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Architecture Design Designers

Is this the best house in Australia? Houses Awards 2020 announced!

A humble beachside restoration in the Gold Coast suburbs has been awarded the 2020 Australian House of the Year. Chosen by a panel of industry experts, Cantala Avenue House by ME is a modest home, rich in thought and consideration.

The house is significant in the way it evolves the idea of an antipodean coastal home. With strong considerations towards sustainability and affordability, it rejoices in the idea of simplicity with a design that mirrors the no-fuss nature of the Australian home.

Celebrating their 10th year, the Houses Awards have set a benchmark of excellence in Australian residential architecture. Seeking to uncover emerging talent and celebrate the industry’s leading designers, the Awards recognise the ability to challenge architectural norms and explore the true meaning of “home”.

Within the broader context of the world’s current challenges, Cantala Avenue House teaches us to reflect on what is truly important and what we really need to live well. “Architect Matthew Eagle has solved ordinary design problems in an extraordinary way, reconsidered the suburban status quo and pushed boundaries, literally and figuratively, all within a reasonable budget.” said the jury.

Matthew himself says: “The existing dwelling is extruded to the east and north establishing a private north-facing courtyard and re-engaging the public components of the dwelling with the street and wider neighbourhood. Planted courtyards permeate the plan providing access to light, ventilation and nature.”

The home champions the capacity for modest residential architecture to significantly impact the way we live in Australia. Despite being sited within an unremarkable yet incredibly familiar suburban context, this alteration and addition of a ramshackle 1970s-era house offers its neighbourhood a welcoming communal space.

The new brickwork entry sequence, planting and seating under a mature poinciana tree presents a skilful navigation of the balance between public and private spaces, with the public zones of the home being pushed to the street edge. The experience of the dwelling is expanded to encompass the street, demonstrating how design interventions can genuinely build community and neighbourhood.

The jury said the house is a contemporary reinterpretation of the traditional beach shack – carefully avoiding replication, it is a playful and refreshing reinvention. It has civic respect, yet individualism. Standard or everyday materials and accessories, and the reuse of the existing structural systems, reveal the architect’s masterful ability to create architecture where it might otherwise not exist.

Equal priority has been given to indoor and outdoor spaces, appropriately embracing the subtropical climate. Both the existing plan and the new addition are punctuated with planted courtyards to maximise natural light and ventilation while minimising heat from the harsh western sun. 

Presented by Houses magazine, the House Awards is an annual program celebrating Australia’s best residential projects.

Architecture Media’s Katelin Butler said, that in her decade-long standing, there has been an undoubted evolution in Australian residential architecture as well as an emergence of a distinctly Australian design sensibility that responds to our climate and specific social culture.

Cantala Avenue House is joined by many outstanding architectural works this year. The 2020 Houses Awards winners are:

  • Australian House of the Year – Cantala Avenue House by ME (Miami, QLD)
  • New House Under 200 Square Metres – Fitzroy North House 02 by Rob Kennon Architects (Fitzroy North, VIC)
  • New House Over 200 Square Metres – Subiaco House by Vokes and Peters (Subiaco, WA)
  • House Alteration and Addition Over 200 Square Metres (Joint Winner) – Ruckers Hill House by Studio Bright (Northcote, VIC)
  • House Alteration and Addition Over 200 Square Metres (Joint Winner) – Cantala Avenue House by ME (Miami, QLD)
  • House Alteration and Addition Under 200 Square Metres – Bismarck House by Andrew Burges Architects (Bondi, NSW)
  • Apartment or Unit – Cremorne Point Apartment by Studio Plus Three (Cremorne Point, NSW)
  • Garden or Landscape – Vaucluse Garden by Jane Irwin Landscape Architecture with Bates Landscape (Vaucluse, NSW)
  • Sustainability – Waratah Secondary House by Anthrosite (Waratah, NSW)
  • House in a Heritage Context – Fitzroy North House 02 by Rob Kennon Architects (Fitzroy North, VIC)
  • Emerging Architecture Practice – Lineburg Wang (Brisbane, QLD)

Photography: Christopher Frederick Jones

Categories
Architecture Designers

Be inspired by the 2020 Houses Awards shortlist

For 10 years, the Houses Awards have shone a spotlight on Australia’s most outstanding homes, celebrating ambitious design and the very best in residential architecture. Today, we’re sharing just a handful of the shortlisted entries to inspire and delight you!

This year’s shortlisted projects represent the pinnacle of antipodean architecture and reflect the current zeitgeist of residential design in this country. A home can be a sanctuary away from the pressures of the outside world and perhaps that rings especially true in the current crisis, explains Katelin Butler, chair of the 2020 jury and editorial director at Architecture Media.

