By Tennent Brown Architects
The Aro Hā retreat is a 16-32 bed yoga and wellbeing retreat with a spa and an associated residential community for staff, all founded on permaculture principles and capable of functioning off grid for periods of time. The site is on elevated schist foothills of the Richardson range near Glenorchy, overlooking the lake and Greenstone Valley.
The central siting concept for the design of the retreat is that of a necklace of buildings laid out on a path. This path reflects the journey which Aro Hā seeks to support for the guests; the provision of a transition space to enable personal growth and wellbeing.
The architectural language developed for the project draws from the natural environment. The forms are sculpted, typically mono-pitched with a singular weathered grey colouring to roof and walls. Local stone building elements are used sparingly and as anchors to otherwise timber-clad forms. The windows on the sunny faces are typically recessed into the building form in niches, to provide shading, in lieu of overhanging eaves, and provide measured solar gain for the passive house construction.
The community building captures the sun with attached triangulated food production structures for citrus and glasshouse kitchen gardens. This provides retreatants an education in permaculture principles.
The sacred space, and culmination of the ‘path’, is the Aro Hā Room, which has a billowed acoustic timber ceiling and timbered surfaces overlooking the empty surface of Lake Wakatipu. This room is designed as a reflective space for yoga, meditation, teachings and gatherings.
Aro Hā aims for self sufficiency: to be able to operate without connection to the grid, and with maximum on site food production. Almost every conceivable energy generation system is employed: solar thermal and wood boiler, all interconnected with a district heating scheme from thermal vessels, ground and roof based PV arrays, and micro-hydro generating into a large battery store.
Food production is integrated into the architecture with solar capturing greenhouses and winter gardens for extending the growing seasons.
AWARDS
PUBLICATIONS
Tennent Brown is concerned with people, how our buildings and environments will affect their experience. We design to uplift the quality of life, of work, play and wellbeing of those the buildings serve. Architecture is built around people, and every design is an individual's or organisation’s story: their hopes and aspirations for a building that is their own.
People entrust us with realising some expression of themselves, to translate that into built form. We take that seriously. Ours is an architecture of listening and understanding: a humanist architecture.