Roy Grounds House

Coordinates: 37°50′08″S 145°00′47″E / 37.835435°S 145.013180°E / -37.835435; 145.013180
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Roy Grounds House
View of building from Hill Street
Map
General information
TypeHouse & apartments
Architectural styleMid-Twentieth Century
Address24 Hill Street, Toorak
Town or cityMelbourne, Victoria
CountryAustralia
Coordinates37°50′08″S 145°00′47″E / 37.835435°S 145.013180°E / -37.835435; 145.013180
Completed1953
Design and construction
Architect(s)Sir Roy Grounds
Architecture firmGround, Romberg and Boyd
Awards and prizesVictorian Architecture Medal

The Roy Grounds House, at 24 Hill Street, Toorak in Melbourne, Australia, was designed by Sir Roy Grounds as his own home for his wife Betty and himself. It is celebrated as one of the most outstanding works of modernist domestic architecture of the mid 20th century in Victoria, a time of great experimentation, and one of the most notable designs by Roy Grounds, one of the most well known and influential modern architects in Victoria.[1]

Description[edit]

The house is an exercise in pure platonic geometries in plan, a perfectly circular glass walled courtyard within a square of solid brick walls, broken only by the front door (and a back door to the kitchen). A broad flat roof with wide eaves floats above the external wall on continuous highlight windows. Internally the rooms are divided by radial walls, which stop short of the courtyard, the focus of the house.[1]

There are four flats behind the house that reach down the block, the first being a smaller single level studio unit, while the other three are matching larger double storey two bedroom units. These three step towards the driveway, allowing easy access to undercover parking, and increasingly larger courtyard gardens. While they do not have the geometry or oriental repose of the main house, they include distinctive features such as the angled carport walls, small slatted balconies, and a double height main space, with double storey window wall facing the courtyard gardens.[2]

Significance[edit]

The complete focus on the internal courtyard, creates an inward looking, almost eastern character. This oriental influence continues to the external design, with strong solid walls, topped by projecting eaves floating above the highlight windows, and a single central large door with oversized knocker. The original planting of the courtyard with persimmon and bamboo also displays an eastern influence.[1]

The house is one of series by Roy Grounds built in the same year that explored pure geometric shapes; this house was square, the Henty House in Frankston was circular, while the Leyser House in Kew was an elevated triangle.[3]

The Roy Grounds House is one of the most well known Mid Century Modernist houses in Melbourne. It received the only award granted in 1954, the Victorian Architecture Medal, which in turn was the only award granted between the awards ceasing in 1942 and restarting in 1964. in 1989 it was one of about 30 houses representing the range of Victorian house styles that were featured as models in the exhibition 'Home Sweet Home: Changes in Victorian Domestic Architecture, 1839-1989' staged by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and the Museum of Victoria in 1989.[4] In 2001 it was added to the Victorian Heritage Register.[1] The house is considered a prototype for Grounds' design for the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) in 1959, which also features a rectangular masonry volume, central door, highlight windows with a floating roof, and central courtyards. Since the mid-2000s the house has been rediscovered and elements restored, and is a widely known and celebrated, with owners passionate about its significance.[5]

The Grounds house and flats is considered to be of architectural significance to the State of Victoria, with the Heritage Council Victoria describing it "... of architectural significance as one of the most celebrated works of modernist domestic architecture of the mid 20th century in Victoria. The perfectly square plan, with a circular courtyard at its centre, is a striking essay in pure geometry, a hallmark of Ground's work, and one of the best examples of experimentation with geometry in the work of post war avant-garde architects in Victoria."[6]

Gallery[edit]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "GROUNDS HOUSE". Victorian Heritage Database. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  2. ^ "grounds-house-and-flats" (PDF). Australian Institute of Architects. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  3. ^ Wille, Peter 1932-1972 photographer; Grounds, Roy Burman Sir 1905-1981. "Triangular House - Studley Street, Kew, Melbourne. Roy Grounds. 1951". Item held by State Library of Victoria. Retrieved 4 August 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ "Architectural Model - Grounds House, Toorak, 1952-1953". Museums Victoria Collections. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  5. ^ "Georgia Danos". The Design Files | Australia's most popular design blog. 31 January 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2019.
  6. ^ "Grounds House,:24 Hill Street, Toorak, Stonnington City, Victorian Heritage Register (VHR) Number H1963". Heritage Council Victoria, Victorian Heritage Database. Retrieved 2 August 2023.

External links[edit]

  • Collection of architectural drawings for the architects own courtyard house at 24 Hill Street Toorak and four adjoining flats by Roy Grounds, Roy Grounds,Roy Burman Grounds Sir 1905–1981, State Library of Victoria. Found here
  • Australian Dictionary of Biography entry for Roy Grounds
  • List of works in Canberra by Canberra House here
  • Australian Institute of Architects assessment Grounds House and Flats
  • Model of house in Museums Victoria collection Architectural Model - Grounds House, Toorak, 1952-1953