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AUSTRALIAN CLIFFHANGER.


Teetering on the edge of a cliff, Harry Seidler's latest remarkable house is an assertive work in the tradition of Heroic Modernism, shaped equally by global culture and technology and local influences from site and place.

One of the few Modernists of the postwar generation to continue working in the Heroic tradition, Harry Seidler Harry Seidler, AC OBE (June 25, 1923 Vienna — March 9, 2006 Sydney) was an Austrian-born Australian architect who is considered to be one of the leading exponents of Modernism's methodology in Australia and the first architect to fully express the principles of the Bauhaus  is best known for his innovative and sometimes controversial urban high-rise structures (see for instance AR August 1991 and June 2001).

At the other end of the scale, Seidler also has an outstanding record of house designs, of which this recently completed holiday house in the Southern Highlands The Southern Highlands could refer to:
  • Southern Highlands, New South Wales, Australia
  • Southern Highlands, Papua New Guinea
  • Southern Highlands, Appalachian Mountains, south-east United States
 of New South Wales New South Wales, state (1991 pop. 5,164,549), 309,443 sq mi (801,457 sq km), SE Australia. It is bounded on the E by the Pacific Ocean. Sydney is the capital. The other principal urban centers are Newcastle, Wagga Wagga, Lismore, Wollongong, and Broken Hill.  is the latest. He was acquainted as a student in the US with such luminaries as Gropius, Breuer, Albers and Niemeyer. His early career in Sydney was distinguished by carefully sited timber-framed houses, strongly influenced by Breuer's New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt.  work; they fitted surprisingly well with Australian building traditions.

This house owes more to Niemeyer, with whom Seidler worked in Brazil, and to Seidler's own later inclination as a mature architect towards sculpted sculpt  
v. sculpt·ed, sculpt·ing, sculpts

v.tr.
1. To sculpture (an object).

2. To shape, mold, or fashion especially with artistry or precision:
 and bold forms. It stands in direct opposition to the more modest and restrained tradition of contemporary Australian residential architecture established by Glenn Murcutt, Philip Cox and Rex Addison, whose sophistication so·phis·ti·cate  
v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates

v.tr.
1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly.

2.
 and foreign influences are mostly concealed by more obvious regional elements. Situated in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of wilderness and dramatically poised on the crest of a red sandstone escarpment escarpment or scarp, long cliff, bluff, or steep slope, caused usually by geologic faulting (see fault) or by erosion of tilted rock layers. An example of a fault scarp is the north face of the San Jacinto Mts. in California.  overlooking a river, Seidler's design asserts itself as a self-consciously Modern work, shaped as much by a global culture and technology as by the rugged landscape it inhabits so forcefully.

Seidler achieves this splendidly confident result through a number of classic Modernist devices. A simple, 'L'-shaped plan accommodates bedrooms, bathrooms and other private rooms in the shorter leg along a north-south axis at the rear, parallel with the cliff. Living, dining and kitchen are grouped in one large space in the other, longer leg pointing westwards over the cliff edge.

Functional and spatial division into cellular and open plan spaces is further marked by a drop in floor level from east to west which follows the fall in the rocky plateau. The north-south axis is also picked up again by a swimming pool cut out of the rock to the north and by a separate garage to the south, the two being linked by a continuous sandstone retaining wall running under the house, where it forms part of the basement. A differentiation of the structure from heavy below (reinforced concrete floors, random rubble walls and fireplaces) to lightweight above (steel superstructure) helps to root the house securely into its site. This classic design is combined with more recent concerns with energy efficiency, the isolated house being by necessity relatively self-sufficient in power, heat and water supply, as well as waste management and bush fire sprinklers (which are fed from the swimming pool/reservoir).

What turns this essentially straightforward and mostly familiar configuration into stunning spectacle, is Seidler's handling of the curved, overhanging lines of the white painted steel roof, which seems to float above the rest of the house and the yawning space beyond the cliff, defying gravity. Made from curved steel beams with differing radii ra·di·i  
n.
A plural of radius.


radii
Noun

a plural of radius
 using new industrial technologies and covered with corrugated cor·ru·gate  
v. cor·ru·gat·ed, cor·ru·gat·ing, cor·ru·gates

v.tr.
To shape into folds or parallel and alternating ridges and grooves.

v.intr.
 steel roofing bent to suit -- a local touch there -- the sculptured roof shapes loudly proclaim an artistic intent as well as modern technique. A suspended steel balcony thrusting its way out below the dipping roof line from the living space invites visitors (those who don't suffer from vertigo that is) to step out into the void and reinforces the generally assertive tone of the design. Heroic Modernism is dead? Not in Seidler's hands.

Architect

Harry Seidler & Associates, Milsons Point, NSW NSW New South Wales

Noun 1. NSW - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
Naval Special Warfare
, Australia
COPYRIGHT 2001 EMAP Architecture
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Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Harry Seidler's latest remarkable house
Author:ABEL, CHRIS
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Jul 1, 2001
Words:622
Previous Article:JAPANESE MINIATURE.
Next Article:ATTEMPT AT ESSENCE.
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