Architecture should not only look good, but it should make us feel good, too, as it can undoubtedly impact our wellbeing and quality of life. Sunshine and fresh air, beyond affecting light levels and temperature, are energising and uplifting with the potential to influence our energy levels and mood. Open-plan living can encourage and support interactions and foster positive relationships, while flexible and zoned spaces cater for the changing dynamics of growing families.

This house in Coogee, Sydney, is light, open and spacious – just what the clients ordered. Designed by Madeleine Blanchfield Architects and home to a family with two young boys, it reflects both Madeleine and the client’s desire for bright, breezy spaces, knowing how they positively contribute to wellbeing. “I’m very much interested in how spaces feel and how you experience them as you move through a house as opposed to architecture as an object,” Madeleine explains. “Houses influence how you behave and interact and it takes a balance of openness and performance.”

Having visited Brazil, the clients had a great appreciation for Marcio Kogan’s architecture, particularly his rectilinear volumes wrapped with timber screens, and they took examples of his work to Madeleine. “Kogan’s houses are usually out in the open or surrounded by jungle, rather than neighbours, so our design was about creating that expansive feeling without large cantilevered concrete forms,” says Madeleine.

The house sits on a long and narrow north-south site with neighbouring houses backing on to the eastern side. It’s arranged with living areas downstairs and bedrooms upstairs. Two walkways are stacked on top of each other through the centre of the house and courtyards carved out either side. This allows eastern and northern sunlight to filter through the sheltered courtyard into the living spaces and keeps windows to the north and south.

The downstairs walkway extends from the front door to back garden and offers a portal view of the ocean. The corridor is lined with timber joinery providing storage and concealing access to the guest bedroom and children’s rumpus room. Both are designed to capture sunlight: the guest bedroom with a raked ceiling and the rumpus room with a void above.

Passing the courtyard, the walkway steps down into the kitchen, living and dining area while the ceiling level remains the same, creating a room with more than 3.5 metres in height. “As the rooms become larger they also gain more volume,” says Madeleine. High-level windows wrap around the room, enhancing the sense of loftiness. Views of the sky contribute to its calming atmosphere. The living area extends outside, and a stone wall protects the back garden and swimming pool from the strong southerly winds.

Large sliding glass doors open the living area, rumpus room and walkway to the outdoor spaces, maintaining a visual, acoustic and physical connection between spaces while still providing a sense of separation.

The stairs, laid with Mafi timber flooring, open to a study area and passageway overlooking the rumpus room, the void providing a link between the two floors. The master bedroom and ensuite at the end of the corridor offer panoramic views. “Bathrooms are one place you are sure to spend time every morning and night. They should be an uplifting experience, not shoved in the back corner,” says Madeleine.

To maintain privacy, the upstairs exterior is wrapped with perforated white Equitone screens, reminiscent of Kogan’s architecture. Concealing bedrooms when closed and opening for views and ventilation, they provide a soft ambience and cast patterns of light across the engineered timber floors.

Like much of the material palette, the screens required experimentation and determination to achieve the desired outcome. Only so much could be removed without losing stability. Likewise, the garage door took trialling to create a lightweight structure using timber battens and an aluminium frame. The effect integrates the garage with the house – the front door also being timber – similarly evoking Kogan’s timber screens, though in a different manner to the perforated panels.

Madeleine and the clients worked closely with stone company Skheme for the flooring, kitchen and bathrooms to push the boundaries of what is typically feasible. The kitchen is clad with Carrara marble with mitred edges, while a streel frame required to support the back wall and the downstairs floor, both inside and out, is laid with 1.5-square-metre Terrazzo tiles custom made in Italy. The tiles incorporate Carrara marble to complement the kitchen, and gold-coloured chips bring in the colour and warmth of the timber joinery and stained Accoya wood door frames. Arashi marble is a graphic and dramatic choice in the master bathroom, and marginally offset white-painted bricks create texture on interior and exterior walls.

The natural colour of the furnishings is also in harmony with the materials, contributing to the relaxing environment and ensuring attention is on the space, light and views.

Filled with sunshine, fresh air and open spaces, there is no doubt this house feels good. But more than that it helps the family live better. “The house feels calm and effortless. It’s not doing gymnastics or trying desperately hard,” says Madeleine.

Madeleine Blanchfield Architects

madeleineblanchfield.com

Photography by Robert Walsh

Dissection Information

Engineered oak flooring from Mafi

Honed Carrara marble, honed Concordia marble, custom terrazo stone, stone cladding, and marble pavers from Skheme

Paint from Dulux

Exterior wall cladding screens from Equitone

Window glazing from Viridian Glass

Windows and doors from Woodhill Joinery

Window furnishings from Simple Studio

Saarinen Womb Chair and Ottoman from dedece

PP35 timber coffee table by PP Møbler and Cappellini Peg armchair from Cult

Bamileke stools from Orient House

Sigh daybed by MRD Home from Julie Lewis Agency

TA22 Holborn dining table by e15 from Living Edge

Flow dining chairs by Ercol from Temperature Design

Frankie Deep sofa from Fanuli

Original bar stools by Ercol from Temperature Design

Sierra Weave Pumice rug from Armadillo&Co

Chez Fabrica rug from Whitecliffe Imports

Paulistano Armchair by Objekto from Hub furniture

Nook bed from Jardan

Mirthe outdoor table and Illum outdoor chairs by Tribù from Cosh Living

Ici wall sconce from Articolo

Envoy Swing Sconce from Schoolhouse Electric & Supply Co

Lampe de Marseille by Le Corbusier from Cult

In-Out Agape basin from Artedomus

Tapware and sanitaryware from Astra Walker

Custom marble basin by Madeleine Blanchfield Architects supplied by Skheme

Rosa freestanding stone bath from ACS Designer Bathrooms

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