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Building style
Contemporary

As you wind up the tortuous roads through the Welcome Bay Hills in Tauranga, you quickly find yourself in rural territory with the most stunning panoramas, taking in the whole of the city, right out to Mount Maunganui.

On one very prominent site in a spacious semi-rural subdivision, there was an opportunity to build a home that really spoke to rural architectural vernacular, yet provided the space and layout required for a young family.

Ata’s Adam Taylor says the scale of the house required was significant.

“It's a really prominent flat site at the head of the valley and we were conscious of scale and how it would look, and that's where the idea of breaking the building apart into smaller masses came from.”

These smaller masses encompass the garage and guest space, the living spaces, and the family’s bedroom wing. Each of these parts was conceived as its own unique form that integrates into the whole.

“Our reference point for the home was old farm buildings. We always talked about how a farm has a collection of buildings, so if you look at this dwelling, you'll find there's some slight differences in floor levels, and every pod or wing has a slightly different stud height, or a unique roof pitch – we're trying to make it look as if it was an assembly over time.”

To enhance this perception, the character of the exterior materials is rustic board and batten in a cypress hardwood, coated in Dryden’s wood oil in ‘Dune’, giving it a soft, weathered patina, while also protecting the timber.

The cohesive treatment of the different forms ensures they appear as one unified form in the landscape, while also integrating visually into the rural setting.

In contrast, Adam says for the interior, the brief demanded a contemporary layout and a modern materiality.

“They wanted to have a high performance home in terms of efficiency and thermal properties, but they also wanted to make sure that the layout encouraged use of the site and living on the land.”

To enable this, the house is entered directly into the living pavilion, which opens straight out to the land. At the back of the home, the living space opens to a fenced external courtyard – perfect for keeping preschoolers safe.

“We're big believers that the inside and outside need to talk to each other. Obviously, the living space here commands the centre of the site, as it has a really good outlook over the mountain. Then the bedroom wing is tucked to the side and is slightly more easterly orientated, so it has a separate outlook – it feels independent and private. And then we've got the service spaces and the garage behind which gives the whole arrangement a little bit of a buffer from the southwest wind.”

The different angles of the forms allow each wing privacy, and a glass link between the living spaces and the bedroom wing creates separation.

“The glass link does two things: on arrival, even though the building is private, we get this little idea of what's beyond, which is a bit playful. But importantly, once you're within the building, it's actually just a disconnect as you move into those sleeping wings and you move out of those living spaces. It makes them feel a lot more private and independent and reinforces the sense of being able to disengage from the busy family environment.”

The interior materiality is simple, understated and subtly picks up on a rural aesthetic, through simple architectural moves like V-groove interior panelling.

Adam says the easy integration of modern convenience and farming architectural vernacular within a rural location is the true success of the project.

“When I drive up the road and look up at the property I see it as three distinct forms, and it has a natural character that feels appropriate. But what I'm most happy with is that you read that glass length, and the scale of the joinery as modern – it definitely appears as a contemporary home on a rural site.”

Words: Jo Seton

Photography: Simon Devitt

Awards and
recognition

2022
ADNZ
Architectural Design Award for New Build 150 - 300m2

About the
Professional

ata is an award-winning, full-service architectural studio committed to the creation of intelligent, sustainable, and progressive design solutions.

Our projects are deeply grounded in understanding our clients. We work in an open and collaborative way to ensure the end result is relevant, meaningful, and reflects their unique identities.

Our work encompasses proportion, use of light, material integrity and sustainable methodology to create functional yet engaging architecture.

Having previously worked in both large and boutique architectural practices, as well as two years as a Project Manager in the construction business, Adam Taylor brings a wealth of knowledge and understanding to his projects.

Services

ata offer a range of services including:

  • Architectural design:

-  residential
-  commercial
-  interiors
-  renovations

  • Development feasibility + planning
  • Site master planning
  • 3D concepts + solar animation
At ArchiPro we recognise and acknowledge the existing, original and ancient connection Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have to the lands and waterways across the Australian continent. We pay our respects to the elders past and present. We commit to working together to build a prosperous and inclusive Australia.