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Issue 59 - The Life Outside Issue

Issue 59

The Life Outside Issue

Introducing the Life Outside issue of Habitus magazine. With life increasingly being absorbed into a digital space, there is never a more important moment to hold something tangible. In this context, the power of nature to have a physiological impact on our sense of wellbeing has never been more important. So how can we cultivate the benefits of the our natural environment in the most intimate of places – our homes? This was the question that helped to bring this issue of Habitus to life.

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A Rammed Earth Home Inspired By Childhood Memories
HomesRebecca Gross

A Rammed Earth Home Inspired By Childhood Memories

Australia

Inspired by memories of the client’s childhood home, rammed earth provides a warm and textured backdrop to everyday life in this extension designed by Steffen Welsch Architects.


Rammed earth brings a distinctive identity to this Melbourne home, inspired by the client’s childhood memories of growing up in a rammed earth house in the country. “We have used rammed earth for more than 15 years and it still has mysterious and seductive qualities to me,” says architect Steffen Welsch. “It is a stone material but warm. It is industrial but feels handmade. And I like its raw texture, especially when sunlight hits it.”

The clients engaged Steffen Welsch Architects to design an extension to their California bungalow, wanting to create a more sustainable, energy-efficient and comfortable home for their young family. They wanted functional, flexible spaces for everyday life and as well as for overnight guests and for entertaining. “A family home should encourage social interaction,” says Steffen. “This building becomes active with spaces that are connected to allow supervision and stimulate conversation. Bathrooms become social and pockets are inserted to make daily activities enjoyable.”

 

The clients wanted to create a more sustainable, energy-efficient and comfortable home for their young family.

 

Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater

Accommodating the new living, dining and kitchen, the extension has a sweeping floor plan that stretches to the rear of the property and wraps around a side garden. “The extension curls around to capture the sun, creating a communal courtyard and allowing the occupants to look at their own house rather than a paling fence,” says Steffen.

Rammed earth walls line the hallway at the entrance to the extension and create a sense of compression before opening to the study, and then the living, dining and kitchen. The walls appear freestanding with high-level windows bringing in additional light beneath the pitched roof. The rammed earth walls enclosing the living area create a sense of shelter and privacy and provide a raw and textured backdrop in the corner of this room.

Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater

The design team selected rammed earth not only as a reminder of the client’s childhood home but also for the sense of shelter and privacy and insulating qualities. Rammed earth absorbs sound to provide pleasant acoustics and also absorbs heat to moderate internal temperatures, keeping the house cool in summer and warm in winter. The natural texture and colour of the rammed earth are complemented with concrete floors and timber joinery, window and door frames. Joinery is designed to accommodate everyday living and activities with storage for everything from clothes and schoolbags to sports gear and electronic devices.

“I have always valued the every day as much as the spectacular, and this is a very comfortable home for the family it is designed for and has an identity without needing to be spectacular,” says Steffen.

Steffen Welsch Architects
steffenwelsch.com.au

Photography by Rhiannon Slater

Dissection Information
Rammed Earth walls from Olnee Rammed Earth
Charred timber from Hurford’s Warehouse
Kitchen cabinets from MTR Cabinets
Curtains and blinds from Clearview Sun Control
Door hardware from The Lock and Handle
Heating and cooling systems from Call Mercury
Landscape design by Peacy Green

Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater

 

Rammed earth absorbs sound to provide pleasant acoustics and also absorbs heat to moderate internal temperatures.

 

Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater

 

Joinery is designed to accommodate everyday living and activities with storage for everything from clothes and schoolbags to sports gear and electronic devices.

 

Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Down To Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater
Rammed Earth House Steffen Welsch Architects CC Rhiannon Slater

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About the Author

Rebecca Gross

Tags

Alterations And AdditionsArchitecturedesignHurford’s Shou Sugi BanMelbourne Residential DesignMTR CabinetsRammed Earthrebecca grossresidentialResidential Architecture


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Issue 59 - The Life Outside Issue

Issue 59

The Life Outside Issue

Introducing the Life Outside issue of Habitus magazine. With life increasingly being absorbed into a digital space, there is never a more important moment to hold something tangible. In this context, the power of nature to have a physiological impact on our sense of wellbeing has never been more important. So how can we cultivate the benefits of the our natural environment in the most intimate of places – our homes? This was the question that helped to bring this issue of Habitus to life.

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