Saines
"We were conscious at the time a modern home can be cold and
unwelcoming. The longer we live here the more we think it is a
fantastic house to live in."
"We are delighted with how Caroline has achieved the goals of
getting views and sun to all living and bedrooms."
Located in a seaside suburb of Sydney, a moderately
sloping site rises from the road up to a beautiful bushland setting
amongst rocky outcrops. The site runs along an east-west axis with
great views over Manly to the east. The existing redbrick house sat
poorly on the site and did not make the most of the micro-climate,
and was demolished to make way for the new house.
The brief was to design a contemporary light-filled family home
to engage with the harbour outlook from every room and take
advantage of the great orientation. The house had to be flexible to
meet the needs of the family as it changes and grows, and to
accommodate occasional visiting relatives from interstate.
The response was to create a building form that sweeps around
from the front rectilinear volumes aligned to the street, stepping
over and around each other up the slope to the landscape at the
rear. The form was generated by the need for all living rooms to
have solar access, make the most of the eastern views, and to
channel cool summer breezes through the house. A spine to the south
contains the service zones and acts as a supportive spine to the
main form of the house.
The living spaces are zoned for both thermal and acoustic
purposes. The formal living area is located at the front of the
house making the most of the views, with the informal living areas
located centrally in the site, opening directly onto a courtyard
that fills the void created by the curved form of the house.
Landscaping is integral to the house as it connects the built
form to the site. The rear garden incorporates native plants with a
natural sandstone outcrop, and a combination of curved walls and
rectilinear forms mediate between the geometry of the house and the
external environment.
This building shows how environmental factors, when positively
embraced, can have an inspiring and beneficial impact on design.
The house demonstrates how comfortable environmental conditions can
be created within a beautiful envelope without resorting to
mechanical means alone for cooling and heating. This is intended to
give the inhabitants great pleasure as well as ensuring a long
lifespan for the building.
Caroline Pidcock
Steve Loo
Natasha Marshall
Builder:
Sandick Constructions
Structural Engineer: Northrop Consulting
Photographer:
Murray Fredericks
Landscape Architect: Out of the Blue + Kristen Martin Landscape
Architects
Simple and intuitive methods for operating the house
Provision of home office facilities
Convenient location of storage space for recycling
Convenient storage for bicycles to encourage use
Good thermal performance of house
Good natural light and ventilation
Good views to the outside
Natural oils finish for timber floors throughout house
Low VOC paints
Good thermal performance to result in minimal heating and no
cooling
Appropriate levels of insulation and thermal mass
Ability to zone areas of the house
Heating system - gas central heating
Well designed natural ventilation throughout house, including
details for bedrooms
Good natural light throughout house
Convenient, dedicated, sunny area for drying clothes
Water saving fixtures and appliances
Low water garden
Materials selected with thought given to reducing their impacts
over their life
House designed to easily adapt to changing family lifestyles
Timber from sustainably managed forests for new floor boards and
decking
Built-on area kept to a minimum
Garden design inherent to house design
Connection of living areas to garden to assist in better care