ABODE MAGAZINE – Featured Article, July/August 2023
Words: Kathy Catton Photography: Andrew O’Sullivan and Grant Mangin
https://www.abodemagazine.co.nz/home/2023/7/3/designer-vision
Talented couple Andrew and Andrea Hopping have given the site of their earthquake-damaged villa a new lease of life, thanks to the work of Radius Building and Foley Group Architecture.
A quintessential 1910 New Zealand villa in the heart of St Albans was the perfect spot for Andrew and Andrea to raise a family. With great neighbours and an ideal location for schools, it ticked all the boxes.
But then the Christchurch earthquakes struck, and the original structure no longer held its appeal.
“The house shook when the dog ran around inside, and dust had a habit of collecting in one corner,” says Andrea. While the insurance covered the cost of new foundations, when the time came to repile the home, it quickly became apparent that an upgrade was required.
“It was a great villa for bringing up our family, but it had done its time,” says Andrea. “We knew we had to start again.”
Andrea and her husband Andrew were familiar with the building industry, so they seemed unphased by undertaking such a project. As a Director at Foley Group Landscape Design, Andrea was adept at working with clients to design homes, interiors and landscapes. Andrew, whose family own Montreux Furniture, oversees the interior design resource centre DesignMade. This resource allowed access to the very best interior products, so it meant he could call on his contacts to get the job done.
The couple’s first point of call was Radius Building. Andrea had previously worked with Richard Fantham, Company Director and Project Manager at Radius Building. “Richard was known to us for being that builder who always comes up with solutions,” says Andrea. “He also knows the way we live, and he really ‘gets’ us, so it was an easy decision to choose Richard and Radius Building.”
Although Andrea and Andrew concepted the home themselves, Dulcie Brown, Principal Architect at Foley Group Architecture took these concepts and transformed them into a well thought out design. As Andrea says, “Architect Dulcie Brown, through her meticulous tailoring, captured the essence of us and our brief, sculpting the ideas we had, into our home.”
The design brief was to create a home that integrates family life with entertaining. It was decided early on to locate the three family bedrooms on the first floor and keep the ground floor as open and flexible as possible for entertaining.
“The challenge was to keep the building mass within the permitted zone created by the boundary recession planes,” explains Dulcie. “It led naturally to a long, narrow home. This is expressed externally with a strong extruded gable form which presents a bold frontage to the street and opens up at the rear to provide the master bedroom with views to the garden.” By having two storeys it also allowed for the ground floor spaces to have maximum connection to the garden areas, a must-have for the family.