Black House is a project completed by Andrew Maynard Architects in 2013.
Located in Fitzroy, Australia, the home has a simple interior with plenty of white surfaces to add to its sense of space.
Photos by: Fraser Marsden
Black House by Andrew Maynard Architects:
“Hindsight
I had arranged to meet with Bill and Tracey on Tuesday evening. I
was keen to show them my design for their apartment renovation. I had
put together a package of sketches. On the cover I wrote the words
“Hindsight; all the things I would have done as a new parent.
The siren call of the suburbs
A new baby often pushes us to conservatism and conformity. Bill
and Tracey had lived in their two level Fitzroy apartment for almost six
years when we first met. Their apartment was on the top floor of a
beautiful MacRobertson factory where it commanded an expansive view over
Edinburgh Gardens and the northern suburbs. Their’s was the location
that we all dreamed of as young adults. However apartments like this are
often abandoned if kids come into our lives. Increased space, an extra
bathroom and a backyard are factors that often dictate a move to the
suburbs. Yet Bill and Tracey loved their Fitzroy home. They did not want
to leave. They wanted clever ideas that would allow them to have a
child in their much loved home.
Existing
The apartment needed a radical rethink. The stair was tight. So
tight that it was, in fact, illegal. Carrying groceries upstairs was a
nightmare. Carrying a child downstairs could even be dangerous. The
lower level was dark, much of it internalised. The entry, on the lower
level, was confined, dark and awkward. Prams and the bulky baby
paraphernalia had no place in the apartment. They would inevitably
occupy hallway space, forever tripped over by frustrated parents and
visitors. Bill’s office, the centre of the lower level, had no natural
light nor view outside. The upper level had ample space, however much of
it was unused or wasted. With clever rearrangement an extra living area
could be added.
It’s a lot more complicated than you think
For Bill and Tracey the biggest issue was space. How would they
fit a baby into their home? For me the fundamental issue was much more
than just increasing space. Armed with the hindsight of raising my own
child, my concern was the radical day-to-day changes a baby brings. The
endless management of ‘stuff’ was the key. The trick is to work with the
chaos a child brings rather than naively hoping that your child will
choose to be neat.
Parents, gravity conspires against you
Gravity is colluding with your child. Gravity conspires in your
child’s favour. Their target is your sanity. Parents constantly pick
things up, while kid throws them down. Children love dropping things on
the ground. We have all seen the torturous game of a baby sitting in a
high chair throwing a toy to the ground the moment it is placed on their
table. It’s cute the first three times. It’s a nightmare the next 200
times. While gravity amuses the child, it punishes the parent. At Black
house we have made gravity the parents’ ally rather than the child’s.
What if the floor could eat all the mess up?
The toy box floor
Let’s design a floor that swallows the mess. Rather than picking
toys up to put back in the toy box, let’s make the floor one big toy
box. Let’s get a broom and sweep all the lego in from the top and sides.
It becomes a game for the child as well as a new hiding place for her
to play.
Sliding wall
Your child wants to be with you, always, regardless of how
wonderful their bedroom may be. Along with them they bring their toys,
clothes and chaos. If we provide a bedroom that, at times, can feel like
an extension of the shared family space, then it is likely that a child
will play in their space and keep all of their stuff there. All you
need to provide for your child is a line of sight and the ability to
speak with you without leaving their room. To accomplish this we have
added heavy sliding walls rather than a fixed wall with standard door.
If the child and/or you want to occupy one large space, the wall slides
away so that the child’s room is an extension of the living spaces. If
the child needs to sleep, study or wants privacy the heavy walls slide
closed and lock in position.
Pram park
Beneath the stair is often lost space. Its the little things that
make a house work well. Entering a house with a pram and a couple of
bags can be surprisingly stressful. Here we have a small shelf to the
left of the entry to drop bags and keys. A hidden hatch to the right to
slide in the pram under the stairs. Its the perfect size for a pram,
which is now hidden until it is needed next.
Winch
Try moving a fridge or a couch in an apartment. It sucks. It
sucks a lot. ‘Stuff’ is always on the move in any house, especially a
house with a baby in it. Groceries go up, garbage comes down. Clean
nappies go up. Dirty nappies go down. Groceries go up. Recycling goes
down. And toys just go everywhere. The new mesh floor, directly over the
front door can be unlatched and a winch lowered to haul items of almost
any size. It’s a small idea that makes a huge difference to your
sanity.
Mesh is the best
Stairs are tricky. Especially in tight spaces. We have tried to
create a stair that feels light like lace, which is difficult
considering the constant live loads it is under. Steel mesh is folded
allowing light to be shared while also enabling conversations to take
place from one level to the other, without requiring you to be in the
same space. This was previously impossible. The stair is also part desk,
part laundry and part furniture. One can lounge on the steps and chat
with both someone at the study and upstairs. Furthermore, as apartments
at the top of old warehouses don’t typically have playgrounds for kids,
the stair becomes a jungle gym for play and exploration. Give a child a
handful of colourful magnets and a handful of pegs and that stair will
keep them amused for days.
The command centre
Bill’s office was previously relegated to a dark corner under the
stairs. He now has the ‘command centre’. The centre of the house, where
he sees all and hears all. The child’s bedroom wall can be slid away so
that father and daughter can see each other without the need to drag
toys into the office. The mesh stairs wrap around the office allowing
someone to sit and chat or quietly play or read on the stairs, in the
same space as Bill. Utility, bathroom, bedroom, laundry, living, dining
and kitchen are all directly linked with the office so that Bill can run
the house with ease.
1 bathroom = 2
The original bathroom was large. Arguably too large for an
apartment. Bill and Tracey wanted an ensuite for themselves and a second
bathroom for both the child and guests. To squeeze out maximum
functional space we sliced the existing bathroom at an angle with each
shower back to back. This rationalised the plumbing while also making
use of every millimetre of space available.
Black House
Retreating to the suburbs shouldn’t be the default decision.
‘More space’ is often not the answer. The answer is more complex, and
can lead to great spaces that do just what you want. All you have to do
is challenge your preconceptions.”
source : homedsgn.com
http://www.homedsgn.com/2015/05/02/black-house-by-andrew-maynard-architects/
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