This house is for four generations. The client had planned for their parents’ retirement, an ‘open home, a cool tropical paradise for the family’, encouraging their children to ‘raise their families here when they grow up’.
Designed with an I-Thou relationship with nature, the family and nature share the same breathing space. Plants, water bodies, and living spaces are integrated as one. The setting provides daylighting, natural ventilation, and passive cooling. It offers an ecological-friendly environment that promotes general wellness for all.
At the foyer, an old retaining wall with a history of leakage has been transformed into a green courtyard with waterfall feature. Visitors are now greeted with tropical rainforest plants and the sounds of cascading water, which can be enjoyed from all levels.
Working with the existing terrain, built-ups that contributed to the site coverage are utilised as planters for tropical fruit trees, to cool ambient temperature, and to insulate the interiors. On plan, the house is a green oasis amongst the neighbourhood, of landscape decks and cascading planters framing the bio pool and ponds. These are the catchment areas for rainwater harvesting, to be recycled for irrigation.
Planting verandahs of varying plant species line the peripheries of the rooms and overlook the central pool. This continues to form a planter bridge of passion fruits, where climbing vines provide sun-shade from the setting sun, and a privacy screen for the neighbours.
Craft is celebrated here. Salvaged materials and objects form part of the schedule of finishes. It suggests alternative palette, tactile and experiential qualities of housing, in physical and spiritual sense.
This house has become the popular gathering place for the extended families and friends, and it has also attracted a host of biodiversity – from bees, butterflies to squirrels.
By living with and constantly in touch with nature, this house is a sanctum from the hustle of urban-living, reconnecting one’s soul with nature. It also reflects the great collaboration between the client and the team of consultants and builders, in making this contemporary tropical setting possible.
1. Evening view of the house from the roof garden. The house steps and falls with the terrain forming an amphitheatre at the heart of the plan.
2. View from Cornwall Gardens (street name). The house front conceals an inner sanctum and an undulating terrain.
3. The house front reveals and connects with its layers of greenery, merging and blending with the plants and trees on the street.