Trends New Zealand Volume 33 No 2 | Page 24

Pavilion in the sky Solidly grounded on a steep hillside, this home transforms into a glass and steel pavilion on the top levels, optimising its stunning outlook Previous pages: Looking down on Queenstown from on high, this home is supported by massive stone walls emerging from the ground, with long horizontal topping beams forming the floor plates at each level. Above and facing page: Working with a steep site, architect Francis Whitaker cut into the face of the hill to create a large basement that includes the garage, a wine cellar, and a lobby with a grand staircase and lift to access the upper floors. search | save | share at The view from the top of Queenstown Hill is truly breathtaking. However, its extremely steep gradient was certainly an issue for the architect who conceived this multi-level holiday home. On his first visit to the site, architect Francis Whitaker says it wasn’t clear how he was ever going to build a house there. “It’s an exceptionally difficult site – extremely steep,” he says. “It’s the uppermost section of the highest subdivision in Queenstown, so it can never be built out. However, there was a problem – we had no flat land to build on.” Whitaker’s solution was to design a long narrow form, just one room wide, and partially submerge it into the hillside – following the contours of the land. “We had no brief from our clients for the look of the house, but because of the spatial require- ments and the large number of rooms, the house simply became a series of narrow layers emerg- ing out of the ground,” the architect says. “The building actually generated itself. It’s the only way it could exist.” The initial phase of the project was to cut a huge notch out of the hillside to create a flat and stable platform for the house. Peter Campbell,