17.4 C
Los Angeles
Thursday, October 3, 2024

A Monolithic Home To Match Its Sublime Location

The Elemental House by SSD Studio is a contemporary farmhouse in the Dooralong Valley of New South Wales.

Perched atop a hillside on a 20-acre property, the geometric form utilises a pared back material palette of stone, timber, concrete and glass to connect with its sublime surrounds. With its grand scale and proportions, the house presents a dialogue between architecture and towering landscape.

An absolute feat!

The Most Sensational Small Spaces Of 2020

Over the past few years, we’ve noticed a specific and unrelenting fascination with small spaces. From DIY-style ‘tiny homes’, to off-the-plan apartments, there exists an endless curiosity about these compact homes, and how clever design and styling can make them not just liveable, but genuinely lovable!

From a handbuilt cabin on the edge of a river, to a stylist’s pint-sized Sydney apartment – these are the most outstanding small spaces we visited over the past year. Squeeze in, there’s more room than you think!

Start your day off with a better breakfast

Everyone knows the age-old adage that breakfast is the most important meal of the day; however, many Canadian adults fail to take it to heart.Everyone knows the age-old adage that breakfast is the mos

Painting The Landscape With ACRE Designs

GardensPainting The Landscape With ACRE Designs

Growing up on the Mornington Peninsula with a nature reserve on his doorstep, Acre’s Creative Director Brett Robinson has always had a passion for the landscape. After training as a graphic designer, he quickly tired of ‘designing 2D business cards for accounting firms’ and returned to university to complete a masters in Landscape Architecture. From here, Acre was born, combining Brett’s design know-how with his love of the landscape.

Brett’s diverse influences are evident in both Acre’s design methodology and their finished projects. He explains, ‘we are heavily focused on traditional design methodology, and adhere to the principle that form follows function.’ For Brett and his team, the specific relationship between the site context, architecture and the client always directs the outcomes. He explains the importance of local specificity, noting ‘a formal garden on the Peninsula just isn’t smart design!’

The firm’s evolution has been one of determination and late night hours from Brett, whose business was a ‘one-man band’ in the initial years, while he continued working nine-to-five at a design firm. After a long time of burning the candle at both ends, he made the switch to full time with Acre: necessitating the quick development of skills across social media, marketing and bookkeeping. Thankfully, Brett’s 36-hour work binges are (mostly) behind him, as he now has an equally hardworking team with a shared philosophy to ‘transform each home we work on into a sanctuary and place of positivity.’

Brett emphasises the importance of his talented team, and their individual creative hobbies and interests outside of work, too. He describes, ‘these attributes mean we look at landscape a little differently, we almost paint the landscape.’ (Let’s pause and enjoy that phrase for a sweet moment!) The firm’s style is distinctive for its ‘monolithic clean architectural details, overlaid by a sense of stylised wildness.’ Acre’s designs flirt in the spaces between control and chaos, to find an elegant solution for every location.

The Acre Landscape Architecture team from left to right: Tari Northwood, Pip Byrne, Mitch Żurel, Brett Robinson. Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


‘Blairgowrie House’ project in collaboration with Planned Living Architects. Photo – Derek Swalwell.


‘North Adelaide SA Project’ in collaboration with Nexus Design. Photo – Jonathan Van Der Knaap.


Tari Northwood and Pip Byrne in the Fitzroy studio. Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


Mitch Żurek looking over samples. Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


‘Malvern East’ project. Photo – Urban Angles.


Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


Studio details. Photo – Amelia Stanwix.


‘Blairgowrie House’ project in collaboration with Planned Living Architects. Photo – Derek Swalwell.


‘Blairgowrie House’ project in collaboration with Planned Living Architects. Photo – Derek Swalwell.

Check out our other content

Check out other tags:

Most Popular Articles