“This year’s jury was acutely aware of the broader context of what is happening in the world today – the current pandemic, our climate emergency and economic downturn. How do these challenges affect the way we design or should design in the future?

“The standout homes were the ones that not only comprised a series of beautifully designed spaces, but gave the impression that they would be highly functional and comfortable places to live. These homes showed the ways that residential architecture can contribute to the broader context of its streetscape and local suburb, and how design interventions can build community and neighbourhood.

“With density increasing in our Australian cities and suburbs, it’s important to think about connections that expand the experience of a dwelling beyond its technical boundaries and how to navigate the balance between public and private space.”

The winners will be announced 31 July with projects awarded across nine categories and one home awarded the premier title of Australian House of the Year. The 2020 jury includes: Barrie Marshall – Founding Partner, Denton Corker Marshall (VIC); Poppy Taylor – Founding Partner, Taylor and Hinds (TAS); James Russell – Principal, James Russell Architect (QLD); Hannah Tribe – Principal, Tribe Studio Architects (NSW); and Katelin Butler – Editorial Director, Architecture Media.

In the new house under 200m2, check out Paddington House 05 by Nobbs Radford Architects:

In the new house over 200m2 category, check out Glebe House by Chenchow Little Architects:

In the house alteration & addition under 200m2 category check out Park Life by Architecture Architecture:

In the house alteration and addition over 200 m2, check out Tree House by Madeleine Blanchfield Architects:

In the apartment category, check out Lawler Residence by Andrew Donaldson Architecture and Design:

For the house in a heritage context category check out Gallery House by Grove Architects:

See the full shortlist for the 2020 Houses Awards

Categories
Interiors Addict

The breathtaking winning homes from the 2014 Houses Awards

A hidden hilltop retreat, a new home that engages with its heritage context using imaginative brickwork, and a multi-residential apartment complex centred on community and self-sufficiency, were among the winners of this year’s Houses Awards, an annual celebration of Australia’s best residential design.

The Australian House of the Year by Peter Stutchbury. Photo: Michael Nicholson
The Australian House of the Year by Peter Stutchbury. Photo: Michael Nicholson

There were winners in eight categories, with one project receiving the premier accolade of Australian House of the Year. For the first time ever, all states were represented in the shortlist.

The Invisible House. Photo: Michael Nicholson
The Invisible House. Photo: Michael Nicholson

A sight to behold, the Invisible House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture was named Australian House of the Year. The judges said: “There is something absolutely Australian about this project, not just its connection to an undeniably spectacular setting, but also its modesty, clarity, resourcefulness and consequential delight. Being (another) rural retreat with a jaw-dropping view, this project needed to convince the jury that all the moves made to create it are in harmony with its location, and that it is a great piece of architecture in its own right, and this it has.”

Inside the winning Invisible House. Photo: Michael Nicholson
Inside the winning Invisible House. Photo: Michael Nicholson

We think the category winners are all pretty amazing:

New House under 200 m²

Dogtrot House by Dunn and Hillam Architects NSW

Dogtrot House. Photo: Killan O'Sullivan
Dogtrot House. Photo: Killan O’Sullivan

New House over 200 m²

Invisible House by Peter Stutchbury Architecture NSW

House Alteration & Addition under 200 m²

Cabin 2 by Maddison Architects VIC

Cabin 2. Photo: Will Watt
Cabin 2. Photo: Will Watt

House Alteration & Addition over 200 m²

Skylight House by Andrew Burges Architects NSW

Skylight House. Photo: Peter Bennetts
Skylight House. Photo: Peter Bennetts

Apartment or Unit

Loft Apartment West Melbourne by Adrian Amore Architects VIC

Loft Apartment. Photo: Fraser Marsden
Loft Apartment. Photo: Fraser Marsden

House in a Heritage Context (joint winner)

Middle Park House by Jackson Clements Burrows VIC

Middle Park House. Photo: John Gollings
Middle Park House. Photo: John Gollings

and

Westgarth House by Kennedy Nolan VIC

Westgarth House. Photo: Derek Swalwell
Westgarth House. Photo: Derek Swalwell

Sustainability

The Commons by Breathe Architecture VIC

The Commons. Photo: Andrew Wuttke
The Commons. Photo: Andrew Wuttke

Outdoor

The Garden Project by Welsh + Major Architects NSW

The Gardens. Photo: Brett Boardman
The Garden Project. Photo: Brett Boardman

The jurors for 2014 were: Brian Donovan, principal, BVN Donovan Hill (QLD), Maggie Edmond, founding director, Edmond and Corrigan (VIC), William Smart, creative director, Smart Design Studio (NSW), Emma Williamson, co-founder, CODA (WA), and Katelin Butler, editor, Houses magazine (VIC). Architectural advice in the heritage category was provided by Peter Williams of Williams Boag Architects on behalf of the Heritage Council of Victoria.