Randwick Pavilion

Sydney, Australia – MASQ Architecture

Built Area:     90.0 m2
Year Built:     2018
Photographs:    The Guthrie Project

The brief for Randwick Pavilion required the addition of three spaces to an existing home. A living room, kitchen, and dining room were appended into the original structure. The design of the living room establishes an indoor-outdoor connection. It’s surrounded by a garden on three sides while being completely enclosed and private.

The design of the Randwick Pavilion combines the right amount of exposure and privacy.
The design of the Randwick Pavilion combines the right amount of exposure and privacy.

To create a sense of intimacy, a solid wall closes off on one side. It rounds off a corner and peels away, giving way to a brick screen. This balances off the hard and heavy wall, making it lighter and allowing natural light in.

Inside, the material palette is subtle and discreet. Colors are mostly white with a combination of earth-tone hues. Dark granite floors provide a striking contrast against the stark white walls.

White walls and neutral color tones dominate the interior spaces.
White walls and neutral color tones dominate the interior spaces.

Randwick Pavilion is a homey, comfortable dwelling. Its design closely connects the indoors to the outdoors. It strikes a delicate balance between openness and protection, combining the right amount of exposure and privacy.

Notes from the Architect:

Our inspiration for the project lay in the established backyard which sat sunken down slightly from the surrounding. The brief was to add a new living room space, kitchen and accompanying dining room. We particularly wanted to have the living room feel very much like a pavilion in the garden, however we saw this as an enclosed and protected space as much as it needed to be connected to the garden. We created a brick wall that enveloped the upper level which was then suspended above glass doors and windows below.

At the northern edge of the space a low level brick ledge forms a seat at the threshold between inside and outside; with the windows fully open the space dissolves while the mass of the brick wall above provides intimacy and controls light into the space. We resisted the temptation of the ubiquitous high level northern windows but favoured the solid wall that rounds the corner gently then peels away from the façade. The wall breaks away becoming a brick screen protecting the glazing to the west whilst accentuating the floating effect of the solid mass further.

Considered as a space that inhabits both inside and outside, the pavilion can be both a place of open interaction or one of repose and protection.

Internally the kitchen is located at the rear of the space with an off form concrete box gutter expressed internally as the division between kitchen and living room. Above is a narrow slotted window framed in steel that provides a glimpse of foliage beyond but more importantly brings in light deep into the space. From here the ceiling slopes upwards to the north creating the large volume of the living room.

The material palate is restrained to respond to the budget; natural and white painted brickwork, dark granite floors and off form concrete, reflect a simple and honest application of the materials integral to the ideas behind the project.

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Exterior Views:

Interior Views:

Drawing Views:

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