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Thursday, October 3, 2024

Anne Atkins – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

Today we visit an inner city garden in Melbourne overflowing with greenery, brightly coloured annual plants, and fairies. Fairies everywhere!

This magical Fitzroy garden is part of the upcoming Open Gardens Victoria event, and will be open to visit on the 21st and 22nd of November. Georgina Reid of The Planthunter gives us a sneak preview.

 

Building a Productive Garden – The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog.

Matt and Lentil Purbrick are the dynamic couple behind Grown & Gathered. On their farm in Tabilk, an hour and a half north of Melbourne, they grow vegetables and flowers in abundance, which they sell and trade in Melbourne. Over the past few years, they’ve gathered a cult following!

This month, Matt and Lentil celebrate the release of their first book, also called Grown & Gathered! It’s a truly gorgeous tome, beautifully photographed and designed, and dense with really useful information about growing vegetables, foraging for things like mushrooms, native greens and wild fruits, and raising animals.

TODAY Matt and Lentil share with us an excerpt from the book, covering the fundamentals of building a productive garden.

An Off-the-Grid Eco Bush Retreat Rebuilt From The Ashes

A lot about Callignee Eco Bush Retreat feels extraordinarily like fate. Just two weeks after its original owner Chris Clarke completed his dream off-the-grid home nestled in the Gippsland bushland, the Black Saturday fires tore through the dense, dry underbrush and destroyed it all.

Ten years later and Callignee has been painstakingly rebuilt and passed onto new custodians, Maggie and Chris Jones, whose combination of spiritual pull and gut instinct drew them to the isolated property.

An Elegant Off-Grid Home In Three Parts, On Waiheke Island

creative-peoplearchitectureAn Elegant Off-Grid Home In Three Parts, On Waiheke Island

Sometimes, it’s an architect’s job to make as little impact as possible.

‘When the owners purchased the site it was a vacant hillside of some 8.5 hectares’, explains Sarah Gilbertson, Principal architect and designer at Auckland-based firm Cheshire Architects. ‘Their first occupation of the site was built mostly by themselves.’ A timber-lined container was placed high on a hill with a large deck oriented towards the view, an outdoor bathroom, BBQ and campfire. The dwelling was simple, and the life lived in it was one closely aligned with nature.

With a desire to maintain the informality of this original settlement, Cheshire Architects proposed three separate structures that housed different functions – one for living, one for sleeping and bathing, and another one for guests – more like an encampment than a single house. The three structures are separate, but connected, arranged around a sunny courtyard that acts as a natural meeting place.

The main living pavilion is a humble but generous structure, its pitched roof emerging from the skyline. ‘[It] appears wedged into the hillside, its gable form emphasised by the falling slope of the hill, anchoring the informal courtyard and bedrooms which are nestled behind it’, says Sarah. Clad in timber and lined with recycled Oregon boards, all but the necessities are stripped away. A magnificent concrete dining table grounds the space, extending from the internal living area right out into the external courtyard.

Sleeping + bathing areas for the owners and their occasional guests occupy the remaining two pavilions. The structures are cloaked in canvas, to ‘amplify the intricate woodiness of the cabin thresholds by contrasting them with a skin that is both taught and soft’, Sarah explains.’These buildings are a family of similar but not identical parts, all of which sit comfortably in the landscape’

Cheshire Architects have not only designed a beautiful home here, but provided the tools and space for a quiet life of simple fulfilment.

The long concrete table extends the length of the interior, right out to the external courtyard. Pottery vessel by Jane Burn. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


A post stamp view out to the hills and the water. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


Inside the living quarters, line with recycled Oregon timber. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


Ceramics by Sophie Moran. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


The sleeping quarters. Bedding by Kip + Co. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


Looking out from the main living quarters into the internal courtyard. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


The living quarters are anchored around the fireplace. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


Details in the bathroom. Photo – Jackie Meiring.


Awaawaroa at night. Photo – Jackie Meiring.

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