Bunkeren House and Lodgings has been conceived as an immersive extension of its surrounding coastal environment, with a design strategy that places the landscape at the forefront.
Rather than presenting as a conventional dwelling, the project is planned so that arrival at the house is experienced as arrival at a garden, reflecting the way natural headlands frame the beaches they overlook.
This approach guides every aspect of the layout and construction, creating a residence where built form recedes and the coastal setting becomes the primary architectural presence.
Set within an amphitheatre of conglomerate rock, the house is cast along a gentle linear arc that mirrors the geological rhythms of nearby headlands and embayed shorelines. Half submerged within the hillside, the structure gains climatic stability, improved bushfire protection and increased habitat potential. This submersion also ensures that the coastal topography dominates the visual experience, with the house acting as a quiet anchor point rather than a competing element.
The planning centres on a series of elevated earthen platforms that hover above the site. These platforms are separated from the enclosed room volumes by post tensioned concrete cantilevers, allowing daylight and natural ventilation to pass freely through the spaces. Each axis terminates in a curated landscape view, reinforcing the sense of connection to the surrounding terrain. Concrete has been chosen for its robustness and ability to withstand ongoing interaction with soil, planting and the coastal climate.
Central to the project is the creation of a biodiverse environment. The garden is planted with fifteen endemic species selected to support local wildlife, particularly bird life. Over time, these plantings will continue to grow over and around the built elements, encouraging a gradual blending of architecture and nature. The result is a site that reads more as landscape than house, with raised platforms and planted terraces forming a layered ecological response to the coastal setting.
Through its integration with the hillside and its embrace of environmental processes, Bunkeren House demonstrates how residential architecture can deepen a site’s natural character while providing a resilient and climate responsive place to stay.
Images by Tony Marshall via ArchDaily
Studio Tate has completed a lavish redesign of the 17th floor of a distinctive hexagonal building in Melbourne, ...
Red sculptural interventions define the interior of ARKS’ new flagship store in Bandra West, Mumbai, where Anagram Architects ...
Work is set to begin on a new 12-storey mixed-use affordable housing development in Adelaide’s inner north-west, marking ...
Specifier Source is brought to you by the same company that publishes Home Design, Grand Designs Australia Magazine, Kitchens & Bathrooms Quarterly Magazine, Outdoor Design Source, Build Home, CompleteHome and many more.