BLOXAS adds periscope-shaped extension and courtyard veranda to Melbourne house

Australian studio BLOXAS adopted elements from Japanese architecture to reorganise the spaces of this Melbourne residence around a courtyard then added a new timber-clad extension shaped like a periscope (+ slideshow).

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Located in the suburb of Fitzroy North, the renovated open-plan house was designed by BLOXAS to provide a “dynamic mix of spaces” for a family of four who had previously spent many years living and working in Japan.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

The building has an L-shaped plan that wraps around the long north-facing courtyard. A wooden deck runs along the edge of the lawn as an imitation of the traditional Japanese engawa – a narrow veranda –  and prompted the residence to be named Engawa House.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

“This design was structured around the concept of engawa,” explained architect and studio principal Anthony Clarke. “This space offers a transition between the yielding comfort of the grassed courtyard and the polished concrete floor of the interior.”

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Three red brick chimneys belonging to the old structure are dotted through the house. One sits along the street-facing southern elevation, forming a visual break between the white-painted weatherboards cladding the original house and the black-stained plywood walls of the extension.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Comparing the building to a red brick factory across the street, Clarke added: “The black stained plywood exterior of the facade will age sympathetically with the warehouses surrounding it, offering a unique composition against the retained brickwork fireplace.”

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Living, dining and kitchen areas occupy a large rectilinear space at the centre of the house and can be opened out to the courtyard by sliding back a series of floor-to-ceiling glass doors.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

A staircase leads up from the living room to a mezzanine study, from which residents can survey activities going on beneath them.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

New timber-framed windows puncture the facade and a bathroom wraps around another of the old chimneys.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Photography is by Peter Bennetts.

Read on for a project description from Anthony Clarke of BLOXAS:


Engawa House

Melbourne’s inner-north has a distinct European feel of community living. Small houses compel people towards local parks and curbside gardens, blurring the threshold between public and private. The Engawa House in North Fitzroy, embraces this atmosphere, as the dynamic and historical patchwork of the surrounding context becomes part of each living space.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

The clients, a family of four, described a space offering them a feeling of discovery, through a variety of intersecting planes, and the layering of natural light. They required a relocated central bathroom, kitchen, dining, living, additional bedroom with ensuite, as well as a mezzanine office and external entertaining area.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

A full facing northern wing, mixing a combination of single and double storey forms, attaches itself to the front rooms of the existing house. The simple orientation takes advantage of the full range of views from the mezzanine, whilst being sympathetic to its elevational context. The living, dining and bedroom/en suite skirt a large and long courtyard garden, maximising sustainable performance, and offering northern light into each new program.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

This design was structured around the concept of “Engawa”, referring to an exterior hallway on the side of a traditional Japanese dwelling. This space offers a transition between the yielding comfort of the grassed courtyard and the polished concrete floor of the interior. It also offers a transitional space for informal seating.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

The open living and mezzanine enhance a visual and auditory connection, with a distinct lack of privacy, embracing the family’s already strong connection.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Rather than competing with the streetscape, BLOXAS utilised council restrictions to invite exploration yet maintain integrity. The striking black form signposts the street corner and its palette of styles.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

The Engawa House interplays scale and height, contributing to the elevational rhythm of the red factory brickwork, single-storey weatherboard terraces and the multi-storey residential context.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Large timber windows to the southern boundary invite the engagement between neighbouring residents and the clients of the Engawa House.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Underpinning the projects conceptual idea was a very tight budget. The addition provides a smaller overall footprint than the previous plan, now maximising the site’s potential. The black stained plywood exterior of the facade will age sympathetically with the warehouses surrounding it, offering a unique composition against the retained brickwork fireplace. This facilitated a high quality interior where the client desired a more minimal and refined finish.

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda

Architect: Black Line One X Architecture Studio
Location: Fitzroy North, Melbourne, Australia
Builder: Zachary Spark Constructions
Project Year: 2013
Furniture: Ross Gardam, Earl Pinto

Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda
Mezzanine floor plan – click for larger image
Engawa House in Melbourne by BLOXAS adopts a traditional Japanese veranda
Sections – click for larger image

The post BLOXAS adds periscope-shaped extension
and courtyard veranda to Melbourne house
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Profile House by BLOXAS

A wooden wall with the silhouette of three little buildings lines the edge of this house extension in Melbourne by Australian architecture studio BLOXAS (+ slideshow).

