Here’s how this striking black-clad house responds to its tough landscape

With mountain ranges on all sides, this Queenstown home was designed to be striking, but sit unobtrusively amongst the landscape

Q&A with Jeff Fearon and Tim Hay of Fearon Hay Architects

In this striking black-clad Queenstown home the views of the surrounding mountain range are ever-present, but carefully framed and revealed slowly as you walk through the home. “The idea was that each roof would lift towards a different view, and bring the landscape into the house,” says Tim Hay of Fearon Hay Architects. “Because it’s only one room deep, there’s always light and always landscape.”

What was it like to revisit your original plans for a new client?

This was a unique case – a new client that we had also contemplated building with previously. We just picked up from where we left off really.

As a new introduction to the plan, how does the ‘airlock’ assist in function?

The airlock is an enclosure of the courtyard and functional interim space before entering the house proper. It’s also a response to the owners’ reworking of the internal spaces to create an additional sleeping/library space in the garage building. The threshold space provides internal access to the garage, laundry and boot room, not to mention a beautiful frame of the view line through the courtyard to the ranges beyond.

How does the house respond to the landscape?

We discussed the house as a response to the toughness of its environment and the outlook to mountain ranges on all sides. It creates a centre of gravity – a protected position for immersion in the landscape.

The house is built with four layers of cladding. How does the bullet-proof response work when there’s extensive glazing?

Compliance with codes and performance standards in extreme environments continues to require highly complex and layered solutions – in this case, a response to wind pressures, structural stiffness, water tightness and an external material selection that softens the extensive use of sheet metal and glass.

 


 

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

Impactful design

The 2024 Readers’ Choice Home of the Year, Sumner House by RTA Studio, is a place of striking proportions and captivating creativity: a powerful response

Homes

Open space

Perched atop an escarpment overlooking Whangārei’s town basin, this home is the embodiment of the owners’ vision, the architects’ knowledge, and the builder’s expertise.

Design News

Tangibility and presence

Nine years ago Scott Thorp moved to Christchurch to be closer to the mountains. It was here that he felt most connected to the land,

Design News

Painted heritage

Drawing on eight distinctive New Zealand landscapes, each reminiscent of a particular era in our colour evolution between 1830 and 1930, a new collection from