VISION Issue 39 | Page 28

VISION 39 — HOUSE-MASTER Your design response with the Louttit Bay House is clearly very different from that of the neighbours. How do you explain the difference? I think what that says is interestingly that this house probably connects to and is inspired by the landscape, whereas a lot of houses in the suburban model are cookie cutters. What we’re striving to do is to capture the essence of the locality. In this case it's the coastal rusting hulks of fishing boats and the exterior character of the house which has that rusty quality, whereas the inside is more polished. It’s is also just referencing the environment and the beauty of nature. There’s an extraordinary amount of glass in this house compared to the average dwelling. How did the owners respond to first sighting your proposal? It's got glass where it needs it. There’s glass on the north side and that's the larger exposure. And then there's smaller amounts of glass on the east and west. I like to allow people an understanding of the passage of time throughout the day. Here we get a lovely morning light streaming across the ceiling and in the evening the orange evening light comes through the clerestorey, illuminating the upper-storey. So, it’s my own type of fishbowl, but this side's actually more restrained, given there's a lot of glass on that side. It's about layers of screening and vegetation. It feels like what a real beach house should be – much less the fortress, rather – open to the sunlight and breeze. This house reflects the informality of a family-oriented framework. It’s a place where people gather in the summer months and weekends. It was never about any kind of edifice or trophy house statement. We wanted a design that really felt grounded and with materials that felt closer to nature and the earth rather than anything highly synthetic.