Karekare Bach Unites Architecture and Nature

“A bach is New Zealand’s answer to the humble beach cabin, and the Karekare Bach represents the epitome of its building genre,” Ellie Stathaki writes for influential British design magazine, Wallpaper. “The simple wooden structure was designed by Auckland-based studio Stevens Lawson Architects, headed by Nicholas Stevens and Gary Lawson, for the designer Dean Poole and his family.”

“Situated deep in native bush, a stone’s throw from the small town of Karekare, this bach is the ultimate retreat; simple, fairly compact and surrounded by nature. This was a direct response to the owners’ brief, which outlined a holiday escape that would provide the ‘authentic New Zealand experience’. The architects worked hard to distil this into a building and Karekare Bach has been designed to perfection, from its overall proportions to its smallest details,” Stathaki writes.

“The overall design ‘references both the simple cabins built by early settlers and a Māori whare,’ explain the architects, linking this modest summer abode to the region’s past, as much as to its cultural and geographical context.”

Original article by Ellie Stathaki, Wallpaper, June 18, 2020.

Photo by Mark Smith.


Tags: Dean Poole  Gary Lawson  Karekare Bach  Nicholas Stevens  Stevens Lawson Architects  Wallpaper  

Met’s Arts of Oceania Has Maia Nuku in Charge

Met’s Arts of Oceania Has Maia Nuku in Charge

New Zealander Dr Maia Nuku is showcasing Oceania to the world at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas Bywater writes in a story for The New Zealand Herald. Curator of