House 14 by Dane Richardson
Australian architect Dane Richardson designed this house in Eagle Bay, Western Australia.
Full description after the photos….

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House 14 by Dane Richardson
The large open planning of the main living room form the central core of the building; the space was divided into areas with clear functions. The volume of this space was divided by a large fire place and level changes. This achieved a connection with others in the space but enabled the different activities to seem slightly separate which has proved very beneficial when the house is at capacity.
The north facing terrace with its built in “fire box” is the focus of all outside entertaining. The open “fire box” provides a fantastic place to sit and star gaze in the evening.
The planning divides the building into three wings. Children’s bedrooms, guest room, bathroom and games/tv room to the western side. The master bedroom and study to the eastern side and the main living volume & court yard central to these wings.
Cantilevers and exposed structural elements feature and further add to the strong lines of the building. Upper levels provide shelter for lower levels.
The entry is screened with high stone walls and a planted court yard; this rustic relaxed threshold must be crossed prior to entering the sharper aesthetic of the building. Stone work is featured in other areas and on the main terrace. The owners shipped a set of old Indian temple doors to the project which were integrated into the stone walls of the entry court, this rustic touch ties in with the coarseness of the stone.
The combination of timber and stone is used to soften and relax the harder geometry of the building. The 4.5m high glazed walls of the main living room open the space to valley views. Sun penetration and heat loss is controlled via electronic window blinds and low emission glass.
The home engages a range low energy use systems and passive solar design principles. It is equipped with a home automation system, collects all potable water, re-uses grey water, utilises low energy & low water use fittings.
Visit the website of Dane Design Australia – here.
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Kenn on 11 Feb 2010 at 8:59 am #
What a beautiful home. I’d love to see what it actually looks like when people move in and add their personal touches (and some COLOR). New home photos, despite the fantastic subject, always look so sterile.
Chad on 11 Feb 2010 at 9:57 am #
One of the best I’ve seen posted.
jwc3 on 11 Feb 2010 at 8:24 pm #
What’s up with the tilted photography?
Alex on 11 Feb 2010 at 9:41 pm #
Dane Richardson is clearly the finest and edgiest designer in Australia. This house is way out there and nothing less than we have come to expect from this multi-award winning architect. Pure Genius.
Los CA on 12 Feb 2010 at 9:08 am #
Nice house, nice decor. I just hope the owners will keep it looking like this and not trash it up and overstuff things or add silly colors. Leave something that is perfect alone. Very nice!
me on 12 Feb 2010 at 3:08 pm #
Gorgeous home, I love the floating level. agree that the tilted photography doesn’t work.
Moi on 16 Feb 2010 at 1:58 pm #
Fantastic and beautiful home….Awful interior furniture. Somebody help them.
Ida on 08 Mar 2010 at 6:15 am #
Kenn, the reason it looks sterile is so as not to elicit comments like Moi’s. Don’t worry Moi, help WAS sought – these are pedigreed pieces – look again.