Bellows House

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

BELLOWS HOUSE

Architects EAT

ARCHITECTS
Architects EAT

PHOTOGRAPHS
Derek Swalwell

AREA
350 m²

YEAR
2020

MANUFACTURERS
Brickworks

DESIGN ARCHITECT
Albert Mo

PROJECT ARCHITECTS
Sarah Magennis, Emma Gauder

LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
Jim Fogarty Landscape Design

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
R. Bliem & Associates

BUILDER
Cannon Build

CATEGORY
Houses, House Interiors

ART CONSULTANT
Swee Design

LOCATION
Flinders, Australia

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

A single row of mature poplar trees, along the side unsealed road, forms a soft foreground to what we considered as the “main” façade of the house.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Shadows of the trees cast onto the white concrete masonry blocks in the morning, animate the long articulated façade.

The articulations, through the masonry and concrete detailing, together with the frustum roofs and layering of spaces, evoke street engagements and curiosities.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

These pose a polemic to the long façade which is essentially a defense mechanism to provide and suggest domestic privacy.

The formal entry sequence starts from entering the pedestrian gate on the main street: the dusty pink brick pavers provide the conduit between the native garden and the building structure.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Through the gap between the long façade and the garage, an outdoor shower is provided for washing down the wet gears from the sea, before space opens up to the inner outdoor sanctum. Internal living spaces look into this north-facing courtyard garden where the family gathers and entertains.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Once inside the house, the 2 largest of the frustum roofs reveal their internal structure: reverse step concrete pyramids. The skylight in the center of them provides all-day illumination to the living and dining areas.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

The heaviness of the structure makes the external masonry feel like eggshells, with complex engineering and detailing make the exteriors all the more minimal.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

It is perhaps because this is a second home that the client has given us more latitude to “experiment”.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

We want a house that offers them a different experience than their city abode, a house that provides a sense of escape, a world away from their city existence; a house that their kids can reminisce their summer holidays when they grow up, a house that is memorable, under the concrete pyramids, their giant tents.

The notion of a beach house, or a second home, it’s often the place to get away with the family or it’s about getting together with a lot of people.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Many of the spaces that are conceived in this house are to facilitate these collective experiences:

kids bunkering together, an open washroom that doubles as a mudroom, multiple entry points into the house, different indoor and outdoor living areas; these areas converge when you eat, you only eat together in the one spot.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

It is at the onset of the project to design a house that is permanent, anchoring the house in the sands, as opposed to the lightweight beach vernacular, it is more of a bunker than a shack.

While this house doesn’t have spectacular clifftop views of the ocean, its flat inland village location prompted a response of a place marker, which the locals now affectionately refer to as the “Pyramids of Flinders”.

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell


Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell

Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell
Bellows House
© Derek Swalwell


Bellows House
Plan
Bellows House
Roof Plan


Bellows House
Section
Bellows House
Section Detail


Bellows House
Elevation
Bellows House
Sketch