An Inky Black Melbourne Home Draws Its Hue From the Surrounding Eucalyptus Trees
Kirsten Johnstone Architecture creates a sustainable home that blends into the landscape with a palette of rammed earth, concrete, and timber.
Kirsten Johnstone Architecture creates a sustainable home that blends into the landscape with a palette of rammed earth, concrete, and timber.
When a couple with a teenage daughter approached architect Kirsten Johnstone to design a new house in Melbourne, they asked for an environmentally friendly home that would provide a space for all stages of family life.
"This was their first experience working with an architect, and they were fully engaged with the process," says Johnstone. "They wanted a home that would encourage similar forward-thinking design nearby—and they are thrilled when neighbors comment on the home and how it responds to the area."
It was essential that the home respond sensitively to the site, which is L-shaped and located in a Significant Landscape Overlay in Blackburn, a unique suburban pocket of Melbourne. The surrounding area has strict tree protections and planning controls, which significantly impacted the home’s allowable footprint.
"The restrictive planning overlays limited the height of this new home, so I used design techniques to create a light, airy home—linear wall cladding, a stepped-down floor plate to the front lounge, the stepped ceiling between the dining and rear living areas, and different materials," says Johnstone. "This completely disguises the reality that this is a very modestly sized home by suburban standards."
See the full story on Dwell.com: An Inky Black Melbourne Home Draws Its Hue From the Surrounding Eucalyptus Trees
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