Hawthorn Hood

Architecture Residential Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia

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32 Images

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1. Image 01

Existing entry hall

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2. Image 02

Side entry hall

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3. Image 03

Side entry hall detail

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4. Image 04

Side entry hall detail

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5. Image 05

Side entry hall detail

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6. Image 06

Living space

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7. Image 07

Living space

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8. Image 08A (GIF)

Living space and study nook

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9. Image 08B (GIF)

Living space and study nook

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10. Image 08C (GIF)

Living space and study nook

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11. Image 09A (GIF)

Dining space and study nook

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12. Image 09B (GIF)

Dining space and study nook

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13. Image 09C (GIF)

Dining space and study nook

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14. Image 10

Dining detail

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15. Image 11

Kitchen-Dining zone

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16. Image 12

Kitchen

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17. Image 13

Kitchen detail

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18. Image 14A (GIF)

Study nook detail

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19. Image 14B (GIF)

Study nook detail

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20. Image 14C (GIF)

Study nook detail

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21. Image 15

Study nook detail

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22. Image 16

Northern court detail

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23. Image 17

Rear view

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24. Image 18

Rear view

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25. Diagram 01

Concept diagram

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26. Drawing 01

Existing Ground Floor Plan

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27. Drawing 02

Proposed Ground Floor Plan

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28. Drawing 03

Proposed First Floor Plan

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29. Drawing 04

Proposed Roof Plan

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30. Drawing 05

Existing Street Elevation

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31. Drawing 06

Proposed Street Elevation

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32. Drawing 07

Proposed Rear / North Elevation

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Description

The Hawthorn Hood clients (a couple of professionals with primary school aged twins) approached our studio to design a renovation-extension for a house that they occupied in a neighbouring suburb. It became apparent, through early investigations, that the resultant design would likely be heavily compromised due to a number of inherent limitations in the house and site; the most significant being the solar orientation of the allotment.

These initial conversations sparked a hunt for a house and site that would better suit our clients’ long-term needs. A short-list of preferred suburbs, streets and orientation informed a letter-drop campaign that culminated in the purchase of the project site. Design discussions commenced in haste, and the result is a light-filled and engaging ‘forever’ home that ticks all of our clients’ boxes!

The original house has a strong period character and is protected by a Heritage overlay. Rather than turn its back on the form and materiality of the original home, our response was to engage with and reinterpret the characteristics that define it; in particular, the grand proportions of the existing interior spaces, and the highly articulated, terracotta roof form. The project commenced by ‘unclipping’ a previous extension-renovation at the rear of home and re-programming the floorplan to harness the sun-filled rear yard. Bedrooms and utilities occupy the original home and the spacious roof form, whilst new living areas, positioned to the north of the original house, draw upon the grandeur of the original interiors, harness northern sunlight and frame views of the backyard and pool. The new living areas are defined externally as a reclamation of the roof of the original house, folding down at the rear of the house in response to the function of the spaces within whilst offering a sympathetic nod to the original house and the surrounding rooflines of its heritage neighbourhood.

Questions and Answers

What were the key challenges?

The original house has a strong period character and is protected by a Heritage overlay. Rather than turn its back on the form and materiality of the original home, our response was to engage with and reinterpret the characteristics that define it; in particular, the grand proportions of existing interior spaces, and the highly articulated, terracotta roof form. The result is a site specific design response embedded to place; a project that departs from the period details of the original, whilst deploying a material and formal language that is both innovative and familiar.

Who are the clients and what's interesting about them?

Our Hawthorn Hood clients (a couple of professionals with primary school aged twins) approached our studio to design a renovation-extension for a house that they occupied in a neighbouring suburb. It became apparent through early investigations that the resultant design would likely be heavily compromised due to a number of inherent limitations in the house and site; the most significant being the solar orientation of the allotment.

These initial conversations sparked a hunt for a house and site that would better suit our clients’ long term needs. A short-list of preferred suburb/s, street/s and orientation informed a letter-drop campaign that culminated in the purchase of the project site. Design discussions commenced in haste, and the result is a light-filled and engaging ‘forever’ home that ticks all of our clients’ boxes!

Details

Project size 451 m2
Site size 1021 m2
Completion date 2023
Building levels 2

Project team

Paul Porjazoski Project Director
Michael Germano Project Architect
Joanna Butler Design Team
Merran Porjazoski Design Team
Lana Blazanin Design Team
Clive Steele Partners Structural/Civil Engineer