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Lochside House

Scottish Highlands, Fort Augustus PH32 4BY, UK

haysomwardmiller.co.uk

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Feb 25, 2024

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United Kingdom

Category:

RESIDENTIAL

House

Project Type:

Post Type:

Building

Country:

United Kingdom

Richard Fraser

Photographers:

Architects:

Haysom Ward Miller

Area:

Year:

City:

Scottish Highlands

Construction:

Client

Private

Description:

the Architects

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The very energy-efficient structure uses highly-insulated SIP panels, prefabricated to minimize transport of materials. The cladding is Scottish larch, charred by the contractor using a variation of the traditional Japanese shou sugi ban technique to achieve a naturally varied rich color and improved durability. The house will be completely off-grid, with its own water supply, sewage treatment and electrical system, all designed to minimize energy use. The modular form of the house, made up of three simple, pitched-roofed volumes, reduces the apparent scale and the height of the roofs and allows sections to be isolated and left unheated when not required. The scale of the individual sections relates to that of the buildings small and shelters that have stood on the peninsula in the past, the ruins of which still remain. The design does not try to copy the style of existing buildings in the area but its straightforward use of local stone and timber and simple forms are common with the traditional croft houses and agricultural buildings of the Highlands. The intention is that the development should have minimal impact upon the natural flora and fauna and will instead leave it as undisturbed as possible. Rather than surrounding the house with conventional domestic garden planting, the natural materials of the house sit in the natural landscape and, as the ground level falls away to the southeast, terminate with a deck or jetty above the unspoiled surrounding site. New planting will use native species chosen only to re-establish those that have been suppressed by invasive rhododendron or grazing, and to introduce a little more ecological diversity. As the process of clearing rhododendron continues, it is believed that other species should be able to reclaim much of the site with only minimal help - small Scots Pine seedlings are already established and need only protection from grazing. The existing birch, alder and larch will be augmented, with more planting of native heathers and juniper to add to the diversity of the lower stores. Yellow flag iris will be introduced to the existing boggy area to the east of the proposed house. The flat "green" roof connecting the pitched volumes will be planted with the some of the same mix of sedums, sea pink and other species found on the rocks nearby. The scale and sitting of the buildings, tucked into a natural fold in the land and designed around the existing established trees, has been carefully considered so that the building feels an integrated part of its surroundings from the outset - a modest and sustainable home that makes the most of, and has minimal impact upon, its very special location.

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Haysom Ward Miller

About

Haysom Ward Miller:

Haysom Ward Miller Architects is a Cambridge based RIBA Award winning practice. Our work includes a wide range of projects from private one-off houses, to housing developments, educational, ecclesiastic and other building types. HWM do not promote a singular architectural style or brand. Instead we seek to develop an architectural language which is strongly rooted in the surrounding context. We aim to design buildings and spaces which are responsive, dynamic and integrated. Our concern is not principally with the designed object as much as how that object informs and influences the surrounding environment. The design process is one of translation and interpretation, which begins with a mapping and reading of the surrounding context and ends with a built form which we hope will enhance and reinforce pre-existing positive aspects of its surroundings whilst healing the negatives.

Category

House

Post Type

Building

Project Type

RESIDENTIAL

Country

United Kingdom

Year

Area

Client

Private

Photographers

Richard Fraser

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