Pacific House | Alexander & CO.

Sydney / Australia / 2022

21
21 Love 1,614 Visits Published

Pacific House is an alteration and addition to an existing 1990’s concrete framed cliffside dwelling. It is exposed to the Easterly facing ocean and closely adjacent similar cliff side dwelling structures. We have replanned the dwelling, adding external amenity including landscape works and a swimming pool. We have also modified portions of the exterior building envelope including doors and windows, cladding, entries, external decks, facades and pergolas. 


The five-bedroom home has been transformed into a contemporary, materially rich and performative family dwelling. The design vernacular is inspired by the client’s European Story of Origin, the practicalities of family life and the ocean adjacency. 


Client Design Brief


Pacific House required the building to be quite fundamentally replanned. Although originally built substantially in masonry well before we were retained for our consultancy, it was poorly planned and was dislocated from its views, its gardens and its room logics. Our client, a young professional family, required that the house provide for their children, and the functional engineer of family life.


Our client is a long time advocate for our practice. Having completed various work for their commercial businesses, this project represented an opportunity to personalise their story within their own home. We decided that the home must have two sides; the kitchen and garden side including a pool, and a view side. After all, you can’t play in a view. Hence the plan was orientated to allow for the children and the duty of meals, swimming and play. and then for the adults and the contemplation of watching the ocean.


Modifying within the substantial structural constraints, the swimming pool was located in an old driveway excavation. ‘P&O’ inspired, the breakfast nook overlooks the pool length and creates a folly within the neoclassic formality of the plan at large. The house is a combination of contemporary and neo-classicism but retains its youthfulness.


Response to The Client’s Brief


The home contains five bedrooms, family bathroom, ensuite and robe and roof access to the upper floor. A lower guest bedroom, rumpus, living and dining room, breakfast nook and kitchen open to the rear garden and pool. The lowest level contains gym, sauna, wellness and garage.


The facades are white and textural, a backdrop onto which flowing green planting is contrasted. The concrete chassis of the old building is made more material and curves are added to the view corner doors. it is a softer, more approachable version of what it was, notwithstanding that its 90’s mystique is not altogether abolished. It becomes something of a Mediterranean inspired monolith in draping green. 


Inside, ceiling height constraints lead us to ensure that the finishes and ceiling details are focal. New steel beams support larger concrete openings within the plan and are dressed in timber to make them purposeful. Existing masonry walls required us to play within structural constraints, with room dimensions taking on careful geometries. The exterior facades of the building contain terraces, gardens, balconies and planted edges. The building is conceived to become lost in gardens, the pool conceived as a moment of P&O interaction with a curving dining niche. The palette is richly textured but leans monochromatic. 


Were There Any Design Challenges in The Project That Were Overcome?


The existing structure required a Development Application and followed an orthodox design and documentation procedure. The coastal exposure of the site lead a construction process that was fraught with complexity. High winds and lashing storms ensured that the project was started and stopped several times, and internal linings which were storm damaged needed to be replaced mid-way through the fit out process.


Manufacture and supply chain failures also conspired to extend the build time frame well beyond what was expected. The usual neighbourhood tensions rose and fell and at least some furniture was blown off the balcony along the way! 


How Did We Achieve Excellence/Beauty/Innovation in Our Design Outcome?


Principal Jeremy Bull says, “I liken these projects to breathing new life into an old maid. She was substantial in her structure but devoid of spirit and certainly absent of any operational utility. I think that the act of storytelling well into a not-too-old-but-plenty-bad chassis in a way that feels personal and convincing is a worthy exercise and one I am quite fond of. The building is once again breathing and quite alive. She feels both then and now. Aged and contemporary. Ready for a new family and her next 30 or so years I hope.”


Principal Architect: Jeremy Bull


Interior Design Team: Shelby Griffiths, Jordan Fleming

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    Pacific House is an alteration and addition to an existing 1990’s concrete framed cliffside dwelling. It is exposed to the Easterly facing ocean and closely adjacent similar cliff side dwelling structures. We have replanned the dwelling, adding external amenity including landscape works and a swimming pool. We have also modified portions of the exterior building envelope including doors and windows, cladding, entries, external decks, facades and pergolas.  The five-bedroom home has...

    Project details
    • Year 2022
    • Work finished in 2022
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Single-family residence / Interior Design
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