Architect Pancho Guedes's love of complex geometric angles is clear in the design of this Johannesburg home, with the statement chimney stack a thoughtful and eye-catching addition.
KNOWN FOR HIS SCULPTURAL AND WELL-THOUGHT-OUT BUILDINGS, PANCHO GUEDES WAS INSPIRED BY SURREALISM, AFRICAN ART AND ARCHITECT ANTONI GAUDÍ.
THE COLEMANS are not your average suburbanites - although chatting to the humble Audrey Coleman, now 90, you wouldn't guess it. She and her late husband, Max, were active human-rights advocates during the apartheid years, both working for the Detainees' Parents Support Committee, with Audrey also a long-standing and celebrated member of the legendary humanrights organisation, Black Sash.
An important piece of South African architectural history, House Coleman sits comfortably among the greenery of historic Forest Town; a courtyard filled with palm trees, banana leaf plants and strelitzias is a tropical oasis-like space; while not large, the home certainly packs a design punch with its unfussy white exterior, angular lines and porthole windows.
House Coleman has major cred too. Built in the early 1980s, it's a masterpiece of clean lines and geometric shapes and, though tailor-made to be its owners' retirement home, it's also a piece of South African design history. "Our son Colin was a student at Wits University and insisted that Pancho Guedes was the only person for the job," says Audrey of their choice of architect.
A large light-filled kitchen leads into an impressive dining room. Guedes designed the doors, which include cathedral-glass windows, himself. A lifelong fan of art and design, homeowner Audrey Coleman had the chairs - inspired by Scottish architect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh's Hill House chairs - specially made.
Bu hikaye VISI dergisinin 125 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye VISI dergisinin 125 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
ROOTS
LOCATED WITHIN THE EXTRAORDINARY LANDSCAPES OF THE SINCLAIR NATURE RESERVE, NOOISHOF IS A PLACE OF SOUL-STIRRING BEAUTY THE RESULT OF A LIFELONG LOVE AFFAIR WITH SOUTHERN NAMIBIA.
REMINISCENT
A CREATIVE COUPLE COMBINED IMAGINATION, SIMPLICITY AND A GOOD DOSE OF ENERGY TO TRANSFORM THIS FRENCH FARMHOUSE AND ITS OUTBUILDINGS INTO A HOME THAT REMINDS THEM OF CAPE TOWN.
SIMPLIFICATION
A SMART, SAVVY AND BUDGET-FRIENDLY RENOVATION HAS MADE THE VERY MOST OF THIS YOUNG FAMILY'S HOME IN CAPE TOWN. HERE, JAPANDI-STYLE SIMPLICITY REIGNS - AND THE INDOOR-OUTDOOR LIVING IS EASY.
UP
SITUATED IN A GROVE OF INDIGENOUS MILKWOODS OVERLOOKING AN EXPANSIVE BEACH, THIS CONTEMPORARY TREEHOUSE EMBRACES THE FUNDAMENTALS OF ECO-CONSCIOUS ARCHITECTURE.
CLARITY
ON THE SHORES OF WALKER BAY IN THE WESTERN CAPE, A CONTEMPORARY HOME CREATED BY A PAIR OF GRAPHIC DESIGNERS COMBINES CLEAN-CUT ARCHITECTURAL LINES WITH FRESH INTERIORS.
GEM
DESIGNED AND PREVIOUSLY OWNED BY ONE OF THE GIANTS OF AMERICAN MODERNIST ARCHITECTURE, ARTHUR WITTHOEFFT, THIS UPSTATE NEW YORK HOUSE BUILT IN 1957 HAS BEEN SYMPATHETICALLY RESTORED BY ITS CURRENT OWNERS.
POTENTIAL
A CREATIVE, HANDS-ON COUPLE TRANSFORMED AN ORDINARY HOUSE INTO AN ENCHANTED WONDERLAND OF INTERCONNECTED SPACES WITH INSPIRED DESIGN COMBINATIONS AND EASY-GOING GLAMOUR.
LARGER THAN LIFE
Four South African MURAL ARTISTS are transforming the local URBAN LANDSCAPE, one attention-grabbing wall at a time.
IN STUDIO WITH ZYDIA BOTES
For the powerhouse behind SOMETHING GOOD STUDIO and ROMARIA KNITWEAR, it's all about collaborative design, making connections and a calm, happy workspace.
ANATOMY OF A CHAIR
Founders of local furniture brand PEDERSEN LENNARD, Luke Pedersen and James Lennard, talk us through the inspiration and design process behind their new TULBAGH CHAIR.