VISION Issue 39 | Page 12

VISION 39 — HOUSE-MASTER The Corten and layered glazing of the Louttit Bay House produce a jewel-like luxury to eliminate the need for extraneous façade ornament. Here the envelope says it all with its surprise window-as-wall behind slatted fence. His design for the earlier Dame of Melba and Inlet houses reveals a similar beach-craft materiality. Inspired by their settings they are tactile and sensuous with the kind of brave, thoughtful glazing often wished for, but rarely experienced. His love of the ocean – he’s a surfing tragic like so many good architects – appears to deepen, the whole ‘immersed’ in nature approach. It’s as if his houses adopt a similar surfer’s balance and poise for surefooted results. And no sign of interiors burdened and weighed down with ‘stuff’. The preference always being for crafted, un-fussed, spaces where timber and stone flow like an infinity pool. Add to this, the extensive use of fixed and operable glazing as generous invitation to nature, place and dwelling. An architect’s role is nothing if not the privilege to share good and great experiences be it meditation or celebration. Vision’s Peter Hyatt visited a number of David Seeley’s projects to discover the honest, the revealing and uplifting: Let’s start with the Lauriston House. Is it the result you hoped for? DAVID SEELEY By and large it is. Architecture is art and science and, on top of that, it's an economic consideration. It's the way in which you meld those three to come up with the best out of what you've got. There's definitely a repetitious quality about the building, and that's driven, primarily, by economy, but at the same time, there is this artistic reflection of what surrounds it. That's the art of what we've done, which I'm very proud of. VISION What does the project say about you, the client and the place? The heroics of our clients in actually letting us do this can’t be underestimated. That's pretty significant. It's also our first project away from the coast, so that's also a milestone. The obvious point of the Lauriston House is the roof and the way it reflects the rolling landscape. This house appears seriously playful. The roof shape does have that playful quality. Not that we were initially setting out to achieve something necessarily playful, it was more contextual, based on the geometry of the olive plantation and the curving nature of the vegetation and landscape. It has voluptuous contours which is the nature of the erosion of the valleys by the creeks and dams. That inspired the shape of the roof.