Project: Split House
Architects: BKK Architects
Location: Port Phillip Bay, Victoria, Australia
Area: 3,444 sq ft
Photographs by: Peter Bennetts
The Split House is a pair of pavilions characterized by the experimental spirit of mid-twentieth-century design with a firmly twenty-first-century bent. It was designed by BKK Architects to provide a family home that considers privacy, thermal comfort and spatial delight.
The design involved an ultimate understanding of the site’s topography, geology and vegetation which resulted in the house taking the slope of the land not as an obstacle but rather as a means to fulfill the brief.
From the architects: “The Split House negotiates a complex range of conditions typical of emerging coastal developments. New houses for ‘downsizers’ in a suburban mode, paved driveways and letterboxes prevail, vying for the expansive views to Port Philip Bay, and backed by the relatively wild, coastal woodland of Mt Martha Public Park. The Split House provides a range of spatial relationships to its site and the broader territory that carefully balances the owners’ desire for privacy and engagement with their surrounds. The house comprises two relatively simple volumes linked by a splayed stair that also acts as a seating area for people to gather, listen to music, sit in the sun.
Occupying separate levels that follow the natural contours of the site, the two pavilions provide a separation between the upper, main living/master bedroom zone and rumpus room/guest bedrooms below. Through the curation of windows and doors a range of direct and indirect connections to the landscape provide multiple opportunities for occupation throughout the year. Smaller elements, such as integrated seating, stairs and study nooks provide spaces for quiet contemplation, juxtaposed with larger communal areas for family and friends to come together.”
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