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The
following text and images are courtesy Marcus
O'Reilly Architects. Click on images for larger color
views.
The Color of Tea Trees: Marcus
O’Reilly Architects has carefully designed a low
key, site responsive beach house in Sorrento on Victoria’s
Mornington Peninsula in Australia. The timber-clad structure
reinterprets a longstanding beach house tradition in the area.
It uses local materials to blend into, respect and complement
it’s sought after location adjacent to a national park.
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The site, which has been in the
owner’s family for more than fifty years, is heavily
populated with eucalyptus trees which grow out of the rolling
sand dunes of the area. Floating green-stained cedar volumes
and bleached timbers visually respond to the Eucalyptus canopies.
The volumes step up the sand dune allowing it to be virtually
undisturbed as the dune rises to the rear of the site. The
front volume is anchored to the ground by canted sandstone
walls lending a sense of gravitas to the otherwise light wood
framed structure. |
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The main living level stretches
east to west along the site
to welcome northern light into each room of the house. The
light is cleverly filtered through tea tree stake sunshades
and screens which add to the
vernacular of the house. The point of entry of the house is
up a timber staircase with playful and unpretentious custom
galvanized steel balustrades which leads to an
expansive deck covered with a radial polycarbonate and
timber awning. The architect chose a low maintenance material
palette which was not only intended to stand up to the
tests of sandy boogie boards, wet towels and teenage parties
but also improve with age. |
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Sustainable issues were at the
fore, primarily with passive solar
performance. The orientation, size, volume of building,
insulation and the weight were modelled to assess how much
extra ballast would be needed to add to the southern walls
to obtain the required thermal mass. The calculations paid
off and rendered air conditioning unnecessary despite the
obvious difficulties involved in obtaining optimal thermal
performance for a structure that is up on stilts and lightweight
in a temperate climate. Passive ventilation and 10,000-liter
rainwater tanks complete the package.
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Sorrento House in Sorrento, Victoria, Australia
by Marcus O'Reilly Architects |
2010.01.04 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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