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Let’s Bring the Church to the 21st Century

Let’s Bring the Church to the 21st Century

As an 18-year-old-boy Josh White walked through a dilapidated old building with no roof and thought, “wow, this would make a great house”. Twenty-two years later, he bought it.

Renovations can be tricky business at the best of times. When you’re looking at a historic church built in the late 19th Century, keeping the integrity and history of the building respectfully in tact while creating a modern space in which a modern family can comfortably live, is no small feat. Ensuring there was synergy between the old and the new was of utmost importance.

The approach led by Josh White, builder and architect at Spa Country Builders, was to embrace and champion the two conflicting elements, as opposed to separating them.

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

To this effect the church’s original walls were retained to juxtapose the stark white walls of the new build. “We also kept the roof pitch of the extension the same as the original church to tie the design together,” adds Josh. An island bench in the kitchen stands where the altar once stood when it was a functioning church.

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

Large Stegbar windows – one of the standout features – afford plenty of natural light to filter through as well as expansive, and enviable, views of the paddocks beyond. The existing nave and large timber trusses, which were repurposed from an old bridge in Kyneton, Victoria, are likewise impressive as is the floating internal staircase.

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

But no job comes without its challenges and removing the original alter in the kitchen – which was damaged beyond repair – is case in point. “We ended up using a 20 tonne excavator to keep workers away from the collapsing structure,” recalls Josh. Digging up the existing concrete floor is another example; in the 1950s it is assumed that concrete was poured over timber flooring, which has since rotted away and sunk. Essentially the entire structure was somehow sitting on thin air!

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

But it’s the challenges along the way that make a stunning end result all the more satisfying. An easy job just doesn’t give the same sense of accomplishment, does it.

Spa Country Builders 
+61 409 764 393
+61 3 5476 4393

Words by Holly Cunneen

Photography by Earl Carter

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

Yandoit House | Habitus Living

Yandoit House | Habitus Living


Author:

Holly Cunneen was the editor of Habitus and has spent her time in the media writing about architecture, design and our local industry. With a firm view that “design has a shared responsibility to the individual as much as it does the wider community,” her personal and professional trajectory sees her chart the interests, accomplishments, and emerging patterns of behaviour within the architecture and design community.