banner

This house was designed for our friends while we all lived in Wellington; representative of the impending move that both our families would make to the Wakatipu. Two brothers had a plot each on the Cox Estate vineyard to build homes and work the vines for single-estate wines.

One client is interior architect Nikki Wilson. We conceived the idea of Assembly designing the exterior while she designed the interior and contract managed the build. Her husband Mike Cox, usually in the IT realm coordinated site services; mastering water and effluent. The design was highly collaborative from the inside out and the outside in.

The light timber framed house follows the sloping land with stepped rooms, raised on piles to allow views over the vines and structures. The carpentry house has a repetitive structure and expression inside and out. A mono-pitched metal roof folds down at each end, pierced with window boxes which provide framed views to the mountains each side. The intense summer sun is shielded on the West with deep window recesses, while the Eastern landscape provides retreat from the sun and wind on the West.

The interior is as reductive and rational as the exterior, inspired by low cost Japanese duplex housing. It is a small, relatively low budget house and its lean-ness is permitted by the sense of space and light the high ceilings and generous volumes give.

Strict subdivision criteria allowed for the removal of 11 rows of vines to create the building platform, which was also restricted with a 4.5m height limit above the sloping ground. The site is in the Gibbston Character Zone, with the consenting planner noting the design with its shed/industrial form appears functional, minimal, compatible with viticultural character, and achieves the intention of the consent requirement.

Assembly Architects
Otago
Get in touch
Visit Website
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House
Cox Estate House

Professionals used in
Cox Estate House

About the
Professional

Assembly is an Arrowtown based architecture practice delivering bespoke architecture with personality, environmental engagement and considered construction.

While the majority of our work is in housing, we have a reputation for innovation and collaboration resulting in a diverse portfolio including commercial, public and tourism projects and prefabricated buildings.

Assembly have developed expertise in many types of housing, including stand alone bespoke houses across a wide budget spectrum, housing development, and multi-generational housing. Our homes are decidedly individual, representing the diversity of clients and sites, materials and structure. We have expertise in rammed earth homes, recognized with finalist placings for the Terra Award, the first international prize for earthen architecture, and the NZ HOME of the Year.

Registered Architects Louise Wright and Justin Wright established Assembly in Wellington in 2005, and moved to Arrowtown in 2012.  The studio includes a diverse and talented team of architects, architecture graduates, architectural technicians and administrative support.

In 2019 Assembly was a founding signatory to the NZ Architect’s Declare Climate & Biodiversity Emergency.

Assembly is a New Zealand Institute of Architects practice.