Home New Zealand – August 01, 2019

(Greg DeLong) #1
Groundfloor

Firstfloor


  1. Entry

  2. Bathroom

  3. Living

  4. Bedroom

  5. Study


1

Design


notebook


Q&A with architect Mark
Cannata of Zero Zero

How long did the renovation take?
Time in Sicily seems to move more
slowly than other parts of the world.
The construction phase took almost two
years, which is much longer than you
would normally expect. The emphasis
on quality and innovation meant a steep
learning curve for some of the contractors
and subcontractors involved.

Talk us through the ancient water supply.
Historically, when building a new house,
a cistern would have been carved out of
the bedrock to collect rainwater – the
only supply then. Most of the area is on
a karstic limestone plateau that’s riven
with caves and openings, such as the
cave under the house. The cistern, and the
adjacent one in the next house, may have
been carved from an existing void. It must
have been quite a feat of engineering: the
cistern is a pyramid with a square 4 x 4
metre base with rounded corners and
a circular sump to collect any silt.

What projects are you working on?
Our current workload is quite varied in
size and building type: we’ve just started
on a new house within the ruins of an old
stable, which will be a Near Zero Energy
Building. We are also working on new

suites set in a Mediterranean garden
for a luxury coastal resort, which will be
built entirely of Cross Laminated Timber.
On the larger end of the scale, we’ve
been providing sustainability advice
for a new biotechnology centre near
Palermo with HOK, my former London
practice. And, in collaboration with major
universities, we continue our research
and experimentation with a number
of projects that combine sustainability
and historic conservation.

What are your plans for the other two
buildings on the property? Well, Mia has
already decided that the cave should be
the ‘party’ room. It’s a generous space,
approximately 7 x 6 metres, which is
cool in summer and warm in winter. The
other two buildings will be respectively
the kitchen and living room in the final
configuration of the property. The house
has been designed with adaptability in
mind: Mia’s room will become the family
bathroom (it already has plumbing under
the floor); the current kitchen will become
the main bedroom, with the existing
pantry furniture adapted to a wardrobe
with the hidden en suite behind. The
upstairs ‘boat’ volume will become the
children’s bedroom and play area.

The mini-me tiny house.

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134 HOME NEW ZEALAND
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