Elliott Architects Inc.

House Elliott

House Elliott
© Danie Nel

HOUSE ELLIOTT

Paul Elliott Architects

ARCHITECTS
Paul Elliott Architects

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Mitchell du Plessis

ENGINEERING
WSP

MANUFACTURERS
Amorim Cork South Africa, Xlam

PHOTOGRAPHS
Danie Nel

AREA
90 m²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Cape Town, South Africa

CATEGORY
Houses

The submitted work is a cork-clad, mass timber house built on a relatively inaccessible site, the subdivided portion of a house designed by Julian Elliott.

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

The site is 13.5m meters wide and 30m long. The short side is at the end of a cul-de-sac. There is a river running through the site. Prescribed setbacks from the river and the back wall allowed for a 4.5m deep floor plan.

The original build is the garage of the original house which became my mother’s pottery studio. It is built with bagged brickwork and has a vaulted roof, definitely, Corbusier-inspired!

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

A glass and steel studio was added some thirty years later and my father worked from there until it was turned into a granny flat where my parents lived out their lives.

Our mass timber addition on the other side of the river stretches the full width of the site. It is elevated and steps down in three platforms due to the sloping site.

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

Mass timber was chosen as the building material for its carbon-neutral credentials, ease of erection, and health benefits. Due to inaccessibility, the CLT floor, wall, and roof panels were lifted over the existing house using a crane.

Cork was chosen as the cladding material as it is water repellant, UV and mold resistant and have excellent insulating and acoustic properties. Used to clad the walls and the roof it gives the house a monolithic appearance.

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

The plan layout resembles a Japanese townhouse of the Machiya type found in Kyoto, in that it is a collection of pavilions connected by courtyards.

A pleasant result of the additive building process is movement space. One moves through the existing house and arrives at the garden at the back through series of surprising spaces, the whole being revealed only at the end of the journey.

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

The front of the house is a carport/workshop, office, guest room, and bathroom. Utilitarian, it is seen as a public space, and entrance to the rest of the house is by invitation only. The middle of the house is a gathering space for dining and living: a family room. It has a patio out to the west for grilling and alfresco dining.

There is a covered bridge/deck connecting the new to the old which can also be used for outdoor entertainment. Crossing the river court you arrive at the new house which is more private and contains three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a library, and a multi-purpose room opening out onto an outdoor living area.

House Elliott
© Danie Nel
House Elliott
© Danie Nel

At the back is a zen garden with plants and water features. The painted shared wall has a graphic by Sengai, a Japanese Buddhist monk called Sengai’s Universe. Square-man, triangle-aspiration, and circle-enlightenment.


House Elliott
Sections
House Elliott
Isometric Views
House Elliott
Plan
House Elliott
Isometric Views

Elliott Architects Inc.
T +1 405 2720600
Elliott Architects Inc.
900 NW 6th St, Oklahoma City, OK 73106, United States