Winkler Residence by Peter Winkler Architects

Set among Messmate Gums in Australia’s Torquay hinterland, Peter Winkler Architects designed Winkler Residence as a home and studio shaped by a respect for the bush. The architecture studio describes the property as a hybrid, utilising “sustainability at every element of the home” and aiming to preserve the site’s existing landscape as much as possible.

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About Winkler Residence

Simple Architecture Forms a Dialogue Between Landscape and Home

The residence is composed of two recycled timber pavilions—The home and office are at either end of the main pavilion, with carport and guest accommodation in the other—linked by a bluestone terrace positioned beneath the largest existing canopy tree on site. This central threshold connects inside to outside, encouraging a deliberate engagement with landscape and weather. A colonnade walkway opens to the native garden, allowing the morning sun to filter through, while providing shelter in rain and a sense of pause before entry. Living spaces and bedrooms occupy the eastern pavilion, while the studio and guest accommodation are housed to the west. A flexible central zone supports both daily family life and weekday studio meetings, offering spatial versatility within a compact footprint.

Home Completed and Ornate Entrances to Studio and Carport

Sustainability is embedded into every element of the home. Structure, cladding, lining boards and decking are crafted from recycled Blackbutt salvaged from Wagga Wagga’s 1895 Hampden Bridge. The aged hardwood, sourced through AAH Hardwoods, carries both a rich narrative and technical advantage—seasoned over time, it offers exceptional dimensional stability. The building is constructed to a strict 1200mm grid, maximising efficiency in both planning and material use. Short lengths of timber are utilised within the rhythmic facade bays, reducing waste. Floor and ceiling linings in plywood sheets match this module, and structural members were ordered to exact profiles to avoid offcuts.

Full-height charcoal-tinted glazing is site-glazed directly into structural mullions, eliminating conventional window frames. This reduction in materials is both aesthetic and efficient, allowing uninterrupted views and reducing cost. Along the north facade, custom copper louvres offer summer shading while enabling passive solar gain in winter. The north-facing orientation and narrow floor plate maximise winter sun, with openable windows and sliding doors throughout ensuring effective cross ventilation and connection to sea breezes.

Elevated Construction and Thoughtful Root Preservation

The home sits elevated on a wide-span stump and pad footing system, designed to protect existing tree root systems and adapt to seasonal flooding. All services were carefully routed to avoid root damage, with excavation timed to align with spring rains and optimal regrowth conditions. Externally, the landscape and architecture speak the same language: permeable stone pavers on adjustable pedestals allow for airflow and water to reach tree roots, while garden paths meander through Bracken, Banksia and native grasses.

Natural Materials Nested Inside Quaternion Structure

Inside, the material palette is earthy, warm, and consistent with the ethos of living simply within nature. Recycled Blackbutt wall linings glow softly in daylight and form a backdrop to custom bamboo cabinetry, timber benchtops, brass fittings and black-anodised window frames. Nothing is white, silver or synthetic—materials are finished with natural oils, and no plasterboard is used. This home feels quiet, textural and grounded.

A generous Carport supports an active coastal lifestyle with ample storage for surfboards and gear. Outdoor showers and drying spaces encourage barefoot transitions between ocean and home. The wet entrance provides direct access to showers and laundry, making sandy returns from the beach seamless.

Humanistic Sculptural Elements Contrast Surfaces and Spaces

The fence line itself becomes a sculptural statement: hardwood posts of varying diameter and species represent the diversity of humanity—angled tops face in multiple directions, some toward the ocean, others toward each other, symbolising protection, community and dialogue.

Ultimately, Winkler Residence is a long-term, lived-in project—an architectural response to place, memory and climate. It champions recycled materials, passive design, and ecological care, creating a generous and adaptable home for work, life and play.

Photography by Johnny Rollin
Visit Peter Winkler Architects

- by Matt Watts

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