Maleny House by Bark Design Architects
Bark Design Architects have completed the Maleny House on Australia’s Sunshine Coast.
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Maleny House by Bark Design Architects
The ‘Glass House Mountain House’ in Maleny, celebrates its site, perched on the edge of the remnant rim of the Glass House range, as well as the essence of its place – ‘sky and mountains’. Translated into a place of ‘glass and stone’ inextricably connected to its landscape it has qualities of being anchored, robust and earthbound as well as being transparent, light and floating.
Memorable to the experience is the ‘sanctuary’ of the courtyard space, whose edges are defined by ambiguous indoor outdoor thresholds of the transparent internal spaces, sitting between the refuge of a monumental basalt ‘Garden Wall’ and the broader natural volcanic landscape. Engaging with existing topography, orientation, views and vegetation, the house balances economy and fine craft.
It celebrates economical finishes, directness, authenticity, natural, textured and unadorned surfaces which are embroidered with highly crafted timber elements and pieces. Surfaces, finishes and details exhibit the Japanese concept of wabi sabi – the beauty of things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete, allowed to weather and evolve with time.
Sustainability starts with natural cooling and lighting, harnessing available breezes and winter sun, using locally sourced hardwood, plantation grown plywood cladding and lining, recycled Blackbutt timber floors, local quarry rock, and endemic garden species.
Establishing habitation on this site has been guided by the key principles of;
·‘Anchoring’ a man made courtyard sanctuary between the refuge of a monumental ‘Garden Wall’ and the broader natural volcanic landscape,
·‘Mapping’ particular mountain vistas into and through, transparent internal spaces, lacing the internal spatial zones of the house around the edges of a made landscape, a private courtyard to shelter from weather and road whilst capturing Northern aspect for winter sun,
·Translate the site experience of ‘sky and mountains’ into a place of ‘glass and stone’ inextricably connected to its landscape,
·Qualities of being anchored, robust and earthbound as well as transparent, lite and floating,
·Surfaces, finishes and details exhibit the Japanese idea of wabi sabi as a manifestation of a beauty of things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete which are allowed to weather and evolve with time.
Public amenity includes a larger landscape buffer and setback with preservation of shade trees to the street, maintenance of the public view through parts of the building and site, and from the valley below, the buildings form and bulk on the escarpment appears recessive and non reflective rather than dominant to the landscape of the ridge.
Requirements of the functional brief are separated into distinct spatial zones and the feeling of pavilions connected around the edges of the main outdoor courtyard space creates a loosely connected resort or village feel of a mountain lodge typology.
Essential to making Place is the contribution of the landscape architecture, and the fine craft embued Gabion stone wall, which evolved into a personally placed landscape art element by the stone mason, and the crafted timber joinery elements and the craft of the artist of the fabric screen piece.
Balancing elements of economy and fine craft, largely the house exhibits economical finishes, a certain directness, authenticity, natural, textured and unadorned surfaces which are then embroidered with some key highly crafted timber elements and pieces.
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Architect: Bark Design Architects
Project Team: Stephen Guthrie, Lindy Atkin, Chris Kolka, Sam Cunningham, Rebecca Berris, Sarah McMahon, David Teeland, Phil Tillotson
Structural Engineer: Rod Bligh, Bligh Tanner
Landscape Architect: Pat Atkin, Landform
Builder: Nathan Quail, Quail Constructions
Photographer: Christopher Frederick Jones
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shane on 26 Feb 2012 at 6:22 pm #
the fire pit may be a little cheesey but other than that I really like this design. Playful & unpretentious
Dan Royle on 26 Feb 2012 at 6:48 pm #
Tinder. Not suitable for Australian rural conditions.
Bert on 27 Feb 2012 at 12:40 am #
The house is beautiful. The view is STUNNING!
Maarit on 27 Feb 2012 at 6:54 am #
Exterior and layout: interesting features. Interior: only Saarinen’s Tulip chairs were missing, every other design piece from the 19th century was there. Where did the imagination stop?
Maarit on 27 Feb 2012 at 6:56 am #
Sorry, missed one pic: even the Tulips where there
Juice on 27 Feb 2012 at 2:40 pm #
What beauty. It takes advantage of all the natural beauty surrounding it too!
Peter van der Veer on 27 Feb 2012 at 9:52 pm #
This design is quietly everything many an architect and student loudly boasts yet never applies.
It is also a great show-piece of what seems to have become the new Australian vernacular;
a crazy cacophony of lines, angles, shapes and spaces that frenetically WORK together – functioning. It’s hardly passive.
While in shot 5, the elements visually conglomerate into an architectural crawly thing.
This is serious fun.
It is a project full of lessons far beyond the simple east – west axis of the living wing to align with the sun’s consistent overhead sub-tropical transit (approx 25`S).
This design has been governed by comprehensive rational accounting;
Many sophisticated details have been factored and configured into every detail to work naturally and freely with each other in this very well reasoned cacophony.
It is an encyclopaedia.
Shot 25 especially, contains the most important universal model image for everyone.
A principle that needs to become human instinct again.
First applied more than 6,000 years ago, it demonstrates the most important simple basic principle and need that most people neither understand, nor apply, nor respect;
The image is the most succinct lesson in thermal ventilation and control.
In that one image is virtually we can learn about priceless climate control and it’s comforts – especially the relaxing sensation of fresh air and resulting health benefits.
The louvres are not a fad driven cliché.
Their placements have been crucially factored in. Not only in accordance with the laws of nature and the variables of the governing climate but also the minute pockets within which the building itself has imposed there as well as the surrounding topography too causing inversion and everything else as well.
It is architecture as biology.
Congratulations.
Peter van der Veer on 28 Feb 2012 at 5:15 am #
oops there is a typo-
The fourth last sentence should begin: “In that one image is virtually everything …”
And everyone, please carefully consider the configuration with the clerestory in shot 25.
Hunter on 01 Mar 2012 at 7:47 am #
in some instances I find the building over designed… but beautiful as a whole.