Tandem House – Melbourne

Tandem House is for a family with young adult children that is scaling down from a large suburban property to a small urban block in Hawthorn, Melbourne. Designed by Fiona Drago Architects, the house is composed of two buildings arranged in tandem, while presenting as a single building to the street. The two buildings are separated by a courtyard, which allows natural light in to the centre of the house and down to the basement.
The house incorporates a spacious living zone, several bedroom zones and a home office, allowing the occupants to live and work separately or in unison. The north-facing living area connects seamlessly through large sliding doors to the compact rear garden.
Inside, the light colour palette amplifies the sense of volume in each room. Most of the habitable rooms have views out to vegetation. The site is located at the corner of a quiet street and a laneway, on a site slightly wider than a standard terrace house, which provided the opportunity to design a double-fronted residence.
The services rooms (bath, laundry, kitchen) and the stairwell, functions that require less natural light, form a spine along the party wall. They are stacked on top of each another to provide greater efficiency in the services reticulation.
The clients purchased this property for its central location, they wanted to live in a walkable neighbourhood and reduce the amount of time they spent maintaining their house and garden.
The design respects the single storey scale and pitched roof forms of the neighbouring houses. It appears as a single storey dwelling from the street. The visible roof form aligns with the other pitched roofs in the streetscape.
The material palette reflects the masonry walls and metal roofs of the neighbouring houses and the grey colours of the zinc and masonry reflect the bluestone in the adjacent laneway.
The client’s brief was fairly straightforward; they said that they wanted a little, modern house. They wanted to down-size from their large family home, where their children had grown up, and wanted a compact house in a more central location, one that could be shared with their children as they became adults.

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