St Lucia House

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Skinner & Brown (web)
House
2000
Brisbane
Jon Linkins (web)

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2000 PROJECTS

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This is the architects' first design collaboration in twenty years of architecture - their own family house. Functionally the house is zoned into five interlocking levels that give a vertical gradation of spatial intimacy. On a compact suburban site, the house looks onto a small courtyard encircled by three fully grown trees. The principal living volume overlooking the court is an ambiguous and complex space at the heart of the narrative promenade, which links the five levels of the building to the courtyard. Spatially, this room is conceived as a modern mutation of the verandah - an elevated, half-open space which evokes simultaneous sensations of prospect and refuge. The architects have used the project to gently proselytise for a modern architecture in Brisbane which explores the expressive potential of architectural space. Just as physiological comfort in the subtropics relies on the generous flow of cooling air around the body, they believe a comparable psychological satisfaction can be derived from the funnelling, pooling and release of architectural space
The existing magnificent trees were not only the starting point for planning of this evocative family hpome in Brisbane's St Lucia, but also represent a sacred site under which many important family celebrations have taken place
All the decorative elaboration is out there in the trees. The architects experimented with spatial concepts and left nature to provide the decorative elements.
In the striking St Lucia House the verandah is moved inside in the sense that its principal volume - the large kitchen/dining/ living/deck space - is elevated (a piano nobile) and overlooks a garden courtyard through high operable north-facing windows shaded by mature trees and roof overhangs. The interlocking five level house (slab floors, pine-framed walls, sheet finished) rises from teenage bedrooms at courtyard level to a poolside family room, the central living space and parents' bedroom, and concludes in a bridge-like study loft. It is a handsome exercise in generous indoor-outdoor spacing characterised as "regional modernism" in which, rather than an elaboration of construction, structure and fabric, the principal expression is the experience of architectural space.

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