Jury Comment
Springhill House makes a significant contribution to residential architecture in Australia. It responds to its setting, brief and budget with utility, clarity and rigour. Sited on a north-facing slope in a disused agricultural paddock, this house for an author is both economical and delightful.
The canny, efficient plan is organized by a rhythmic linear form that relates to structural bays. Slender timber portal frames allow for clear spans and for a large, single-pitch roof that provides shade of varying depth around the house, which is broadened or contracted according to orientation and strong solar passive design principles. The structural rhythm is broken on the north side to mark a large opening to living areas, and is sheathed on the southern arrival side by galvanized sheet cladding, which gives the house a taut, sheer expression – tough yet gleaming and mirage-like. Internally, the house is planned to avoid circulation space, with open living areas and a tight service spine, flanked on each end by a study with framed but expansive views.
Springhill House demonstrates that designing within limits, minimizing material and spatial excess and building on tradition can lead to unembellished yet exceptional occupation.
See full image galleries of all the winning and shortlisted projects here.
The award for New House under 200m2 is supported by Artedomus.
Credits
- Project
- Springhill House
- Architect
-
Lovell Burton Architecture
- Project Team
- Joseph Lovell, Stephanie Burton
- Consultants
-
Builder
Nick Andrews
Engineer Meyer Consulting
Lighting Light Projects
Photographer Benjamin Hosking
- Site Details
- Project Details
-
Status
Built
Category Residential
Type New houses
Source
Award
Published online: 27 Jul 2018
Images:
Benjamin Hosking
Issue
Houses, August 2018