalist Modernism |
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construction
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timber, etc |
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type
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House |
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Sydney's Bondi Beach is, rightly, one of the world's more famous crescents
of sand, but its natural beauty is not matched by the architecture
fronting it and sprawling over its cliff-top flanks. No single carbuncle
but a plague of minor boils; a rash of postwar brick and clay-tile
houses that owe everything to the worst of English suburbia and nothing
to the might of the South Pacific Ocean.

Contemporary architects are gradually making inroads with more
climatically responsive houses that are replacing the tacky brick boxes.
London-based Walters & Cohen has replaced one such bungalow on the very
edge of the sandstone cliffs to the north with a house made up of a pair
of pavilions in white render and glass that cling vertiginously 80m
above the surf. Porous Sydney sandstone does not readily last as an
exposed building material in such a weather-beaten location but
geo-technical surveys indicate that it provides a solid footing to the
concrete structure--along this section of the cliffs at least. A walled
entrance court deliberately conceals the spectacular views, which are
only revealed to the casual visitor after reaching the L-shaped
first-floor living area wrapped on two sides with glazing. Views
outwards allow whale watching, views downwards can reveal shoals of fish
80m below, and those upwards give advance warning of any approaching
electrical storms that can buffet the house.
In an exercise in deferred gratification, you enter through a solid
timber door set in a blade of masonry some 7.5m high and flanked by
equally tall etched glass panels 250mm wide. The double-height hall
beyond is an atrium between seaward and landward pavilions of the
building. Its wedge shape culminates in a deep internal lightwell
fronted by a 4.5m X 2.5m frameless glass panel. Uplights are set into
the polished concrete floors to avoid the need for lights within the
soffit high above; none of the first floor's ceilings are interrupted by
light fixings.
A flight of timber treads is cantilevered off the wall, supported by an
internal edge beam of welded steel angles, some of which return
vertically to form the framework for the glass balustrade. Upstairs, the
panorama awaits.
Concealed at entrance level on the seaward side is a suite of rooms with
ocean views, two bedrooms and a woodworking studio for the client.
Steel-framed sliding doors and windows allow uninterrupted views, even
from the bathrooms that have bluestone-clad (from neighbouring Victoria)
baths pushed against the glass. Handles are everywhere minimized or
absent. Full-height doors at this level pivot shut to 10mm-wide
aluminium returns set in the wall. This minimal detailing prescribed by
Walters & Cohen and a neatnik client has been clarified and executed
throughout by local practice Collins and Turner (both former Foster and
Partners employees).
All the timber used, including the matchstick screens of the garage and
the double-height oriel above, is recycled jarrah--a tough Australian
hardwood--some of it sourced from an old wharf from the port of
Fremantle in Western Australia.
The oriel serves another double-height space on the landward side
reached from a half-landing and incorporating a mezzanine bedspace--itself
accessed by a beautifully built formed-concrete staircase. A small
square window gives glimpses back west across the peninsula and Sydney
Harbour to the distant Central Business District.
This room, like the whole of the upper floor in both pavilions, is
surmounted by a clerestory set above two steel channels back-to-back to
conceal perimeter lighting. The steels act as a ring-beam for each
pavilion and steel uprights carry the steel roof with its deep-shading
eaves. An air-conditioning zone has been created between the floors but
the combination of under-floor heating for the winter months and the
cooling breezes pushing over the lip of the cliff suggests that
mechanical climate control will not be necessary.
Although some blinds may need to be installed against strong morning
light, the rest of the cantilevered upper floor, kitchen, living,
dining, study and TV areas, make the most of the uninterrupted gull's
back views. Most of the glass doors open, with only a glass cliff-edge
balustrade (on a curve with a setting-out point some 200m out to sea)
between you and the drop, but opposite the dining area incorporation of
structure into a masonry panel creates a framed view. This living area
is backed by a waist-high insertion of jarrah shelves and cupboards that
runs 7m from the return of the staircase balustrade, then folds around
the study zone and makes a backdrop to a sunken TV area. Here the
glazing forms a frameless box reflecting the sea and the cliffs by day
and the moon by night. The nose of this box, seen from the entrance
courtyard, is a subtle indicator of the axis of splendour to come. |
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www.sydneyarchitecture.com
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links
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