Designed by CHT Architects
From the architects:
The idea of creating just another contemporary ‘box’ was not on the mind of either the architects or their homeowners when planning a new house in a bayside suburb of Melbourne.
The owners, a couple with two children, could have modified the existing architect-designed house on their 1000m² site.
However, it had not weathered well, despite being only 20 years old, with the timber windows and eaves suffering the effects of the salt air.
The existing house also lacked natural light and was poorly orientated on the site, having a northern aspect to the street.
Our brief was to fundamentally create a ‘home’, a place they could enjoy living in,” says architect David Carabott, founding director of CHT Architects.
“They were also looking for a place that provided for multi-generational living,” he says.
The large two-level home, with basement-level car parking, has the silhouette of a house with a distinctive pitched roof, not dissimilar to a child’s drawing representing the archetypal house.
But instead of small windows, here there are generous glazed walls articulated below a steel roof that extends to the ground and is expressed as walls either side.
Raked ceilings (reaching up to 9m in height) and internal voids add to the sculptural feel of the house.
These elements transform the traditional house form into something that’s contemporary and, importantly, light filled – a central courtyard allows northern light to permeate the core.