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Issue 61 - Vintage Modern Issue

Issue 61

Vintage Modern Issue

The breadth and scope of Habitus has always been extraordinary. With how we live at heart of every issue, we have stepped it up with Guest Editor David Flack of Flack Studio shaking the ‘how’ and looking at new ways to make a house a home. With Vintage Modern as the issues theme, we look at the way iconic design has stayed with us, how daring pieces from the past can add the wow factor and how architecture and good design defy the pigeon hole of their era.

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Takt Studio is at the heart of regional design
ConversationsJan Henderson

Takt Studio is at the heart of regional design

As a practice, Takt is designing architecture that is sustainable, sensitive and desirable. This studio is leading the way as a beating architectural heart in the regions and is in sync, not only with the landscape, but with the local communities who call the land their home.


The good news is that architecture and design is alive and thriving in our regions. Local communities are embracing architecture that is designed for their particular needs and requirements by architects who understand the nuances of creating for them.

Take the architectural practice Takt for example. The studio was established some 16 years ago when, ahead of the trend, Katharina Hendel and Brent Dunn moved from Sydney to the South Coast of New South Wales for a sea change. With a plethora of experience and knowledge between them, they conceived Takt in order to create meaningful buildings that enhance life and explore the possibilities of site, light, material and sustainability.

Dunn studied at the Universities of Queensland and Tasmania and received both a Bachelor of Design Studies and a Bachelor of Architecture. Honing his craft, he has worked on a multitude of projects that encompass residential, medium-scale public and large-scale commercial projects.

On the other hand, Hendel was educated in Germany receiving a Dipl.Ing.Arch from HTWK Leipzig. Her expertise is in a variety of areas that include residential and hospitality with a focus on urban design and the relationship between landscape, scale and detail. Together the two creatives complement each other and are a force to be reckoned with when it comes to design that is absolutely appropriate within their regional context.

The Takt team (clockwise from bottom left): Brent Dunn, Katharina Hendel, Emma Gaal and Daniel Rivers.

The move for Hendel and Brent, partners in life as well as work, was a lifestyle change that would see them surrounded by bush and ocean but still close to the city. Projects for the fledgling practice were primarily residential but commissions increased and since 2019 there are two studios, one in Thirroul near Wollongong and the other in Moruya on the South Coast of New South Wales. The practice was not only designing for the community but was also a part of it. However, more change was ahead with natural disasters in their region, which saw a shift in the focus of their work that continues to this day.

Hendel and Dunn have personal knowledge of the 2019 New Year’s Eve fires in Cobargo, a town in the Bega Valley and Lake Conjola situated on the south coast of New South Wales that caused such devastation and heartache. Their approach to the ruination was to literally work through the grief and become involved in the redesign and rebuilding of these communities. They had the skills and the experience from their many years in architectural practice, however, talking and listening to survivors, realising needs, exploring the type of facilities and amenities that would be required and how they can best be designed, has given the pair a deeper understanding of the architecture that should be crafted for the future.

Learning and growing through understanding, they have participated in community workshops, site analysis and risk assessments and investigated and contributed advice on the bushfire ratings – much of it in a voluntary capacity. To this end, Takt became involved with collecting ideas for the rebuilding process in the Conjola area which was later developed into a masterplan.

Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne

The practice works with and for councils and is recognised under the Government Architects Strategy and Design Pre-qualification Scheme which focuses on the delivery of strategic advice, design quality and innovation of the built environment.

While the majority of projects undertaken by Takt are still residential, there are other exciting projects ahead. The practice is integral to the Rebuild Cobargo Main Street projects and has also designed a community hall/disaster response centre for the village that may proceed at a later stage.

Receiving funding last year, the Rebuild Cobargo Main Street projects will see four sites with four distinct programs brought together by an overarching plan for the town centre, commercial, retail, tourist facilities, hospitality spaces, a new Post Office and Market Hall and the new Cobargo Bushfire Resilience Centre. Takt and its team including Daniel Rivers, Emma Gaal and Ben Beattie, along with the initial assistance of SJB and now Dunn Hillam Architects (who have taken over further development of these sites), are making design contributions that will see a new town rise from the ashes.

Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne

Of course, sustainability is key to all Takt projects and is the way forward for all of us. Each Takt design is sympathetic to the site and sits beautifully in its surroundings. Designing for natural disasters is a given but so is crafting a building for beauty, form and function and incorporates and helps sustain the natural habitat of flora and fauna.

Following on from the personal experiences that Hendel, Dunn and their staff and colleagues have encountered, the pair are also founding members of the Regional Architecture Association (RAA). The RAA was established in early 2021 with the goal to establish an independent member-focused association that could support architecture and influence the built environment in the regions and it’s doing just that in advocating for the communities needs and the profession. Through events organised in regional areas practitioners and the public have a voice and can contribute and be heard.

Hendel and Dunn and their team are making a difference to architecture and the communities in which they live and work. They are taking the idea of sustainable design next level and ensuring that their projects reflect all that they have learnt over the years as well as supporting the equilibrium of the land. It’s crafting a holistic solution to architecture in the regions for the local populace and doing it in style.

They are at the heart of architecture and home. From disaster comes new hope and Takt is helping to ensure that architecture is the catalyst that provides for a better life in the future.

TAKT Studio
takt.net.au

Camp Yarrawa, photo by Shantaru Starick
Camp Yarrawa, photo by Shantaru Starick
Camp Yarrawa, photo by Shantaru Starick
Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne
Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne
Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne
Cloud Cottage, photo by Ingvar Kenne

We think you might like this story on the pod, also by TAKT Studio.


About the Author

Jan Henderson

Jan Henderson is currently an Editor and Program Director of the INDE.Awards at Indesign Media Asia Pacific. Her previous roles have included Acting-editor of Indesign magazine, Associate Publisher at Architecture Media, Editor and Co-editor of inside magazine and Interiors Editor of Architel.tv. As Principal of Henderson Media Consultants she contributes to various architecture and design magazines, is a regular speaker at events and has participated as a juror for industry awards. Jan is passionate about design and through her different roles supports and contributes to design in Australia.

Tags

ArchitectureBen BeattieBrent DunnDaniel RiversEmma GaalKatharina HendelRegional architectureRegional DesignResidential Architecturesustainability


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Issue 61 - Vintage Modern Issue

Issue 61

Vintage Modern Issue

The breadth and scope of Habitus has always been extraordinary. With how we live at heart of every issue, we have stepped it up with Guest Editor David Flack of Flack Studio shaking the ‘how’ and looking at new ways to make a house a home. With Vintage Modern as the issues theme, we look at the way iconic design has stayed with us, how daring pieces from the past can add the wow factor and how architecture and good design defy the pigeon hole of their era.

Order Issue