A working farm building & residential retreat in Tasmania by John Wardle Architects has won the Houses Magazine 2012 ‘House of the Year Award.’ ¬†The Shearer‚Äôs Quarters also received the gong in the New House under 200 square metres category.
From the architects:
This is an ambitious house that compels us to reflect on the inherent beauty of living. Set within a historic farming property in Tasmania, it is both a working farm building and a place of retreat. It is also a model for modest, small-footprint, environmentally responsive houses. The form of the rudimentary shed is the vehicle for an inquisitive exploration of detail, form and context. The material expression has a farm-sense quality and draws heavily on recycled timber and convict-era handmade bricks. This is a finely tuned and beautifully synthesised building that is a reminder of the essential systems and patterns of domestic life.
From the jury citation:
This is an ambitious house that compels us to reflect on the inherent beauty of living. Set within a historic farming property in Tasmania, it is both a working farm building and a place of retreat. While this might seem like a contradictory pattern of day-to-day inhabitation, here it has been effortlessly reconciled. This deft touch has created a house that is an exemplar for contemporary residential architecture, simultaneously functional and beautiful. It is also a model for modest, small-footprint, environmentally responsive houses. The form of the rudimentary shed is the vehicle for an inquisitive exploration of detail, form and context. Sited in a complex of buildings, but self-contained, its relationship to the existing 1840s cottage is in the farm tradition of small clusters of buildings, outbuildings and sheds. This apparently simple house has an effortless relationship to the built, cultivated and natural landscape. The material expression has a farm-sense quality, and draws heavily on recycled timber and convict-era handmade bricks. This is a finely tuned and beautifully synthesized building that is a reminder of the essential systems and patterns of domestic life.
www.johnwardlearchitects.com // Images (c) Trevor Mein //  View other Houses entries HERE.


















