John Wardle’s Fairhaven Beach House stretches out towards the ocean

Angular zinc-clad volumes fold around a central courtyard and stretch out towards ocean views at this house designed by Australian architect John Wardle on the scenic Great Ocean Road in Victoria (+ movie).

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

Named Fairhaven Beach House, the three-storey residence is perched on the top of a hill. John Wardle Architects laid out the building with an uneven U-shaped plan to create a wall of windows facing the water and an east-facing courtyard that is protected from coastal winds.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

The route from the entrance to a large living room was intended as a dramatic progression through the building, passing by a cantilevered study and through a pivoting asymmetric door.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

“It is a dynamic, fluid journey through the house from arrival to the ocean view,” said the architects, whose past projects include a house on a working sheep farm in Tasmania.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

“It is choreographed to increase anticipation before reaching the main living space,” they added.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

A large kitchen and dining room is positioned on one side and projects even further towards the coastline, plus a secluded balcony provides an opportunity to dine outdoors.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

“The house is carefully zoned to allow for privacy and communal gathering,” said the architects.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

While the exterior of the house is clad with grey zinc panels to blend in with the tones of the bush landscape, the interior features timber surfaces across every wall, floor and ceiling.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

Two bedrooms are located on the ground floor and a wooden staircase leads up to a third on the upper storey.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

A garage, wine cellar and informal living room are tucked away in the basement.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

Fairhaven Beach House topped the residential category at the Australian National Architecture Awards earlier this month. Judges described it as “a masterful control of form and space, scale, material and detail”.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

Photography is by Trevor Mein. Movie is by Maximilian Mein.

Here’s more information from John Wardle Architects:


Fairhaven Residence

The Fairhaven Beach House is located on top of the ridgeline above the Great Ocean Road on the Victorian coastline. The site enjoys panoramic views over the southern ocean and surf beach below.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

The proportions, orientation and dimensions of windows have been tailored to particular views and to reveal internal spaces. The design process has been one akin to scenography, bringing together sensory and spatial experiences to frame the theatre of inhabitation within.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

This beach house coils and steps around a protected central courtyard, which creates an outdoor space sheltered from the harsh prevailing winds. The living area doors and an oversized sliding kitchen window open up and integrate the courtyard with the house during fine weather.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

It is a dynamic, fluid journey through the house from arrival to the ocean view; it is choreographed to increase anticipation before reaching the main living space.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

As you step beneath a cantilevered study into a dramatic vertical entry space, you become acutely aware of a number of twists and folds along its length that make the transformation into the horizontal living space. Its main window aperture matches the cinematic proportions of the ocean view.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

The house is carefully zoned to allow for privacy and communal gathering. The upper level houses a suite of private rooms including a main bedroom, ensuite, study and viewing terrace. The entry level contains a pair of bedrooms and bathroom. The main living and dining space is where the occupants come together. A garage, laundry and informal living space are hidden from view in a basement level.

John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean

Materially the house is clad in a green-grey zinc cladding, for both its longevity and natural colouring that merges with the scrub and tea tree landscape. In contrast, the interior of the house is completely lined in timber (floors, walls, cabinetry and ceilings) to form an enclosure for living that its inhabitants become completely immersed within. The eye is then always drawn back to the outlook beyond.

Site plan of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
Site plan – click for larger image
Basement plan of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
Basement plan – click for larger image
Ground floor plan of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
First floor plan – click for larger image
Elevation of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
Long section one – click for larger image
Elevation of John Wardle's Fairhaven Beach House wraps a courtyard and stretches towards the ocean
Long section two – click for larger image

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Small projects are “good grounding for research” – John Wardle on Shearer’s Quarters

World Architecture Festival 2012: Australian architect John Wardle tells Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs how small projects can be “a good grounding for research and testing of ideas” in this movie we filmed about his award-winning Shearer’s Quarters at the World Architecture Festival earlier this month.

Shearer’s Quarters by John Wardle Architects

The building, which picked up the award in the villas category, provides a guesthouse alongside Wardle’s own farmhouse on an island off the coast of Tasmania. The architect explains how the volume of the building employs “a series of geometric shifts” that transform it from ”a skillion at one end” to “a gable at the other”. The structure is also based on a strict geometric grid that dictates “all the windows, the doors, the joinery and the room dimensions”.

Shearer’s Quarters by John Wardle Architects

The new building is clad in corrugated iron, which Wardle describes as “the traditional material for agricultural sheds” in the area. “But as it reveals itself it opens up to a completely timber-lined interior,” he says. This interior accommodates visiting family and friends, as well as travelling sheep shearers and Wardle discusses how ”the social culture of shearing is a wonderful bit of theatre.”

Shearer’s Quarters by John Wardle Architects

Wardle also explains how his Melbourne-based practice usually works on larger projects and describes how the retention of water is an important aspect in the environmental management of any new building in Australia. He states the importance of bringing building back to cities to prevent urban sprawl and says that: ”Now is the time for considering the way that cities shape themselves and develop.”

Shearer’s Quarters by John Wardle Architects

We’ve filmed a series of interviews with award winners at the World Architecture Festival, which we’re publishing over the next few days – see our interview about the World Building of the Year with architect Chris Wilkinson and our interview with the shopping centre winner Mark Dytham.

See all our stories about WAF 2012 »

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Slideshow: Shearer’s Quarters by John Wardle Architects

World Architecture Festival 2012: here’s a slideshow of the winner in the villa category at the World Architecture Festival, which is a house on a working sheep farm on North Bruny Island, Tasmania, by John Wardle Architects

Clad in galvanised, corrugated iron, Shearer’s Quarters is positioned on the site of an old shearing shed alongside a timber-clad cottage.

Pine lines the interior walls, where an open-plan living room and three bedrooms provide enough room to accommodate guests that include sheep shearers and friends on tree-planting weekends.

Bedroom walls are covered with recycled apple crates that the architects sourced from nearby orchards.

We’ve now announced winners for all the awards, including World Building of the YearFuture Project of the Year and Landscape of the Year, as well as all the category winners from day one and day two.

Dezeen is media partner for the World Architecture Festival, which took place at the Marina Bay Sands hotel and conference centre in Singapore. You can follow all our coverage of the event here, including a series of movies we filmed with programme director Paul Finch.

We’re also filming movies with some of the winners, which we’ll be featuring on Dezeen soon.

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by John Wardle Architects
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