An urban retreat of brick and cedar

On a long, narrow site in Auckland’s Coxs Bay, an expertly conceived home opens up to a green reserve on the site’s eastern boundary.

Contemporary architecture on the city fringe meets the recurring challenge of achieving privacy, light, and connection to the outdoors, often on sites where neighbouring properties are situated close to the boundaries. Here, however, solitude is ensured with the use of clever form and materiality. 

The pool and central courtyard offer both privacy and views, achieving a sense of openess that belies its footprint.

This home, by Guy Tarrant Architects, uses the courtyard typology to create both privacy and openness, with the central courtyard an oasis of calm — a concrete pool is surrounded by lush green planting and a moat, which negates the need for fencing, while an outdoor fire and alfresco entertaining area feel private and protected from the elements.

The house itself steps down the site, following the natural slope of the land, which drops away to the east. The brick exterior wraps into the internal walls of the first level, which consists of the bedrooms and office, unifying the quiet spaces. 

In the living room, dark stained timber in Dryden WoodOil Midnight meet the floating cedar ceiling which was finished in in Dryden WoodOil's Lite Oak.

The living and kitchen are stepped down — here, the space opens up with extensive glazing and clerestory windows, to frame the greenery beyond. The floating cedar roof was finished with Dryden WoodOil Lite Oak, a choice that beautifully complements the richness of the brick and the natural tones of the surrounding greenery.

Throughout the day the ceiling becomes a canvas as a spectacle of rippling reflections bounces off the courtyard pool, and light falls across the timber through clerestory windows and the eastern wall of glazing. 

Within this urban retreat, there’s a sense of being cocooned in a space of repose. 

dryden.co.nz

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

In frame

Designed by Jonas Trampedach in 2011 for FRAMA, the Rivet Series is crafted using a hand-hammered alternative to welding aluminium.

Design News

Intuitive simplicity

When it comes to home automation, a job well done is a job unseen. If you don’t notice it, and don’t need to interact with

Landscapes

Terracotta clad

Architect Tim Dorrington of Dorrington Atcheson Architects set out to produce something new: a prototype for pocket-sized houses envisioned as an alternative to large-scale developments.

Design News

Enduring character

Completed 10 years ago, and designed by architect Rich Naish of RTA Studio for his family, this home has settled effortlessly into its busy suburban