The building history could be tracked back to 1815, and several important people have owned the property.
The client is looking to renovate the existing heritage house, and add 2 new dwellings to the rear of the heritage house....our task is, "how?"
With 3 dwellings on the same land, there is inherent issues on privacy, overlooking, and overshadowing to address. Easiest is probably to build a wall around the dwellings to isolate them from each other.....but then, there is no interaction, and no benefit for them to be next to each other. It is a rare situation to have 3 dwellings on the same land, of course we should make something interesting out of it!
So the idea is, "garden as the sharing, buffer zone between the dwellings." - ok this is still rough, there will be many more refinements to come along the design process... - rather than using fences to block each other out, we started exploring ways to screen and borrow views to expand the imaginative boundary whilst maintaining the privacy of individual dwellings.
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we first looked at off-setting the building volumes from the heritage building articulation. Down side is access and overlooking. |
..............So.............
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So we decided to go simple - minimise building footprints, orientate to face the sun (and away from each other) to improve building amenities |
We will get busy on this project in 2011, hopefully I can tell you more about it soon!
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