— NZIA Local Award 2018 / Waikato Bay of Plenty
— HOME Magazine / Home of the Year Finalist 2018
Designed as a retreat, the DNA house is an exercise in contrast, delight, strength, and elevation.
A series of bi-folding perforated metal screens surround the home, serving to filter light, and provide an element of protection when the home is unoccupied. The DNA of the clients was sampled and the coded patterns were then combined to form the delicately structured perforation pattern.
The house is at once sleekly recessive and boldly sculptural – having been described as an otherworldly form, having seemingly landed on the beach, opening and closing in concert with the lives of its travellers.
The experience of arrival to the front door and the lower level promenade is a continuation of the meandering journey taken from either the beach or from the road to the nearby settlement on the Coromandel Peninsula. A series of steps and ramps provide for more of a soft and easy journey and serve to elevate the arrival.
The lower level houses the two bedrooms and a bathroom for each. Timber lined walls provide warmth, softness and enclosure, with all spaces opening directly to the outside and the perimeter transitional space. A floor hatch with rope ladder access provides for an additional direct and energetic connection.
Ascending the steel framed suspended timber stair to the living zone above, an open plan layout is surrounded by generous roof overhangs, lifting to the views and helping to define the zones within, and the large deck. A roof hatch at the apex allows for a connection to the sky at night for stargazing.
Photography by Simon Devitt