Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

An oversailing glass roof and steel mesh curtain protect a two-storey extension and terrace at a historic Sydney house.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

The double-height curtain provides shade and privacy but can be drawn back to open the house to the remodelled garden.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Australian architects Allen Jack+Cottier converted the High Victorian house in collaboration with designer Belinda Koopman, while the garden was redesigned by Vladimir Sitta.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

The house formerly contained a private zoo, according to the architects.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Glass Loggia House was recently awarded two Houses magazine awards.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

While this house uses a mesh curtain for cooling and privacy, we recently published a house that achieves the same using mist – see our earlier story here.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

See also our previous story about a sports centre designed by Allen Jack+Cottier.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Photography is by Nic Bailey of Allen Jack+Cottier.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Glass Loggia House wins two prestigious HOUSES Magazine awards for design excellence
18th July 2011

Allen Jack+Cottier, Belinda Koopman and Vladimir Sitta of Terragram, have been honoured among Australia’s best house, garden and apartment designers at the inaugural HOUSES magazine awards in Melbourne on Friday evening, for their work on Glass Loggia House in Glebe, NSW.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Their transformation of the dark rear living spaces and run down garden of a grand two storey High Victorian style residence in Sydney’s inner west won the Outside category, and also a High Commendation for House Alteration and Addition under 200 m2.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

The judges noted “The approach of both the landscape architect and architect respects the remnants of the past, adding another layer to history. Through a suite of new spaces the house and garden is now more engaged with the people who live there… The walls, rooms, corridors, platforms, and curtains create a palpable ambiguity about what is inside and outside, old and new.”

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

The house was originally a private zoo, so when work started in 2003 Vladimir Sitta retained and reused building fabric remnants to construct a “Garden of Ghosts” with a polished concrete pool ‘fenced’ by a fish skeleton vitrine and plant filled moat.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Jim Koopman, Director – Architecture, Allen Jack+Cottier, said “ We conceived a double volume glass loggia sheltered on the west by an existing cypress stand to create a useable outdoor area in a way that responds to the grand scale of the existing building ,and was appropriate to the conservation area.

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Click above for larger image

“The loggia and new rooms are designed to exploit the ambiguities between what is inside and what is outside with a dramatic external steel mesh curtain shading the whole north- west facade, which operates to transform the loggia and garden spaces for different family functions.”

Glass Loggia House by Allen Jack+Cottier, Vladimir Sitta and Belinda Koopman

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Brooks Avenue House
by Bricault Design
Park Avenue South
by Studioctopi
Elm & Willow House
by Architects EAT

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

A steel shell curls over the arched frame of this sports hall near Sydney by Australian architects Allen Jack+Cottier.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

Glazed end walls in the Milson Island Sports Hall allow views right through the building.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack and Cottier

The inside is clad in curved, slotted plywood to absorb noise and withstand the impact of stray balls.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

Strips of glazing run along both sides of the building below head height.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

More stories about sport on Dezeen »

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

Photography is by Nic Bailey of Allen Jack+Cottier.

The following information is from the architects:


Milson Island Sports Hall

The most recent addition to Allen Jack + Cottier’s suite of award-winning sports and recreation centres for the NSW Department of Sport & Recreation is located just north of Sydney on Milson Island, in the Hawkesbury River.

The shape of the building emerged by morphing the ideal shapes resulting from the thermodynamic analysis, the side wind forces, the need to shed leaves and branches and yet collect water and the enclosure requirements. All building elements had to be sized to be barged across the river to the site.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack and Cottier

The design celebrates this integrated thinking by not allowing any visible ridge, eaves gutters, downpipes or skylights on the exterior. The natural thermal ventilation aided by the suction caused by the wing shape demanded a clean crisp interior skin with no visible fixings bracing, wiring or lighting.

The acoustic slotted ply ceiling is integrated to the structural bracing, so that the walls and ceiling carry all the wind loads of 38 m of building to the ground. The shape of the building reduced wind load by 30%, thus reducing structural sizes and saving money.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

At night, the curved wing shape of the new building acts as a proscenium arch to define the place for the campfire, an important part of each camp at the site. It works both for the audience inside looking out to the gathering space, and for the audience around the fireplace looking back into the hall.

When the campfire is lit at night, and the hall interior is illuminated only by a strip of lights, the building seems to magically float off the ground, into the surrounding bushland.

Natural light from the roof windows ground level slot windows and end walls create an even, almost art gallery like, light on the playing surface of the hall.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

A combination of twelve wind turbines and a series of floor mounted louvres ensure the building remains cool in Sydney’s fierce summer heat.  In winter with the turbines and louvres closed a heat plume forms to act like an insulation blanket. Attached amenities and storage modules service the fireplace, the bushwalking activities and the oval so have to be accessed from outside, forming a strong entry and destination point.

Roof water, free from the blockage of leaves and branches, falls clear of the sloping glass slots into an oversized roof garden for natural filtering and collection to water tanks for future use.

This is a powerful building which in its frugality demonstrates the essence of shelter.

Milson Island Sports Hall by Allen Jack+Cottier

Completed: 2010
Cost: A$ 2.7 m
GFA: 670 m2
Client: Sport and Recreation, Community’s NSW


See also:

.

ANZAS Dance Studio by Tsutsumi and AssociatesFootball Training Centre
by RUFproject
Parc de la Ciutadella by
Batlle i Roig Arquitectes