New houses have the opportunity to explore form, orientation, planning, exterior and interiors. A great house does this with no corner ignored, with as much emphasis on space as on object, function and form, indoors and out.
At the Invisible House we find a collection of spaces that are distinct from one another, but that feel as though they belong together – open spaces are balanced with enclosed, long with short, horizontal with vertical. This is achieved through a masterful command of material, primarily local stone, concrete and wood, and a pared-back yet crafted approach to detailing. This approach extends from the bathtub to the roof, where water puddles before flowing through troughs to drop onto the landscape.
via. ArchitectureAU Latest