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Coastal cottage reborn: Surfside House
Surfside House, designed by Andrew Burges Architects, is a compact family home in Clovelly, a beachside Sydney suburb. This project involved converting an existing semi-detached dwelling, where the ground floor was reimagined into bedrooms, and a new open living space was added above. The design responds to the coastal hillside site, suggesting a new neighborhood character through its tower-like form and integrated garden platforms.
The ground floor of the Surfside House houses three bedrooms arranged around a central stair and study. The architects utilized overly wide doors to enhance light distribution and extend the perception of space. A main bedroom faces the street, while two children’s rooms at the rear open onto a small garden and connect to each other. This thoughtful allocation of doors creates a sense of continuous space throughout the ground level. To maximize the utility of the small rooms, built-in sleeping lofts were incorporated, providing each child with a private elevated space featuring a small window. The varied ceiling heights on this level, with their bulkheads and thresholds, define distinct areas and manipulate natural light to create pockets of shadow, making the rooms feel discrete even when doors are open.
In stark contrast to the ground floor, the first-floor living room is a singular, expansive open space. Large windows offer ocean views and invite breezes, while nearby treetops and new planter beds bring greenery close to the interior. Timber walls and sliding screens contribute to a treehouse-like ambiance. A rear deck extending from the kitchen further integrates planting through built-in garden beds. The kitchen, dining, and lounge areas are unified under a raked ceiling that ascends to a generous corner skylight, making the room feel large and spacious. The kitchen joinery is crafted to resemble bespoke furniture, reflecting its role as the heart of the home for a cooking-focused family.
Despite its open plan and large windows, the living room maintains a cozy and inviting atmosphere due to deliberate design choices. Deep reveals around most upper-level windows encourage occupants to sit and converse by the sill. A subtle separation between eating and lounging areas is achieved through a few steps and a low credenza, effectively zoning the space without dividing it. This allows for a sense of containment provided by the timber furniture.
The Surfside House stands out in Clovelly, an area that has seen significant development from its original simple cottages to a mix of units, duplexes, and contemporary homes. The state government's "Complying development" planning controls have often led to new constructions that disregard neighborhood character. Surfside House, with its hardwood board cladding, clean roofline, and raised planters, intentionally diverges from the traditional brick cottage aesthetic. Its tower-like form, visible through a gap in banksia trees, is designed to harmonize with the rich vegetation of the eastern suburbs. The timber cladding blends with the giant banksias, and the built-in planters integrate with the tree canopy. This design approach not only revived a dilapidated cottage but also provided a growing family with a functional and aesthetically pleasing home within their community, potentially offering a new vision for neighborhood character and priorities.
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