Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South Africa. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Architecture Wednesday: River House F

The house, a summer retreat for a family living in London, sits along the Kromme River estuary that flows into the warm Indian Ocean in South Africa. The long and narrow site—a little shy of an acre—stretches from the street to the river.

The original house was demolished to make way for a new house positioned at the rear of the site, with a vehicular graveled courtyard enclosed behind low walls facing the street. The thatch roofs and curved bagged walls are contemporary in a manner yet reminiscent of the original St Francis Bay bungalows, a combination of fisherman’s cottage and Cape farm architecture. Architectural guidelines mandated the clean white walls and pitched in thatch or slate.

The house consists of single storey “barn-like” forms placed in a series of configurations to create “little werfs”—a local term for farm courtyards—which, in turn, create varying degrees of shelter and privacy. Each “barn” serves a different function: the first is a service wing housing a garage and kitchen, two are for outdoor entertainment, one for the living and dining spaces and two are for sleeping. The courtyards in between have been planted with indigenous grasses, shrubs, and trees to reintroduce the presence of the nearby coastal thicket.

Where the house opens to the outside, the large thatch roofs are supported on a series of over-scaled eucalyptus columns; these pavilions can open entirely by sliding the glass doors and timber shutters aside into concealed cavities. When all are open, the structures feel like a series of thatched pavilions that allow the seamless free flow of movement from inside to out and allows for uninterrupted transition from one courtyard through the house, to the next.

The children’s bedrooms open up onto the entrance courtyard providing a safe and sheltered area in which to play. Two of the bedrooms have sleep lofts as does the playroom, and along with the window seats in the bedrooms, provide guests with additional sleeping space. 

The elevated living room terrace features generous outdoor sitting spaces and is flanked on one side by the main bedroom wing and on the other by the swimming pool. The pool with its long, low, white walls is reminiscent of an old reservoir and is surrounded by indigenous dune forest vegetation. From the poolside deck, timber boardwalks meander through the garden, leading down to a little beach in front of the river.

That said, I love the whimsy of the house, and the openness, and of course that pool and garden area. The cats would have a field day …

Arch Daily

Wednesday, February 05, 2020

Architecture Wednesday: Mabote House

Mabote House is one of those homes that, at first, appears simple and maybe a bit plain.

It’s not; between the spacious rooms, and the vistas through the glass, to the gorgeous pool and outdoor sunken lounge, the wide covered walkways and verandas, Mabote House in South Africa celebrates a sense of natural escapism with its seamless flow between external and internal spaces.

Natural elements were prioritized and the building layout was planned to accommodate existing trees and topography. The treatment of these elements enhance the experience of the space, and help to embed the structure in its environment more successfully.

Mabote is not in the landscape, it’s of the landscape. And I love it for its simplicity, for its clean lines, for the use of roughhewn beams and reclaimed wood walls; concrete floors and over-the top design.

It’s gorgeous and breathtaking.


Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Architecture Wednesday: Rooiels Beach House


The Rooiels Beach House is perfect for the person who wants huge, who want wide open, who wants modern and right on the water.

The 10,225-square-foot home, in Cape Town, South Africa, seems to hover gently over the sand at the end of a rocky peninsula. And yes, it’s large, but it’s also what is called a ‘one room deep space’. It’s completely open, from living to dining to kitchen to bedrooms to bathroom—though for those of us feeling a bit modest, the bedrooms can be closed off—and can be completely opened on all four sides to the outdoors.

It’s like a modern, fabulous, expansive, luxurious tent …on the beach!


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Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Architecture Wednesday: Industrial Style Architect’s House


Y’all I love a barn, and even a house inspired by a barn, so this one, on the outskirts of Pretoria in South Africa, is a favorite.

Despite its clear urban and industrial influences, the house was inspired by an old barn, and designed by the architect for her parents. But it’s less rustic and more urban and industrial; less old wood and more clear glass.

The central portion of the house, made of black steel and glass, is the clearest influence of the old barn. This “reception room” with its high cathedral style ceiling is bright and naturally lit, and breathtaking in its industrial simplicity. At the far end, where doors open onto a patio and lawn, is the large family dining table.

The two wings of the home aren’t made from glass and black metals and are a little more natural and slightly more rustic through the use of concrete, exposed brick and exposed carpentry of reclaimed wood.

Off the reception hall and dining room is the kitchen with a wooden island as its central hub; you’ll also find a wooden trap door that leads down into a temperature-controlled wine cellar. The trap door closes flat into the floor but still acts as a decorative piece that looks like it might have been part of a barn.

On the second floor, above the kitchen are the bedrooms and master suite, where you find a set of floor-to-ceiling windows, that can be left open, or can be covered by a sliding shade. On the top floor of the volume built on the other side of the reception hall is an activities space to feature art, gallery lighting, and bean bag chairs for reading, TV and music.

I do so love a barn, but I also love modern, urban, industrial, and this house, along with its own wine cellar … wine cellar … is perfection.


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