L-house

Architecture Residential Linden, New South Wales, Australia

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1. Deck

View from deck looking down to Sydney Basin - You can see Sydney Harbour Bridge on a clear day.

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2. Lounge Room

Framed views of nature curate visitors appreciation of bushland setting and simultaneously achieving a low window to wall ratio which results in a high thermally efficient home.

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3. East Elevation

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4. Corner Window

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5. Entry

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6. Southern bath box

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7. North elevation

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8. Sunrise through western elevation

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9. Deck threshold

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10. L-house

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11. Site Plan

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12. Sections A & B

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13. Sections C & D

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14. Ground Floor Plan

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15. Mezzanine Plan

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16. North and West Elevations

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17. East & South Elevations

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18. Roof Plan

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19. Entry and Exit

Western facade slowly frames view beyond

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20. Master bedroom window

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21. Kitchen

Client made it themselves as an Ikea hack!

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22. Attic space

The fire storage room, rumpus and study are secondary spaces that are made within the resultant form of creating a sleek building that does not dominate the landscape.

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23. Garage doors

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24. Entry Screen

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25. Air-lock

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26. Visitor approaching

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27. Framing views to landscape

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Description

Perched on the eastern spur of Linden in the lower Blue Mountains, sat a project home partially completed in 2003. The new owners, a young couple, decided after suffering through several cold winters that it was time to renovate the house into a thermally comfortable family home.

The clients originally wanted to maintain the two existing pavilions: one for guest accommodation and the other for ancillary spaces and create a new dwelling to the east, increasing floor space to accommodate a family and capture the surrounding bushland and easterly views across the Sydney basin to the harbour and city.

ASA proposed an alternate way of thinking about the site with the main principles of respecting the bushland at the core and re-using as much of the existing built form, services and structure as possible to reduce waste and manage costs. From this re-interpretation of the existing “L-House” was created: re-using the north-eastern pavilion for the parents, flowing to a new central family link, which would navigate the level changes in the landscape to connect with the existing east-west pavilion, housing the children’s area, an office and ancillary spaces. This consolidation of the built form created a single eastern elevation where the sweeping views to the city skyline could be appreciated from multiple living spaces.

Conversely, the L-shaped house formed a new western entry to the property to curate the appreciation of the natural bushland setting as you enter the site. The low window-to-wall ratio on the west enabled a celebration of the sleek zincalume cladding. The simplicity and rhythm of the material provides a striking contrast to the natural bushland, with the zincalume shimmering on approach, reflecting the colours of the day. The material however also serves a greater purpose: fire protection. The close proximity of the natural bushland meant the external envelope had to be robust and non-combustible in order to meet the highest level of bushfire protection construction set in the original 2003 DA. As such, the house is effectively wrapped in zincalume cladding with bushfire rated hardwood used as feature elements to soften moments of connection.

For an alteration and addition L-House achieves a solid NATHERS rating of 7.6 stars, well exceeding the 4 stars required in the 2014 s96 approval. Many initiatives have been undertaken to ensure L-House provides a high performance thermal envelope for its residents to cope with the extreme heat and cold of Linden, these include: stripping back the old pavilions and completely re-insulating, using thermally broken window frames and lowering the window to wall ratio. This means L-House has a lower peak demand which in turn reduces the overall residential demand on peak days, which Ausgrid estimates increases the size of their power stations by 147% and is a key initiative on moving to a greener grid.

The design and construction teams worked in an integrated manner to manage the complexities of environmental protection, bushfire mitigation and the re-use of services and structure. The outcome is a highly crafted home that celebrates its natural environment and delivers a low operational energy comfortable home.

Questions and Answers

What were the key challenges?

The key challenges of the site was adhering to the strict biodiversity and fire restrictions applicable to the site,

What was the brief?

The client brief was to create a thermally comfortable family home that celebrated the natural environment and views down to the Sydney basin where on a clear day you can see the Sydney harbour bridge.

What are the sustainability features?

L-House is not a traditional north facing passive house, rather it is passive design, responding to the site. A low window-to-wall ratio for example, enables the easterly views to be enjoyed with sky lights employed to ensure a well daylit home.

Energy use is underpinned by a 3kWh onsite photovoltaic system, with solar panels re-used from the original pavilions with a grid inter-tie system. Lighting, ventilation and appliances are all low energy operation with ceiling fans installed to limit air-conditioning demand.

Rainwater is captured, filtered onsite and re-used throughout the house. The waste water system is also off-grid with an aerated waste water treatment system.

The NATHERS rating of the original pavilions was 2.9 stars. With these initiatives the rating is now 7.6, the equivalent of removing 4 SUV’s off the road each year.

Re-using the pavilions with primary timber construction also contributed to a reduced embodied energy footprint.

Details

Project size 237 m2
Site size 9500 m2
Completion date 2017
Building levels 3

Project team

Imogene Tudor Schematic Design
Branko Jaric Project Architect
Katja Gavran Documentation Supervisor
Alexander Symes Architect Architect
Blue Eco Homes Builder
Thornton & Blake Interior Stylist