All tagged townhouses

Jubilee Street Townhouses

Over two decades after his first Mansard housing development, Jeffrey Howett adapts his hidden storey again here on Jubilee Street, (1975) now with black painted tiles. On this note, Michael Markham pointed out an in interesting dichotomy with Howett’s progressive adaption to the finish of the Mansard tiles. Where Onslow Street exhibited painted white tiles, a gaze towards Modernism’s purity, here, we discover the inverse effect, black. To mediate such an effect emerges into Postmodernism’s ideology.[1] Modernist discourse aside, these Mansard (and rather peculiar) projects conceived by Howlett, succeed in challenging both the relationship with scale and density in town housing and the notion behind, specifically, the typical mansard townhouse. By making ambiguous statements in the proportioning of the roof component, in turn, compositionally balances on the edge to be an either a sloping wall or a roof. What is also remarkable is that Howlett’s mansard buildings partake in a two-decade housing experiment concerned with the typology of housing,[2] and has led to many other imitators of its kind.

Another note to mention in Howlett’s mansard townhouses is in his preference to resist a townhouse to be a detached dwelling. Instead, he has favored the quasi-stretched manor type. As a consequence, as noted by Markham through his windscreen driving past these projects, they are hard to see that they are indeed broken internally with separate dwellings inside their extruded linear volume. Conveying a similar type to the terrace or row house these rather old Mansard projects are therefore quite unique for Perth’s preference for the detached dwelling.

 

Notes:

 

[1] Michael Markham, “John Glenn’s Skyline,” Jeffery Howlett, Architectural Projects, Lawrence Wilson Gallery, 1992.

[1] Markham, “John Glenn’s Skyline,” 1992.

Knutsford Precinct

The Knutsford Precinct is a four-stage multi-residential development to a former industrial area. The formal industrial area still bears its presence with a mixed use of industrial yards, fabrication shops, stores, and lunch bars, and an old lime stone quarry, in an area of low-rise worker’s cottages.

 

The entrepreneurial nature of this project is unlike any other contemporary developer-led residential projects. Here, the Kuntsford precinct arose from a design-led bidding involving a syndicate developer-client that manifest in a recognition in its residential architectural achievements.

 

What is striking is how such a medium-density scale residential development employs its distinctive spatiality. The Kuntsford Precinct, (in its final stage of completion) speculates on a village typology within a Mediterranean-medieval setting in its scale, intimacy and climatic responsiveness, (by threading native landscaping upon the existing dune) resembles a cohesive whole. This is achieved in its spatial pragmatism grounded in a local sense of rustic modernist formality.

 

A mixture of private and shared outdoor spaces permits a sense of community, while an example of its successful pragmatic outcomes is demonstrated in the narrowing of laneway that runs through the North-South axis of the site. By challenging the States planning right-of-way requirements, this laneway has resulted in an intimate engagement with the first level balconies to encroach into the right of way, constituting a village-like a proportion of scale.  What emerges here is a safe and imaginative play area for children of the area.

 

 

For the future of densifying Perth’s domestic living, The Kuntsford Precinct advances the model that can also assist as a case study for future developer-led in Perth suburbs. 

 

For more information see review “Knutsford Stage 1” by Simon Pendal in Architecture Australia May/June 2017 vol.106 no.3.

 

image source:

https://images.thewest.com.au/publication/YA-300110/5754fa707214c_cs_jr_2016060508_knutsfordstage1_spaceagency.etal_robertfrith_0_1bl9uje-1bl9ujg.jpg