Robson Rak has completed a monumental house in Melbourne, embedded in greenery and seemingly forged from solid stone. The entire package, from structure to furniture, and even the art, was put together by the St Kilda-based studio, which has dubbed it the ‘House of Stone and Soul’ – a modern Australian family home.
It’s true that there is a cave-like quality to some of the spaces contained within this expansive private residence, but there’s also an abundance of light, as well as carefully framed sequences and views between different rooms.
Designed for a family of six, the house has ample space for entertaining, as well as six bedrooms and capacious utility areas, including a gym, basement ‘rumpus room’, complete with access to a subterranean courtyard, and even office space for the whole family.
The house presents a solemn face to the street, with different layers and types of meticulously constructed stone creating a mysterious, cliff-like fa?ade. Even the bi-fold garage doors have been given a sliver of stone cladding that implies impervious solidity.
The main entrance is down a covered ‘canyon’ between the curving outside wall of the library and the garage – it also features a specially commissioned John Young artwork. An oval opening in the concrete canopy illuminates the threshold, leading one down a stone-clad tunnel to the front door.
Inside, the ground floor reveals itself as a series of layers. To the right are the library and primary study, with a great curved sweep of books, its own private terrace, and access to a ‘half court’ basketball space. Immediately to the left is a glazed box overlooking one of the house’s two basement courtyards, with the kitchen, formal dining room, and family room beyond.
Beyond the family room, which is shielded from the kitchen by a glazed ‘incursion’ by the tropically planted garden, is a 25m pool. Three sides of the house have a verdant outlook, and together with the use of multi-level courtyards, give this stone house a green soul.
- Interiors: Robson Rak Architects
- Photos: Shannon McGrath
- Words: Gina