Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from February, 2024

Your building's date

 Last week we looked at furnishing a historic building, which leads us to the question of what style and date our building is, so that we can make decisions in harmony with its architectural era. In South Africa, the earliest dwellings in a Western style date to the 18th Century in the Cape Dutch style, characterised by whitewashed walls, thatched roofs and decorative plaster gables. This style remained popular into the early 1800s, and saw a revival in the 20th Century, often with copies of the gable at Groot Constantia, the most famous of the original Cape Dutch homesteads. Groot Constantia, a Cape Dutch homestead (creative commons licensed: https://jenikirbyhistory.getarchive.net/media/cape-dutch-building-fbbb50) From 1820, we see the introduction of British influence, initially in the Georgian style with often very plain white plastered walls, elegantly proportioned timber windows and slate or metal sheeting for the shallow-pitched roofs. Through the 19th Century, this sty...

Living in a heritage building

I have recently been exploring people's strategies for inhabiting Art Deco apartments, looking into their approaches to furnishings and furniture, and any adaptations that they may have made to their spaces to suit a modern lifestyle. The recurring theme in their responses was whether to attempt to decorate in a style that matched that of the exterior of the building, or whether to use a more modern approach. Their principal concerns were around cost and availability of contemporary pieces of furniture, but this leads on to a deeper question of aesthetics and authenticity. An Art Deco lounge (creative commons licensed:  https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Havana_Art_Deco_%288963955085%29.jpg#/media/File:Havana_Art_Deco_(8963955085).jpg) The photo above is an extreme attempt to create an entire environment in keeping with the early 1930s, including the floor and wall surfaces. The "Lucky Strike" branded ashtray introduces a humorous touch which relieves it from being t...

Building in a conservation environment

  In this blog, we look at strategies for staying where you live or work already, and the minimal adaptations that you can make to your environment with the least impact on your space and budget. This relates to my lifelong passion for conservation and history of architecture, in that the least impact on the built environment generally equates to the most historically sensitive. This said, it is not always possible to change only the fittings and furniture particularly as the modern word has changing requirements for services and transportation - we need to make larger-scale adaptations, which take on an additional considerations when working in a historical or conservation environment. My involvement in conservation dates back to the 1980s, when as a newly graduated architect, I was approached to assist with the garden and parking layout of Hazeldene Hall , a historical building in Johannesburg. The owners wanted to convert this mansion into a restaurant, which had to comply with ...

House hunting: an architect's perspective

This blog is aimed mainly at helping you live better where you are already, whether your home or your workplace, but today we explore looking at new premises, when all else fails in space making of our existing property. It is also a good idea to look around at what is on the market now and then, even if to confirm that we are living in the best possible place. In today's blog post, I share some of the things I look at when asked to give an architect's professional opinion on a potential purchase, or when I am more informally looking at houses with family or friends.  Today, we have the advantage of online listings of properties for sale with multiple photos or walk-through videos, allowing us to "view" dozens of offerings in an afternoon or as a regular pastime in the morning while waiting for the coffee to cool. We can use filters to narrow the search in terms of number of rooms or cost bracket. This is quite different from the past when properties were only listed ...