Main Ridge Farmhouse

For one of the owners, who grew up in rural New South Wales, Main Ridge Farmhouse was an opportunity to return to the countryside and give their young family a similar upbringing. The brief to J. Kidman Architecture called for a house that balanced ease, functionality and generosity, with private corners for parents, children and guests, and shared central spaces that feel as comfortable for four as they do for 40.

The client’s childhood homestead, a 1920s Arts and Crafts house by architect Robert Hamilton, provided a useful jumping-off point for James Reid, director of J. Kidman Architecture. “Several of its features – the dominant pitched roof form with deep eaves protecting a wrap-around verandah, the drive-through porte cochere, the inglenook fireplace – were incorporated as starting points,” explains Reid. As the clients wanted to avoid too many decorative elements, the project took its cues from rural modernist architecture such as Robin Boyd’s Mitchelton Winery and the quiet, elemental work of Paolo Zermani.

Positioned just below the peak of Arthurs Seat – the highest point of Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula – the home has rare south-western views across Gunnamatta Beach to Bass Strait. Incorporating both the views to the south and the natural light from the north was a core challenge for Reid, as was protecting the dwelling from inclement weather. The solution was to design the house to run across the slope of the hill, effectively reducing it to two elongated frontages. “This long skinny form is then captured by masonry ‘bookends’, with a weight and gravity that grounds the house into the site,” says Reid, “providing it with a sense of immutability and comforting constancy.”

“We didn’t want the exterior to feel foreign to the site – we wanted it to feel ‘of the earth,’ and that informed the intentionally limited palette of bagged recycled bricks and naturally weathered timber.” The transition from outdoors to indoors was also deeply considered and designed to be more experiential.”

 

Words by Emily Riches via The Local Project 
Photography by Rhiannon Taylor
Styling by Aestas Studio

Architecture and interior design by J. Kidman Architecture.

Build by Pattison Built.

Structural engineering by Webb Consult.

Flooring by Eco Outdoor and George Fethers & Co. Stone by G Lux. Appliances by ASKO. Lighting by Lana Launay and Sarah Nedovic. Artwork by Sundance Studio.