Marra Marra Shack is a special home designed by Leopold Banchini, an architect well known by our readers because all his projects pay attention to people, their culture, the site and the natural conditions, where he builds.

The timber home is located in an amazing place in the Marramarra National Park, at the mouth of the Dyirabun (Hawkesbury) River, and not far from the capital, approx 60 km from Sydney.

After analysing the site, Leopold Banchini opted for easily obtainable materials with a low environmental impact, choosing local origin materials, which also meant an almost zero ecological footprint.
Located in the small Marra Marra Creek community north of Sydney in New South Wales, Australia, this new house designed by Leopold Banchini Architects was built entirely of timber with pillars made out of repurposed 200-year-old electrical posts, giving a new life to the Ironbark timber.

Spotted Gum timber growing in the region was used for the beams of the roof and floor. The details and furniture are made of repurposed Turpentine timber from the former jetty built on the banks of the creek.

"The stepped longitudinal section in conjunction with a tightly arranged structural grid acknowledges the steeply sloping site upon which the house is located. The interior of the dwelling is entirely focused on one single large north-facing window orientated towards the creek edge.

The window is split in half and can be hoisted upwards using counterweights, allowing the landscape into the tranquil timber-lined interior space. Two small rooms open to a patio protected from the wild nature surrounding the building. Above the house, the flat roof offers a large terrace in the tree canopy."

Both solar energy and water are collected on the roof and stored on-site making the house fully self-sustainable.
 
Marra Marra Shack by Leopold Banchini. Photograph by Rory Gardiner.
 


Marra Marra Shack by Leopold Banchini. Photograph by Rory Gardiner.

Project description by Leopold Banchini

In 1788 Captain Cook and his fleet entered the delta of the Hawkesbury and the sheltered bay of Sydney. At the entrance of the Dyirabun (Hawkesbury) River, he was first welcomed by the Darug People who had been living on these banks since the beginning of times. Not long after, the British colonized the Australian territory, building a network of roads and electrical lines across the vast country. The electrical posts were made of some of the finest local hardwoods. Later on, these posts were slowly replaced by steel posts.

The small community of Marra Marra Creek was established by settlers in the early 18th century, most probably using inmate labour to cultivate the land. However, the electrical network never reached the creek and the community remained “off the grid” and only accessible by boat at high tide until today.

Marra Marra Shack is built using timber pillars made out of repurposed 200 years old electrical posts used by the Brits, giving a new life to the Ironbark timber (Eucalyptus crebra). Spotted Gum timer (Corymbia maculata) growing in the Darug region is used for the beams of the ceiling and floor. The details and furniture are made of repurposed Turpentine timber (Syncarpia glomulifera) from the old jetty built by the settlers on the banks of the creek.

The stepped longitudinal section in conjunction with a tightly arranged structural grid acknowledges the steeply sloping site upon which the house is located. The interior of the dwelling is entirely focused on one single large north-facing window orientated towards the creek edge. The window is split in half and can be hoisted upwards using counterweights, allowing the landscape into the tranquil timber-lined interior space. Two small rooms open to a patio protected from the wild nature surrounding the building. Above the house, the flat roof offers a large terrace in the tree canopy.

The house is entirely built in timber; only the façade is covered by thin fire-resistant fibre cement sheets. The footings are pinned to the underlying sandstone bedrock, avoiding the need for heavy concrete footings and reducing the impact on the site as well as the number of trades and machinery required during the construction process to a bare minimum. Both solar energy and water are collected on the roof and stored on-site making the house fully self-sustainable.

Marra Marra Shack is built on the land of the Darug People. We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land on which the house is set, their rich cultural heritage and deep connection to the Country, and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. Always Was, Always Will Be Aboriginal Land.

More information

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Architects
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Leopold Banchini Architects. Lead architect-. Leopold Banchini.
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Dates
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2020.
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Location
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Marramarra Creek, Berowra, New South Wales, Australia.
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Photography
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Leopold Banchini was born in Geneva in 1981 and is an architect graduated from the EPFL (Ecole Polytechinique Fédérale de Lausanne). He is also Master in Architecture from the University of Lausanne (2007) and graduate of the Glasgow School of Art (2004).

Is a visiting professor in the HEAD (Haute Ecole de Design et) in Geneva since 2010 and Assistant Professor at the EPFL since 2009. He has also been Archozoom project designer in 2009.

Has been placed in Lot / ek Architects (New York) between the years 2004/2005, as an assistant project Art Basel (Basel) in 2005, and as a project partner of the collective Atelier Van Lieshout (AVL) that same year in Rotterdam.

He has developed his work as an architect in b720 Arquitectos (Barcelona) during the years 2007 and 2008, and Group8 Architects (Geneva) in 2009.

In addition, since 2008 part of 1to100 Architects, and architectural collective based in Geneva. Its members have been active and decisive parts in projects such as the winning participation of Bahrain at the last Venice Biennale - RECLAIM Golden Lion 2011, exhibitions such as The Gulf - OMA-AMO's participation at the Venice Biennale 2007 and publications such as AMO-Rem Koolhaas's Al Manakh. Parallel to that, they conduce many different operations ranging from architecture, to journalism, until urban design. They have teaching positions at the EPFL and the University of Arts and Design in Geneva.

Its aim is to take position and initiate reflexions upon our contemporary environment.

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Published on: July 18, 2022
Cite: "A house built of repurposed electrical posts. Marra Marra Shack by Leopold Banchini " METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-house-built-repurposed-electrical-posts-marra-marra-shack-leopold-banchini> ISSN 1139-6415
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