Profile House by BLOXAS

Profile House is located within the industrial district of Brunswick East, so BLOXAS designed a new facade that would reference the surrounding brick and corrugated iron warehouses, as well as the timber-clad exterior of the original building.

Profile House by BLOXAS

The front entrance to the house remains in its previous location on the northern elevation, while the new rough-sawn ash facade grows out of a boundary fence on the western perimeter and stretches out along the length of the site.

Profile House by BLOXAS

The extension doubles the size of the single-storey house. The architects retained three front rooms and one small bathroom, then increased the size of the kitchen and dining room and added a new children’s playroom, living room and en suite bedroom beyond.

Profile House by BLOXAS

The zigzagging profile of the building gives angled ceilings to each of the new spaces and brings daylight in through high-level windows and rooflights.

Profile House by BLOXAS

“The defining character of each internal space is the high undulating ceilings,” says BLOXAS director Anthony Clarke. “These, assisted by a central wharf-decking courtyard and smaller lightwell to the west, allow natural light to penetrate throughout the entire plan.”

Profile House by BLOXAS

The long narrow lightwell sits behind the western elevation, while the split-level courtyard is tucked into a recess on the east side of the building so that both the dining room and living room can open out to it.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Most of the new rooms feature bamboo flooring, apart from the living room that has a polished concrete ground surface.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Clarke established BLOXAS, short for Black Line One X Architecture Studio, in 2009 and the studio is based in Fitzroy North, Victoria. See more Australian architecture on Dezeen.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Photography is by Peter Bennetts.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Here’s a project description from BLOXAS:


Profile House

The Profile House offers an evocative tribute to the defined industrial typology of Brunswick East, in Melbourne’s inner north. Simple planning creates clean, elegant and sculptural internal living spaces.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Seeking an addition to their typically dark Californian Bungalow, the clients emphasised the sustainable performance of their future home. Accordingly, they described a space with a feeling of openness, lightness, and visual continuity, connecting their home and landscape.

Profile House by BLOXAS

These values were reinforced by their professions, one specialising in environmental site characterisation and remediation, and the other practicing alternative medicine.

Profile House by BLOXAS

Located in a semi-industrial zone, the site offers visual proximity to the area’s brick and corrugated iron warehouses. Some warehouses and factories are still operational, whilst many lie dormant and in disrepair, ripe for either their imminent demise or redevelopment into multi-storey apartment blocks.

Profile House by BLOXAS

A strong internal vertical profile extrudes to form the western elevation. Clad with rough-sawn overlapping Victorian Ash timber, this distinct contour continues along the western boundary as the defining architectural expression of the Profile House, whilst delivering on the brief of a secure building.

Profile House by BLOXAS

The defining character of each internal space is the high undulating ceilings, these, assisted by a central wharf-decking courtyard and smaller light-well to the west, allow natural light to penetrate throughout the entire plan.

Profile House by BLOXAS

In addition to the retention of three front rooms and central bathroom, the plan now features a re-worked kitchen and dining area, an informal children’s area, and new living space. A new main bedroom, ensuite and private garden are also incorporated. The overall design strengthens family engagement and visual communication, reinforcing the relationships between space and activity.

Profile House by BLOXAS
Floor plan – click for larger image

In addition to dependable design strategies such as careful plan orientation and cross ventilation, solar hot water and water harvesting systems were also included, as well as the use of north facing thermal mass in the main living space. Natural material choices and finishes of low embodied energy including: un-seasoned, un-milled Victorian ash timber, and bamboo flooring through-out the addition adhered to the client’s environmental stipulations.

 

Profile House by BLOXAS
Cross section one – click for larger image

A refreshing change from housing that simply maximises developer returns, neighbours have responded appreciatively to the low scale design, whilst maintaining the area’s built integrity. In a subtle move the project further softens the corner, with the use of the timber in the boundary wall, juxtaposing against the materials of the factories.

Profile House by BLOXAS
Cross section two – click for larger image

This compact, economical and highly livable outcome was a result of inclusive dialogue between all consultants, the builder, architect and in particular the client.

Profile House by BLOXAS
Cross section three – click for larger image

Architect: Black Line One X Architecture Studio.
Location: Brunswick East, Melbourne, Australia.
Builder: Genjusho
Project year: 2012
Areas: Site = 371sq.m, Existing house area = 87sq.m, Additional area = 83sq.m
Furniture: ‘Earl Pinto’ and Ross Gardam

The post Profile House
by BLOXAS
appeared first on Dezeen.