From French Chateau to Rugged Coastal Farmhouse: The Unexpected Transformation of a South Australian Home
A 17th century Dutch painting was the unlikely inspiration for a classic Australian farmhouse that defies expectations
A 17th century Dutch painting was the unlikely inspiration for a classic Australian farmhouse that defies expectations
There’s a scene at the end of the 2023 hit film Saltburn where the lead character, Oliver, dances naked through the house that gives the film its name, moving from room to room via a series of perfectly aligned doorways.
It’s an arresting sequence choreographed to Sophie Eliis-Bextor’s Murder on the Dancefloor. You wouldn’t think that a house like that, first built in the 1300s and modified in the 1700s, would not have anything in common with a newly completed farmhouse on the rugged coastal landscape outside the town of Carrickalinga on the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia.
But you’d be wrong.
It’s true, says architect Mladen Zujic from Architects Ink, that the owners of this modest-looking farmhouse initially had their hearts set on something grander and more recognisably European when they first approached his firm.
“The first few images they gave us were of a French neo classical chateau,” he says. “We said maybe we weren’t the best architects for this, so in the beginning, we declined it.”
However, they kept talking, about their past, their family backgrounds and their experience of being on this piece of land characterised by sandstone outcrops and strong winds.
“One of the owners was from the Blue Mountains in NSW and she had memories from that time of living in the landscape,” Zujic says. “They had camped on this site quite a bit and they came to realise they wanted something more permanent.”
It was easy to see the attraction of a site with such untamed beauty, even if it did present significant barriers to creating a permanent, welcoming home.
“The site is defined by soft high hills adjacent to the beach and there are deep valleys and crevices which create these wind tunnels,” he says. “As much as the site is amazing, you feel like you are above the clouds, where, over hundreds and thousands of years, the winds have blown away a lot of the soil and it’s very rocky.”
Designing a house that would be able to manage the unforgiving conditions without feeling — or looking — like a bunker became the main focus. Which is where the Saltburn references start making more sense.
In pitching the design concept to the owners, Zujic turned to a painting by 17th century Dutch artist Emanuel de Witte, Interior with a Woman Playing a Virginal. The artist, renowned for his architectural interiors, captures a space, much like the manor house in Saltburn, where rooms are connected directly by a series of doorways, without the use of corridors. It was exactly what Zujic intended for the Carrickalinga house, where no space was wasted and connectivity reigned.
“Even though there are rooms and the division of space is apparent, there is a sequence to it, like in the Dutch painting,” he says. “The house also gets more private as you get away from the public areas like the dining room and kitchen space.
“On the right, there’s a library and maybe a kids’ room and then the master suite at the bottom. It is an economical and efficient type of construction.”
Rather than the typical farmhouse design, which involves a long, thin, dwelling facing north, this house is a perfect square — with the centre removed. It solved a problem common to homes trying to manage heat and light in the harsh Australian climate which often suffer from a lack of light at the centre.
“We took a typical pitched roof and we took the dark heart out of it,” Zujic says. “The winds there are up to 220km an hour so we created a central courtyard, inverted the house and put the veranda on the inside.
“It fortified the house against the wind.”
An inverted roofline helps control access to natural light throughout the year, shading the house from the worst in summer and letting the light and heat in during winter.
Given its location, bushfire prevention is also a key consideration. A series of sliding steel shutters allows the house to be locked down when needed while the simplified roofline hinders the accumulation of leaf litter, which would provide fuel for ember attacks.
The design means that the occupants live on the perimeter and in constant connection to the natural environment, whether it is the rugged, uncompromising coastline, or the protected micro climate of the internal courtyard.
“Ninety percent of the year the owners circulate from room to room from the inside courtyard,” he says. “The dining room has glazing that can slide back and open up to the view if they want to pull the breeze in. It acts a bit like the lungs of the courtyard.”
Instead of assigning purposes to each room, Zujic says they have been deliberately designed to be as flexible as possible, with the bare minimum of fittings and fixtures.
“The owners were keen on a commercial kitchen but we talked them out of fixing almost anything to the wall,” he says. “The bookshelves are freestanding and we put everything we could on castors.
