Cedar and oak

While the house that previously stood on this site was tired and needed replacing, the site itself was something special for architect Paul Clarke of Studio2 Architects. Surrounded by grand old trees, including an 80-year-old oak, the site called for a new home that took full advantage of the garden. 

When designing the new house for himself and his family, Clarke decided to play on the idea of memory, taking remnants of the previous home into the new and commemorating the family’s journey and narrative with design motifs and materiality. A major part of this was taking the cedar from the outside of the old home and reusing it for cabinetry throughout the new house. 

The recycled timber can be seen in this ensuite bathroom, where it is used for the vanity cabinetry. 

“There is this idea of memory and reference, where you travel into different spaces and you have this recollection of the material being used elsewhere, so the house feels connected through that materiality,” says Clarke.

The en suite — which opens via a large glazed door onto a platform cantilevered over the garden — has a prominent view of the old oak tree. 

“In the middle of winter, on a cold morning, you can have the door wide open with a steamy shower going and, because the site is very private, you feel like you’re showering in nature,” says Clarke. “I love working in and around the property in the garden, and I can come in the shower door and get rid of the dirt without traipsing it through.”

External lights into the oak tree and over the garden make it possible to leave lights off inside the master suite at night, thus breaking down the barriers between the interior and exterior spaces. 

“I appreciate the ability to be private but have that connection to a beautiful outlook, a landscape or a garden, even from these private spaces,” says the architect.

 

Get the look

Towel rail – David Shaw custom-made oak and blackened steel

Cabinetry – Recycled cedar

Countertop – Black granite with a leaded finish

Basin – Duravit Vero

Tapware – Bellini

Shower fitting – Dornbracht

Images: Simon Devitt

Latest video features

In the Coromandel, a home with a humble profile and a thoughtful design makes the most of a stunning location.

Built with awe-inspiring attention to detail, this Arrowtown home is a fresh interpretation of a familiar Otago rural vernacular.

This sculptural Northland bach is a perfect north arrow on a remote farm high above the sea.

With the sun on its bow and the community at its stern, this is a house in which the elements are always front of mind.

Trending articles

Design News

On Dorset Street

When interior designer, Campbell Johnson, returned to Christchurch from Europe, it was one of Sir Miles Warren’s Dorset Street Flats that caught his eye. It’s

Homes

City villa: A sleek Remuera renovation

Approach this 100-year-old villa in Auckland’s Remuera and there’s a beguiling sense of history and character, but there’s also a sense of something more.

Homes

Pavilion in the clouds

Five simple elements and the well-placed delivery of a stunning view define this minimalist, Hawke’s Bay home by Dorrington Atcheson Architects.