The site for this house contained a ruined farmhouse and barns that had been in the family since the early 1800’s. Its layout was typical of the vernacular farmhouse type with a series of simple pitched roof volumes arranged around several yards that provide shelter from the coastal weather. These buildings and yards accumulate incrementally over generations with new structures added to accommodate new uses.
The initial client brief was to renovate the existing buildings – but we enjoyed them as ruins. In their cob and stone walls, in the broken windows and weathered shutters, in the cast iron stove and stable hitches, in the egg boxes and broken books we could see the lives of those who had lived here before and could feel the slow passage of time. To renovate would be to erase the mysterious joy of the ruin. So we decided to add to the complex of buildings the way it had always happened in the past, with the addition of a single simple volume. In the process we created a series of outdoor garden rooms within and between the existing structures.
The form and materials are intended to resonate with the surrounding buildings making a house that is simultaneously old and new. The very affordable construction is in simple block walls washed with mortar internally and all of the openings are glazed doors allowing one to move freely between new rooms and garden rooms. The simple pitched roof externally conceals a variety of ‘tented’ ceilings internally giving each room a unique character and playfulness.
Completed 2019
Photography by Aisling McCoy.
Winner of the Best House in the RIAI Awards 2021
Highly Commended in the Architectural Review 'New into Old' Awards
Winner of a Special RIAI Award for Research in Practice 2021
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