The Marcus Beach House by Bark Architects
Bark Architects have designed the Marcus Beach House, located on the Sunshine Coast of Queensland, Australia.
Full description after the photos….

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The Marcus Beach House by Bark Architects
The Marcus Beach house celebrates a natural, coastal setting providing its occupants with an inextricable relationship to the landscape and sensitive surrounding environment. The dwelling explores lightness, filtering natural breezes, layers of transparency and integrating indoor / outdoor spaces within dynamic patterns of light and shadow, being a simple frame to enable a contemporary sustainable lifestyle to unfold.
Whilst feeling like a ‘beach house’ sited 250 meters away from Marcus Beach, the basic ‘pavilion’ plan was sketched out in the sand during an early site visit: a simple diagram of two pavilions placed either side of a venerable 100 year old Morton Bay Ash that takes centre stage to the scale, proportions and life of the house around it. The pavilions sit lightly on the site and are linked by a transparent bridge in an arrangement that opens all the spaces to the light, breeze and garden views of the north. The garden is protected by a perimeter wall wrapped in endemic vines providing an acoustic ‘green’ buffer to a nearby busy road.
On approach from the street, the sloping terrain naturally guides an axial timber boardwalk under a simple timber pergola structure arriving in the courtyard opposite the Morton Bay Ash. The main pavilion to the west accommodates living spaces focused around a double height deck space overlooking the swimming pool and northern garden. The Master Bedroom suite is accessed via a polycarbonate clad stair tower that is by day a contemplative space and by night, a lantern. The Morton Bay Ash casts shadows onto the polycarbonate further animating the edges of the courtyard and bringing the landscape inside the house. The recent additions of a study ‘pop out,’ enclosed passage link below the bridge, Laundry and Powder room further animate the edges of the courtyard space whilst responding to the needs of its new occupants.
The house is open and light and possesses simple sustainable design principles to passively defend the occupants from the elements. Windows and doors are strategically positioned to capture the prevailing breezes whilst roof overhangs are generous protecting the house from direct summer sunlight. Air conditioning has not been installed in the Marcus Beach House nor is it desired. Artificial lighting is kept to a minimum due to the generous amount and position of glazing, particularly facing north. The roof over the Master Bedroom pavilion rises to the north providing a band of high level, operable, clerestory glazing capturing daylight and allowing any warm air to escape, setting up an effective ‘stack effect’ natural cooling process.
The connection between the deck and living spaces is dynamic and direct. As the heart of the house, the covered double height outdoor room is actively used all year round as dappled sunlight is filtered through a timber batten screen hung below the roof structure. Indoor and outdoor realms are connected through an interlocking series of alcoves and nooks like a low edge deck seat and reading nook pop-out located off the stair landing. The courtyard and Morton Bay Ash are a focal point in which almost all rooms within the dwelling enjoy a connection.
Architecture: Bark Architects
Location: Marcus Beach, Queensland
House Area: 260m2
Site Area: 727 m2
Builder: Murray Wall
Structural Engineer: Meecham Engineers
Materials: Spotted Gum hardwood Timber, zincalume sheeting, corrugated zincalume, clear & opal polycarbonate, Fibre Cement sheet cladding, timber tongue & groove flooring, plasterboard wall lining, plywood ceiling lining.
Photographer: Christopher Frederick Jones
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Zero34 on 26 Jul 2010 at 9:52 am #
STUNNING. that’s all there is to it.
BjZ on 26 Jul 2010 at 10:06 am #
Love it! Love it! Love it! Great use of wood in all the right places, the indoor outdoor harmony is well fused with all the greenery and the pool enhances it all despite its simplicity. Another fine project to add to my favorites!!!
Victor T on 26 Jul 2010 at 5:38 pm #
LOVE LOVE LOVE this house. Wow.
Alaana on 26 Jul 2010 at 6:47 pm #
How do I get in contact with Bark Architects? This project is amazing, and so are others that I’ve come across. But the website doesn’t show contact details properly for me!
kastatelier on 26 Jul 2010 at 6:56 pm #
its more lovely if the books is located not under where we sit.
Vinh Doan on 26 Jul 2010 at 7:32 pm #
Like the space of dinning so much.
. Nice house and one good experience for my countryside house
It is kinda tropical style of house which could be adapted to Vietnam country climate
Vinh Doan from Vietnam
Cristina on 27 Jul 2010 at 3:19 am #
Beautiful house, love how they used wood.
Kim on 27 Jul 2010 at 5:51 am #
Gorgeous house. Great job executing the indoor/outdoor relationship. In such a simple modern house I see so many cozy knooks to read a book in! I love it, and how can you not love the Queensland landscape!
Contact info:
+617 5471 0340
[email protected]
Kim on 27 Jul 2010 at 5:52 am #
The contact info I listed was for Alaana – I could see the info from their site ok.
CMV on 27 Jul 2010 at 12:13 pm #
Supafresh!
George Papadopoulos Skinotechniki on 06 Aug 2010 at 10:32 pm #
One of the best, I have ever seen