Within a protected cove along the South Shore of Nova Scotia, at the end of a stretch of sand, a river empties out into the sea. Time and tides have created a one-kilometre forested sandbar on which this beach house lightly sits.
Despite its dramatic location on an expanse of shoreline, the clients also were drawn to the internal, cozy character of the site, and so, Lockeport Beach House is an oxymoron. Scraggly tamarack and spruce trees covered in Old Manโs Beard are very particular to some areas of Nova Scotia and thrive in the 10 cm of shallow soil here. The trees shelter the site from the openness of the beach, defend against sandbank erosion, and create a very specific sense of place.
A mandate of protecting the sandbank, and the clientsโ appreciation of hearing the ocean, but not seeing it were starting points for siting strategy. They did not want their new house to be on display from the beach, and the design response celebrates the property as a site within a larger site of unspoiled coastline. Resisting the urge to expose the house to the beach created a framework for the overall design that works to highlight and respect the inherent beauty of a forest site beside the sea
The house is elevated on helical piles bearing six meters into the sand, minimizing excavation, tree clearing and sandbank erosion. Oriented 20ยฐ west of south, the design takes advantage of passive solar orientation, and catching light. At 10โ deep, the 48โ wide cantilevered roof culminates into a razor-edge. It provides shade in the summer, and allows the low winter sun to warm the concrete floors in the cold season. The asymmetrical gabled roof also leverages coastal storms, collecting rainwater that is funneled into three 1750 gallon (6700 litre) cisterns, providing the sole source of water for the house. The scale and relationship of the private and communal spaces and their views to the exterior reflect the initial impressions of the site – at once cozy and intimate, yet open, and expansive โ and expresses a series of spatial experiences as one moves through the house.
A typical response for waterfront property would be to clear the tree line to reveal the view, however, this project seeks to maintain as much as possible, the site as-found. From the beach, and to locals, the house is hidden; its modest siting plays a small role in preserving the unspoiled forest edge and coastline.
Photo credit: Janet Kimber
Designed by:ย Nova Tayona Architects
Technical Info
- Project: Lockeport Beach House
- Location: Nova Scotia, Canada
- Budget: witheld
- Project end date: July 2016
- Area: 205 m2
- Client: witheld
- Architects: Nova Tayona Architects
- General Contractor: Trunnells and Tenons Construction
- Photographer: Janet Kimber
- Press distribution: v2com
Aboutย Nova Tayona Architects
Nova Tayona Architects is a Toronto-based studio with projects in Ontario and Nova Scotia, Canada. The firm focuses on the specifics of site and well-crafted architecture achieved through a collaborative process between client and architect.