Houzz Tour: A Beach House Built for Family Togetherness
This lively beachside knockdown-rebuild is designed to stretch for the summer crowds when the 'whanau' gets together
The problem with living at a popular beach resort year round is balancing everyday needs with the barefoot bach informality of summer holidays. Add in a couple of generations of family visitors and a lively social life, and it takes some smart planning to pull off a home that works for every need. The owners of this full-time home called on architect Will Tatton, known for his respect of the archetypal Kiwi bach form, to create the hybrid home they needed. The result is a relaxed beach spot with a comfortable community feel, but a very personal and fully functional home for the owners when the crowds have gone.
Tatton took as inspiration the familiar flat-roofed bach forms from the ’40s to ’60s, when beach houses were cobbled together from whatever was at hand. These have long since disappeared from the Surfers Paradise-like strip of the Mount, but Tatton designed a modern version. He settled on multiple flat-roofed forms grouped around a central courtyard in carefully scaled heights.
Wide pathways ensure the house remains connected to the sand dunes, which was trickier than it looks as the builders had to fill a steep bank left by the removal of the original house on the big site. Judges who highly commended the home in the 2016 Architectural Designers New Zealand regional awards loved how the careful landscaping highlighted both the breadth and nooks and crannies of the house, and remarked that, “The overall effect of the relationship between house and landscape is to reconcile the ideas of beach house and permanent abode.”
Wide pathways ensure the house remains connected to the sand dunes, which was trickier than it looks as the builders had to fill a steep bank left by the removal of the original house on the big site. Judges who highly commended the home in the 2016 Architectural Designers New Zealand regional awards loved how the careful landscaping highlighted both the breadth and nooks and crannies of the house, and remarked that, “The overall effect of the relationship between house and landscape is to reconcile the ideas of beach house and permanent abode.”
The designer scaled up the materials to smarter versions of what was used in old-school baches: the garage doors are a twin-wall polycarbonate that glows from the inside when it is lit at night. The owner put it together himself, ensuring a weatherproof home for all his beach toys. The entrance to the house is to the far right.
One of Tatton’s tricks was to group sections of the house around a courtyard, giving the comforting effect of a village. Rooms, arranged in staggered rectangles, were kept simple so that people could trickle off to quieter spaces away from the main social areas.
A workshop and surfboard storage area open off this space to the right, while the back wall of the third bedroom and office are to the left. An enclosed courtyard sits at the end of the boardwalk.
A workshop and surfboard storage area open off this space to the right, while the back wall of the third bedroom and office are to the left. An enclosed courtyard sits at the end of the boardwalk.
Stepping stones lead down the side of the house to the beach from the surfboard room off the garage.
Seen here, the front door plays with the sense of proportion. “People go ‘Oh, it feels like a bach, I can walk right in and out to the beach’,” Tatton says. “But then they go ‘Hang on a minute, this feels quite big’. It’s a mental shift, the way we’ve played with proportion and scale.”
The cedar siding is another example of upscaling: the boards are wider and thicker than usual, with the careful addition of a black detail line to add heft. Two sets of slim louvres on the left ventilate the second living room, known as the whanau room.
The cedar siding is another example of upscaling: the boards are wider and thicker than usual, with the careful addition of a black detail line to add heft. Two sets of slim louvres on the left ventilate the second living room, known as the whanau room.
Principal living is arranged around the courtyard, sheltered from beach winds. Tatton treated this outdoor space as a room, with doors that can be opened and closed from the rest of the house. It is close enough to enjoy the sound of the sea.
A gallery hall welcomes visitors to their first vista of the sea. A small bedroom, family bathroom, toilet and laundry open off on the right of this hallway.
On one side of the courtyard is the whanau room, where overflow crowds can also bunk down. The generous family bathroom and separate toilet are across the hallway. Light fittings are vintage, a nod to the owners’ mid-century furniture.
The courtyard allows this back room to share views, breezes and the sounds of the sea, but is slightly withdrawn from the busiest areas at the front of the house.
Tatton always designs the kitchen layouts for his clients, but in this case he said the creative owners were hands-on. They worked with Mount Joinery to get the beachy feel, and fit in enough work surfaces for guests and hosts. The owner particularly wanted the coloured upper cabinets, a reference to the retro colours of old baches (that often used up whatever old paint colours that could be found). They mixed favourite timbers on the island and sideboard.
Pendant light fittings, sourced from Spain by the owners, help to mark out the dining zone in the generous open-plan area. The kitchen joinery is reflected in the sideboard materials and design.
In the open-plan living room and kitchen, Tatton played with ceiling heights and scale. The big room seems in proportion because of the raised ceilings, the warm recycled tawa floors and paler poplar plywood ceilings. A decent fireplace was a must to keep the house warm throughout the winter. The door beyond the fireplace leads to the master suite.
Having the master bedroom off the main living room means that the owners can live in just this wing of the house when they are on their own.
Seen here, the master bedroom shares the spectacular sea views, and a deck that steps down to the beach.
The bathtub in the master ensuite has a picture window for close-up sea views, while louvres provide tropical-style ventilation.
The walk-through shower and custom timber joinery keep the space airy and light, as do the floor-to-ceiling white tiles and large windows.
In the family bathroom, half walls between the shower and the vanity mean that more than one family member can use the room at once.
Tropical planting around the house blends the best of New Zealand (a nikau palm and Maori palisade-style fencing) with a lush tropical mood.
Houzz at a Glance
Who lives here: Empty nesters with a blended family of grown-up children and grandchildren
Location: Mount Maunganui, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Year built: 2015
Size: 300 square metres; 3 bedrooms plus a ‘whanau’ bunkroom/family room
Architectural Designer: Will Tatton, Will Tatton Architecture
Builder: Warwick Aitken, Beachside Builders
Tatton’s clients had lived in the Pacific Islands for some time, and he describes them as full of life: the husband a keen surfer, the wife a social worker, and a couple who’d always had foster kids and loads of people in their lives. “This new house had to be more than a family house,” he says. “The whanau [Maori word for extended family] room was to be open to wider family, it was about people mucking in together, the feeling of an old family bach with bunkrooms. It was a hybrid of the bach, but opulent enough for year-round living.”