Project: Point King Residence
Architects: HASSELL
Location: Portsea, Victoria, Australia
Area: 5,489 sq ft
Photographs by: Earl Carter
HASSELL have designed the Point King Residence in Portsea, on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, Australia.
This luxurious contemporary dwelling is distinguished by its prime cliff top position that overlooks the Port Phillip Bay below it.
This house is all about privacy and breeziness. It has been designed as a slated timber box that overlays a limestone base, anchored by the ground floor that can be opened to the outdoors.
Point King Residence is located at Portsea on the Mornington Peninsula in Victoria, Australia. The site is characterised by its cliff top location and orientation towards the north. The entire house sits almost two metres below ground level, limiting the visual bulk of the building when viewed from other parts of Point King and the Mornington Peninsula. It is a strategy that deals with the scale of the building and links it to the site.
The house has been designed as a slatted timber box overlaying a limestone base. Nestled into the rear of a sloping block, the ground floor anchors the house, allowing the second floor to ‘float’, suggesting lightness.
The ironbark timber facade will fade to a grey colour, mimicking the Moonah trees indigenous to the area. The limestone base references a nearby heritage-listed limestone kiln.
It is designed to bring family and friends together in a beach setting, while allowing the owners to rest and relax in privacy. The planning approach divided the house into three zones – shared, private and living.
The three zones are circled around a central entrance space that mimics the kind of courtyard sometimes seen in a European village. This provided the core planning approach adopted by the HASSELL design team.
Generously scaled rooms foster light and natural ventilation flows with ease. The interiors reflect the architecture of the house, using limestone excavated from the site and recycled timber battens. The palette is sympathetic to the local climate and the client’s desire to ground the house, both physically and figuratively. Decorative elements provide a level of intimacy appropriate to the domestic setting.
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