Bannerman House

This former coach-house located in Bendigo, Victoria offered Bijl Architecture the opportunity to explore heritage and adaptive design from a new perspective.

Carved off from the adjacent original gold-rush era mansion many decades ago, the Victorian-era building had been converted to a dwelling in the 1970s, and now sat on an unusual square allotment that created an uneasy relationship with the street.

With the adapted dwelling purchased in a dark and decrepit state, Bijl Architecture’s client – a busy music educator and conductor – briefed them to create a family home for contemporary living that would accommodate a grand piano in a salon-style environment for the teaching and enjoyment of music.

The house needed to exude delight, charm, compactness, and comfort.

Given the site constraints, instead of adding a modern form solely to the rear of the structure, the Bijl Architecture team ‘wrapped’ the coach-house volume to bring about a new focal point and balance to the site occupation.

As a result, the addition transitions and flows into the sandstone volume, without a marked division between heritage and contemporary.

Inspired by the work of minimalist artist Donald Judd, the scheme creates a recessive form that allows the renewed sandstone of the heritage building to be the hero.

As a result, the original features and openings of the coach-house – the loft window, carriage, and barn door openings – are retained and renewed.

These large openings create views from different vantage points extending through to the new open-plan kitchen and living environment.

Light washes down the restored sandstone walls to accentuate texture, complemented by a muted charcoal palette that creates a unified aesthetic through both the interiors and exteriors.

The new volume contains the entry to the dwelling, flanked internally and externally by discreet storage for everything from coats and boots through to music scores and instruments.

From the internal entry foyer, the circulation proceeds immediately to the open plan Kitchen/Living/Dining space that flows out to the rear deck and garden.

The new entry is framed by a significant skylight element, demarcating the old carriage archway that leads to the piano room and through to the main bedroom suite and stair.

Taking the stair leads you to the first floor, where the original ceilings and expressed framing has been retained, sitting over a simple floor plan of two bedrooms with a central bathroom.

With the vertical slats feathering and softening the bold form of the addition, the carport acts as both shield and cave.

Functioning as a multipurpose space – an undercover play area, a place for tinkering, a rehearsal platform, overflow space for entertaining – the carport is the perfect adjunct to the open deck, screening it from the street whilst furnishing flexibility and refuge.

The landscaped setting embraces the dwelling, completely renewed through the reintroduction of a low heritage style fence and cottage garden.

The sustainability of the dwelling has been expressed and developed in a number of ways by Bijl Architecture.

The significant retention and repair of embodied materials was a priority.

That was done to maintain the heritage value of the original sandstone walls, but also to reuse the existing first floor structure, gable roof cladding, construction, and internal linings first installed in the 1970s addition.

The adoption of an economical building approach was key.

Slab on ground construction was used in the new floors, assisting in the creation of thermal mass.

While the home can be closed-up for Bendigo’s cold winters, full-height sliding doors and louvred windows establish natural cross ventilation, lighting, and thermal massing throughout the year as needed.

Windows, skylights, and external doors are also all double glazed.

Overall, simple, robust materials and landscaping were used in the exterior and interior finishes to provide low maintenance opportunities in the short and longer term.

The opportunity to refashion and reinvigorate the spaces and materiality of this unusual building was not one that comes every day.

Bijl Architecture felt privileged to realise this project with a trusting client, a supportive local Council, and a truly collaborative building experience.

Working with an expert local builder and team who brought joy and skill to the project made an enormous difference for both the client and for the Bijl Architecture team as the ‘out of towners’.

Project Details

Completion date – 2019
Building levels – 2

Project Team

Architecture

Bijl Architecture

Bijl Architecture is an ambitious Sydney practice seeking to challenge the status quo. They believe that our homes, schools, and places of gathering are an expression of our communities’ collective values and hopes, for now and for the future.

www.bijlarchitecture.com.au

Construction

BLR Provincial Construction

BLR Provincial Construction has been operating since 2008. The company directors Dan Bahen, Michael Long and Jonathan Redfearn are all experienced builders and renovators holding high integrity through their well-designed, carefully managed, skilful work.

www.blrconstruction.com.au

Photography

Adam Gibson

Adam combines careful composition with light-footed spontaneity to uncover the human truth. With an eye for dramatic tension, his work reflects a life spent roaming within and beyond the wild Tasmanian landscape, responding to diverse creative briefs. He instinctively turns the abstract into the iconic, making rare moments accessible to a new audience.

www.adamgibson.com.au

Photo Gallery

Click on a thumbnail image to enlarge.

Design © 2020 Bijl Architecture. All Rights Reserved.| Images © 2020 Adam Gibson. All Rights Reserved.

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