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1. Villa Overview 5510 px 4132 px 4 MB A3 print |
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2. Villa Overview 3620 px 4826 px 3 MB A4 print |
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3. Villas from entry 4650 px 6200 px 6 MB A3 print |
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4. Villas from west 4650 px 6200 px 6 MB A3 print |
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5. Roof of bar restaurant Space for yoga, music, meeting 3333 px 4444 px 4 MB A4 print |
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6. Villas from below 6200 px 4650 px 6 MB A3 print |
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7. Villa front on 6200 px 4650 px 5 MB A3 print |
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8. Villas oblique Morning 4457 px 5942 px 6 MB A3 print |
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9. Between Villas Valleys 4533 px 6044 px 7 MB A3 print |
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10. Landscape 6200 px 4650 px 6 MB A3 print |
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11. Material detail Bamboo formwork imprints 4456 px 6684 px 6 MB A3 print |
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12. Between Villas Framed views 5647 px 7529 px 7 MB A3 print |
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13. Villa wall 4650 px 6200 px 6 MB A3 print |
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14. Villa wall internal 5778 px 4334 px 5 MB A3 print |
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15. Villa Walls 4650 px 6200 px 5 MB A3 print |
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16. Internal Living 4132 px 5510 px 4 MB A3 print |
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17. Internal materiality Bamboo and concrete - material and imprint, positive and negative 6200 px 4650 px 5 MB A3 print |
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18. The sea 6000 px 4000 px 3 MB A3 print |
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19. Column in restaurant 4500 px 6000 px 4 MB A3 print |
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20. Outdoor Bath, Ground Floor 4650 px 6200 px 6 MB A3 print |
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21. Entry door Concrete and bamboo 4500 px 6000 px 4 MB A3 print |
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22. GF, Living 4826 px 3620 px 4 MB A4 print |
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23. GF Living 4826 px 3620 px 4 MB A4 print |
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24. GF, Living 5791 px 7722 px 8 MB A3 print |
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25. GF, outdoor Plunge pool 4650 px 6200 px 6 MB A3 print |
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26. 1F, Living 5266 px 3949 px 4 MB A3 print |
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27. 1F, Shower, Bath and Plunge pool View to mountains and jungle 7722 px 5791 px 7 MB A3 print |
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28. 1F, Shower, Bath and Plunge pool View to mountains and jungle 4457 px 5942 px 5 MB A3 print |
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29. GF, Bed 6000 px 4500 px 5 MB A3 print |
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30. GF, Outdoor Living And Pool 6200 px 4650 px 5 MB A3 print |
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31. GF, Outdoor Living 4650 px 6200 px 5 MB A3 print |
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32. GF, Outdoor Living 3620 px 4826 px 4 MB A4 print |
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33. GF, Outdoor Living 5942 px 4457 px 4 MB A3 print |
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34. Villa Entry 4406 px 5874 px 5 MB A3 print |
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35. GF, Outdoor Bathroom 4457 px 5942 px 5 MB A3 print |
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36. Villa Wall 4650 px 6200 px 4 MB A3 print |
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37. Bedroom 6000 px 4500 px 4 MB A3 print |
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38. Concept Diagram Between the mountains and the sea 4550 px 4764 px 952 KB A4 print |
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39. Balinees gateway Inspiration for the shear internal walls - "let the spirit drift" 800 px 1200 px 310 KB Print - Low res only |
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40. Materiality 4032 px 3024 px 691 KB A4 print |
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41. Materiality 4032 px 1944 px 681 KB Print - Low res only |
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42. Walls 4032 px 3024 px 644 KB A4 print |
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43. View 1944 px 2136 px 382 KB Print - Low res only |
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44. Site diagram 1616 px 2416 px 793 KB Print - Low res only |
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45. Site section 9933 px 7016 px 3 MB A3 print |
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46. Villa elevation 9933 px 7016 px 2 MB A3 print |
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47. Villa plan, GF 842 px 1191 px 45 KB Print - Low res only |
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48. Villa plan, 1F 7016 px 9933 px 2 MB A3 print |
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49. Site plan, roof 9933 px 7016 px 10 MB A3 print |
Situated on the northern coast of Bali, the Tiing has been designed as a ‘reward for the intrepid’. Understanding that this project would need a point of differentiation to pull people out of the well-worn tourist paths of southern Bali, the Tiing is a boutique resort embedded into its local and cultural context.
Due to its remote location, the design deliberately leans on traditional materials and construction techniques, while providing a robust conceptual framework. Knowing that concrete is the preferred construction method of Bali, and that bamboo is plentiful, a series of bamboo formed concrete walls were erected on site to create in-between and inside conditions, framing the mountains and the sea.
The materiality of this project aims to work within the local context, construction techniques, resources, and climate; a rugged regionalism. Concrete and bamboo are abundant, so it was best to work with these materials throughout. In a tropical climate, a clean finish would require much maintenance, here, the material will weather in, enhancing the character of the architecture and place. Importantly, this also became the finishing. Expressing the texture and form of the bamboo as a negative impression in the patina of the concrete becomes this project’s motif.
At each end, the walls become shear, referencing local Balinese gateways prevalent throughout the island. These gateways are highly decorated totems, shear-cut on the travel path to encourage the eye and the spirit to drift onwards.
Architecturally, these walls act as funnels, giving each room equal and opposing view of the mountain and the ocean, meaning that guests are always situated in the truth of the site. We thought it vitally important to draw attention to this dual condition as part of a locating and grounding travel experience.
Arriving at the Tiing is a process of 2.5hrs traversing winding roads through the lush Balinese landscape. We wanted something that would act as a distinct counterpoint to that all-consuming ‘green-ness’, so we created a red public bathing pool. It is partially hidden to the entry sequence, but acts as an energising arrival moment in high-contrast to the lush green jungle. Further, we paid attention to the height of the site and the way the water bodies of the pool and the ocean would layer against the horizon. Again, the working strategy for this project is ‘a reward for the intrepid’, and the central pool further serves to consolidate this.
Hidden centrally in the plan is the washing space. This is a rare moment of slick finish in an otherwise unadorned project. Each space has a light well, connecting the occupant back to the sky from the darkness of this isolated space. Protected, hidden, and central, this space becomes a welcome surprise, a place of refuge and delight. This is a place for unwinding reconnecting to the self and to nature.
World Architecture Festival Finalist 2019 - Best Hotel
What were the key challenges?
Responding to distance, in both the remoteness of the project and the fact that our office is located 6 hours (3hr plane, 3 hr car) away.
Distance became the key conceptual principal and the reason that we looked to local skills, trades, and materials. Hence, bamboo and concrete. We did everything we could with those two elements. Bamboo formed concrete walls create the major architectural gensture. Bamboo becomes the doors, windor shutters, entry pavilion, and the re-used bamboo formwork became a fence, ringing the site.
What was the brief?
A boutique, luxury resort in a remote location.
Who are the clients and what's interesting about them?
The clients were a Chinese American, and a local Balinese hotel designer and proprietor. With us as Australians as the architect, it became a positive, productive, and educational cultural mix.
Project size | 2000 m2 |
Site size | 4000 m2 |
Completion date | 2019 |
Building levels | 2 |
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Nic Brunsdon | |
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Manguning | Execution Architect |
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NIC BRUNSDON | Design Lead Architect |