1. Home
  2. /
  3. Houses
  4. /
  5. M House, Clareville, Australia by Rama Architects

M House, Clareville, Australia by Rama Architects

Project name:
M House
Architecture firm:
Rama Architects
Location:
Clareville, Clareville, New South Wales. Northern Beaches of Sydney. Garigal Country, Australia
Photography:
Anson Smart
Principal architect:
Thomas Martin, Rama Architects
Design team:
Rama Architects
Collaborators:
Interior design:
Rama Architects
Built area:
376 m² (floor area)
Site area:
1321 m²
Design year:
2017
Completion year:
2022
Civil engineer:
Structural engineer:
VDM Consulting Engineers
Environmental & MEP:
Landscape:
Sprout Studio
Lighting:
Rama Architects
Supervision:
Rama Architects
Visualization:
Rama Architects
Tools used:
Construction:
Hampton Constructions
Material:
Tallowwood, Stone, Concrete
Budget:
$4.5M
Client:
Private
Status:
Completed
Typology:
Residential › House

Rama Architects: On the leafy shoreline of Clareville Beach, this new residential dwelling recedes behind a green canopy cascading from the rooftop down and growing up from below blurring the lines between outside and in. Hints of Brazilian Modernism are seen in the concrete form with deep drawn-out eaves, voids and openness.

The underlying principal for M House was to create a restful and private family home that receded into the landscape using immersive planting from the rooftop cascading down, visible from every room, as well as planting from the ground up. Encouraging nature to envelop the structure, blurring lines between outside and in allows the home to disappear behind the greenery providing privacy and tranquillity.

The feeling of being outside yet still being sheltered by a formative structure was key – this is where we played with the idea of hard and soft. Hard is represented in the Brazilian modernist design with concrete, stone and tallowwood. The result is a solid structure with large eaves creating a safe shelter in which to recede.

The soft is exemplified with light, voids, landscape and glass. The soft allows the strong shelter to become one with the trees, plants and water surrounding the home.


By Stephany Mata Garcia

Share on: