Armadale,
Victoria, Australia
JACKSON
CLEMENTS BURROWS ARCHITECTS
This
project involved alterations and additions
to an existing Victorian house that
had been
renovated in the late 1980s.
The client brief called for a new
second-floor addition
comprising five bedrooms and associated bathrooms. An
extension of this requirement was to reconfigure the ground floor living,
dining and kitchen areas. A critical factor in the reorganization of these
spaces was to consider how the proposed alterations and additions could engage
with a large external garden.
The
original Victorian U-shaped plan configuration was rediscovered and reinforced
by a first-floor addition that follows the outline of the perimeter walls
below. As a gesture toward connecting the house to the garden and vice-versa,
the two outer bedroom wings of the upper-floor addition cantilever beyond the
ground floor to engage with the landscape.
To further
reinforce this gesture at the ground-floor level, a large deck area projects
into the garden. This provides a new outdoor living space defined by a stone
wall and fireplace an undercroft beneath the first-floor cantilevered bedroom
wing.
The
definition of the once-Victorian house is maintained as a rendered masonry
construction type with punched openings framing views to the courtyard and
garden beyond. The first-floor addition is a lightweight, timber-framed
construction type with vertical cedar shiplap boards as cladding. The
lightweight timber material and construction type provides a strong contrast to
the masonry walls below. A black painted parallel flange channel separates the
two materials as a shadowline and accentuates the cantilever of the first-floor
bedroom wings on either side of the courtyard.
The
first-floor window openings of the new works alternate between a lower and
higher position, one scaled for adults and one for children, activating the
corridor space .
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