Federal House, New South Wales
Architect: Edition Office
Year: 2021
Location: Federal (Nueva Gales del Sur), Australia
Category: Residential / Housing
Status: Built
About
On a hillock overlooking the environs of Byron Bay, in the western coast of Australia – a forested landscape as virginal as when Captain Cook first sighted it –, a house is designed as a sanctuary for its owner to escape to from a busy professional life. From afar its severe massing and muted material palette give it the corporal quality of an object aware of being dissonant in the area, like the ominous monolith in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey. Nevertheless, the jet black concrete of the structure and the darkened battens of the upper floor give the building both a tactile character and a comforting physical intimacy that would have delighted Tanizaki. The organizer is a central void surrounded by a semi-exterior gallery to which the living room and bedrooms can open out to, recalling the verandahs of Australian colonial homesteads, and which, in addition, acts as a thermal buffer. Under it, between the slope and the screen-like supports, is the cavernous space of a pool, which faces the landscape at only one end and is bathed by that uncertain light the Japanese writer said makes us “discover beauty in shadows.”