“It’s more like a gallery approach than a traditional house so that if you change your ideas on how you can use the space, you can move it around.”
The simplified style also suited the owners’ decision to build the house themselves.
“We tried to keep it as simple as possible because the owner was building it himself,” he says. “It’s not the best built house — it has a certain roughness. It’s built from the heart, not from the ruler.”
In a house like this, even apparent mishaps become part of the story.
“When they poured the slab, they had a kangaroo hop across it and they asked me: ‘what do we do now?’,” says Zujic.
“I said: ‘you leave it there and accept the things that happen.’
Credits: Photographer Thurston Empson Aerial Photographer Corey Roberts
This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan
Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.
For every hotel spotlighting its historical bona fides, there are many that didn’t stand the test of time. Here, some of the most infamous.
Many luxury hotels only build on their gilded reputations with each passing decade. But others are less fortunate. Here are five long-gone grandes dames that fell from grace—and one that persists, but in a significantly diminished form.
A magnet for celebrities, the Garden of Allah was once the scene-making equivalent of today’s Chateau Marmont. Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner’s affair allegedly started there and Humphrey Bogart lived in one of its bungalows for a time.
Crimean expat Alla Nazimova leased a grand home in Hollywood after World War I, but soon turned it into a hotel, where she prioritised glamorous clientele. Others risked being ejected by guards and a fearsome dog dubbed the Hound of the Baskervilles. Demolished in the 1950s, the site’s now a parking lot.
The Astor family hoped to repeat their success when they opened this sequel to their megahit Waldorf Astoria hotel in 1904. It became an anchor of the nascent Theater District, buzzy (and naughty) enough to inspire Cole Porter to write in “High Society”: “Have you heard that Mimsie Starr…got pinched in the Astor Bar?”
That bar soon gained another reputation. “Gentlemen who preferred the company of other gentlemen would meet in a certain section of the bar,” said travel expert Henry Harteveldt of consulting firm Atmosphere Research. By the 1960s, the hotel had lost its lustre and was demolished; the 54-storey One Astor Plaza skyscraper was built in its place.
In the 1950s, colonial officers around Africa treated Mozambique as an off-duty playground. They flocked, in particular, to the Santa Carolina, a five-star hotel on a gorgeous archipelago off the country’s southern coast.
Run by a Portuguese businessman and his wife, the resort included an airstrip that ferried visitors in and out. Ask locals why the place was eventually reduced to rubble, and some whisper that the couple were cursed—and that’s why no one wanted to take over when the business collapsed in the ’70s. Today, seeing the abandoned, crumbled ruins and murals bleached by the sun, it’s hard to dismiss their superstitions entirely.
The overwater bungalow, a shorthand for barefoot luxury around the world, began in French Polynesia—but not with the locals. Instead, it was a marketing gimmick cooked up by a trio of rascally Americans. They moved to French Polynesia in the late 1950s, and soon tried to capitalise on the newly built international airport and a looming tourism boom.
That proved difficult because their five-room hotel on the island of Raiatea lacked a beach. They devised a fix: building rooms on pontoons above the water. They were an instant phenomenon, spreading around the islands and the world—per fan site OverwaterBungalows.net , there are now more than 9,000 worldwide, from the Maldives to Mexico. That first property, though, is no more.
The Ricker family started out as innkeepers, running a stagecoach stop in Maine in the 1790s. When Hiram Ricker took over the operation, the family expanded into the business by which it would make its fortune: water. Thanks to savvy marketing, by the 1870s, doctors were prescribing Poland Spring mineral water and die-hards were making pilgrimages to the source.
The Rickers opened the Poland Spring House in 1876, and eventually expanded it to include one of the earliest resort-based golf courses in the country, a barber shop, dance studio and music hall. By the turn of the century, it was among the most glamorous resort complexes in New England.
Mismanagement eventually forced its sale in 1962, and both the water operation and hospitality holdings went through several owners and operators. While the water venture retains its prominence, the hotel has weathered less well, becoming a pleasant—but far from luxurious—mid-market resort. Former NYU hospitality professor Bjorn Hanson says attempts at upgrading over the decades have been futile. “I was a consultant to a developer in the 1970s to return the resort to its ‘former glory,’ but it never happened.”
This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan
Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.