Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows, Table, Facade
© Katherine Lu

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Exterior Photography, FacadeGlassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Windows, FacadeGlassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, ShelvingGlassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Exterior Photography, FacadeGlassbook House / Sibling Architecture - More Images+ 11

Tempe, Australia
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2019
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Katherine Lu
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Cemintel, Lysaght, Mutina, Obeco Glass Blocks, Okalux, Oliveri, Rimex, Roca, Whirlpool
Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Katherine Lu

Text description provided by the architects. What does it mean to be at home? The home, for the client of the Glassbook House, is a place to retreat from the outside world. This hideaway, to the rear of a Federation-style house in Tempe, Sydney, explores the home as a sanctuary that revolves around a serious collection of books.

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Windows, Beam
© Katherine Lu
Ground floor plan
Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Stairs, Wood, Windows, Handrail
© Katherine Lu

The individual act of reading structures the two-storey addition to this home. Communal activities - eating, cooking and entertaining - are flanked by a two-storey bookcase. You can pull out a book anywhere and anytime.

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Shelving
© Katherine Lu
Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Interior Photography, Closet, Shelving, Windows, Beam, Facade
© Katherine Lu

Daylight filters through the southern glassblock facade deep into the interior. In Tempe, it also provides acoustic solace from the nearby Princes Highway, and planes passing overhead. A feature window, which frames a reading nook, punctures through the glass block facade to provide views of neighbouring rooftops and gardens. The backyard below has a permeable boundary that connects to the adjacent property. The home is not only a place for intimacy alone but also with neighbours.

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Katherine Lu

The details of the existing house, including decorative moldings, are amplified with careful and minimal intervention. This is carried through to a new bathroom converted from a second bedroom where partitions and joinery respect original decorative elements. The glass block edition at the rear adds continuity to the celebration of detail being read throughout the home.

Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Katherine Lu

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Cite: "Glassbook House / Sibling Architecture" 02 Jul 2020. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/942855/glassbook-house-sibling-architecture> ISSN 0719-8884

© Katherine Lu

‘玻璃书’住宅 / Sibling Architecture

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