There is something about a welcoming entry that's guaranteed to lift the spirits for family and guests alike.
It's a concept architect Charles R Stinson is very familiar with, and one he likes to introduce to all his projects. For this house, it's a long, park-like driveway, a collection of low flat roofs reminiscent of a village, and a lantern-style tower shining like a beacon that invite you in.
"We also added a trellis walkway leading up to the house," Stinson says. "The low height gives the entry a very human scale and ensures it is not too intimidating. This axis runs right through the house to continue on the other side, reinforcing the connection between inside and out. Beyond the house it becomes a vertical trellis that cloaks an outdoor stair tower near the pool, and then continues horizontally."
The link between the indoors and outdoors is also enhanced by the material selection. Local stone features on the paving, columns and high blade walls that pierce through the horizontal planes of the house to form chimneys. Wood is also used extensively inside as well as out, with ceilings lined in cedar, floors laid in walnut and cabinets manufactured in Australian walnut.
"The entire house is a layered composition of individual forms, planes and materials, from the stone and wood to Venetian plaster, metal and limestone," the architect says. "It is a very clean palette where each material is respected, and serves to create a greater harmony."
Stinson says the materials also meet the owners' requirement for modern architecture that would be warm and inviting. A light-filled, open-plan interior was another requirement.