Lower Mill Estate Orchid
House by Sarah Featherstone
29/Oct/2006 Filed in:
Architecture
The
Lower Mill Estate in the Cotswolds Gloucestershire is
a privately owned, former gravel quarry of 222
hectares with seven lakes and three rivers.
22 architects and a total of 48 modern homes are
being developed
Seen here is the inspiring and whimsical work of
Sarah Featherstone.
"
Our
inspiration for Orchid House comes from the wildlife
and landscape at Lower Mill Estate. A number of
Orchid species can be found here, but it is the
camouflage of the Bee Orchid that specifically
generated our design.The house will blend with its
landscape and environment. The organic form is
created from laminated veneer lumbar (LVL) ribs and
clad with timber shingles (tiles). The camouflage
pattern is burnt to the timber."
The Vision
LANDMARK
HOUSES BY LOWER MILL ESTATE
The 'Landmark Houses' programme is envisioned
specifically for the site at Lower Mill Estate, in
the Cotswold Water Park, where we have invited a
number of architects, such as Will Alsop, Eva
Jiricna, Sutherland Hussey, Richard Meier and
Partners, Roger Sherman, Sarah Featherstone, Alison
Brooks, Piers Gough, Greg Lynn, etc. - an older
generation at the peak of their inventiveness, but
still in wonder at the world out there, and a younger
generation in the process of re-invention as they
gather a second breath - and asked each one to
speculate on the architectural poetics and ecological
considerations for the design of a 'landmark house'
within such a context.
More by luck than judgement, we've started off with
eight architects and eight designs, as did the
celebrated 'Case Study Houses' programme of Southern
California. This programme, initiated by John
Estenza, a champion of Modernism and editor of the
avant-garde monthly magazine, Arts and Architecture,
started off in January 1945 when he commissioned
eight nationally known architects, each to design
their own answer to create a house "to fulfil the
specification of a special living problem in the
Southern California area". In addition there was a
requirement that each house designed "must be capable
of duplication and in no sense be an individual
performance".
They had no clients - the clients came later when
construction began. They started off with eight
architects and eight designs and finished, in 1966,
with a total of 36 individual houses by 20 practices,
including the iconic Stahl House (1959-60) by Piers
Koenig, perched miraculously on the hills above West
Hollywood and Charles and Ray Eames' own house in
Pacific Palisades (1945-49) - one of the great
influences on English architecture from the mid
1960's. But the Case Study Houses were spread over a
wide area of southern California from the north west
of Santa Monica to the south east of Pasadena, whilst
the 'Landmark Houses' here are located entirely in
one 550 acre site in the Cotswold Water Park.
In addition, unlike the 'Case Study Houses', the
'Landmark Houses' programme is concerned with the
design of one-off houses, that act architecturally as
'focal points' within the simpler building vernacular
of the development. If anything, these buildings are
an 'individual performance' and bring to mind the
recent architectural development of Venice
California. Founded by Abbot Kinney of the Kinney
Brothers Tobacco Company in 1905, the six miles of
canals and intersecting streets and single storey
timber frame houses aligned along tree lined canal
banks, were part of his programme for a wider
cultural renaissance. The community, characterised by
a high degree of individuality which determines its
openness, was the place where the Beat poets later
hung out and where, in more recent years, the young
avant-garde architects of LA, including Frank Gehry,
began to cut their teeth on a series of adventurous
house designs.