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Kerferd by Whiting Architects

By Jessica Mejias

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Kerferd is a residential project completed by Whiting Architects.

Located in Melbourne, Australia, the home is stylish, with plenty of natural light to keep the interior bright.

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Kerferd by Whiting Architects:

“Rear extension to a double fronted Edwardian Redbrick, slate roof, four principle rooms with a central corridor. The new is essentially a self-contained home for parents. Children and guests are housed in the existing building with their own large bathroom.

A complimentary-opposite; relating through height, scale and proportion. Belonging without replicating. Avoiding the typical flat-roof response at odds with site and and surroundings. The new should contribute to a “sense-of-place” transcend fashion; remain contemporary and robust.

In getting back to architectonic basics we wanted to avoided the cliched, heroic-modernist box, or worse still the one-liner gimmick-piece in which the fabric of architecture is reinvented with each lean-to addition. Like a punch line, ok at first, a sugar hit, but by the second visit the novelty has worn thin, more saccharine than sweet.

Separate new from old with a clear delineation space to provide a physical break between the two buildings.

We created an infill building to complete the existing rooftop topography. Our site was the missing “tooth”. There is also a strong language of laneway pitch roof, attic garage extensions in the area.

Interior planning is resolved and minimal, no doors or corridors, thus no wasted space = less m2 but maintaining maximum amenity. This type of single-storey period home was never intended to have a stair, so we kept it simple and secondary. One minimal flight up to a low mezzanine study space.

What could have been corridor became the study with an under desk internal glazed visual link to the living area below. Then up a couple of steps to a window box daybed seating area. Again, a no corridor area, instead it’s a private sitting area adjacent to the master bedroom.

Arrival to the main bedroom is via these “transition spaces”, no bedroom door required. The robe is concealed behind bedhead box. The en suite is accessed behind an operable wall panel, a view out from the bath tub is available by sliding back a “barn-door” to reveal more internal glazing, giving the user the ability to personalises the level of privacy they want.

It is a utilitarian building like a workshop or a barn, conceived out of need rather than design. And as with these sorts of buildings, necessity drives the aesthetic.

The walls are panelled and robust, the spaces are just what they need to be and no more. We also liked the idea of capturing the informality of a holiday place. Nothing precious, all simple and practical. Not a high gloss show home, a base from which to explore. Visit the Albert Park village, the beach, St Vincent’s gardens, the Albert Park Lake, Aquatic Centre or jump on any one of a number of trams to the city of market.

An open kitchen eating area in the centre of it all with large wide table to spread out, simple efficient combustion fireplace, doors opening out to the back yard.
Kerferd-Place-by-Whiting-ArchitectsSite plan – click for larger image

Adaptation

We didn’t start with “design” then turn it into building, we started with “building” and turned it into design. We already had (or sourced) elements and materials. Vintage 1930s steel framed doors, commercial aluminium double glazed windows, timber “scissor trusses”, sheet cladding, grilles, fixtures, fittings, tiles, furniture and art.

We then set about crafting a home in a more vernacular, traditional way, to producing something that just “feels-right” through a subliminal, intuitive interpretation of subconsciously familiar architectural elements; corrugated-iron roof, gable-ended pitched roof, square high window, primary geometry: triangle, rectangle, square, extrapolated into 3D objects stacked about the house like giant crates.
Kerferd-Place-by-Whiting-ArchitectsGround floor and first floor plans – click for larger image

Our concept sketch looked like a child’s drawing of a house. Reading as an archetype, a prototype; the first in a run. This leads us to that recognisable “dignity-of-style” you get through familiar forms and archetypal elements.

A steep pitched-roof over a rectangular footprint. A single window, too high to look through. Primary-forms and simple-geometry. These aren’t features belonging to any single local vernacular; they are common where almost everyone lives.

Despite this ubiquity, we wanted to bring these elements together in an unusually refined and beautiful composition.The house should be a lesson in pride. It helps us to recognise the dignity of a style of building which is regarded as humble only because it has not until now been attended to properly. We point to some of what there is to be proud of in suburbs, in a realistic and practical way. We hope for something more in our work, an engagement with the building that transcends the obvious, something that bathes the subconscious and just feels right “intuitively”.

And therein lies the challenge, feels right intuitively – to remain an unspoken joy.”

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Floor Plans

Kerferd by Whiting Architects (18)

Photos by: Sharyn Cairns

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About Jessica Mejias

Jessica is a resident of Madrid, where she often can be found stalking the halls of the Prado Museum, hoping to catch a glimpse of Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights. An Art History graduate, she enjoys admiring art and architecture, reading, and keeping young by playing video games. Learn more about HomeDSGN's Editorial Process.

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