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I've been picked up from airports in taxis before,
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but never, never had to go to a jetty to be picked up by a boat!
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'He's Piers Taylor, an award-winning architect.'
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This building is so tactile
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and just rich, materially.
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SHE SHRIEKS
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'And she's Caroline Quentin,
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'acclaimed actress and passionate property developer.'
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Oh, I've been expecting you, Mr Bond!
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SHE LAUGHS
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'We've been given the keys
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'to some of the most incredible houses in the world...'
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It's chock full of surprises, isn't it?
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SHE SHRIEKS
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'..to discover the design, innovation,
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'passion and endurance needed
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'to transform architectural vision into an extraordinary home.'
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If this was Hollywood,
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I'd be snogging you now.
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'Together, we'll be travelling the globe.'
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Oh, look down there!
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- I would, but I'm trying not to kill us.
- No, you look ahead.
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'Meeting the architects and owners
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'who have taken on the challenge of building unconventional homes
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'in demanding locations.'
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Just another day on the wing of a 747.
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'Whether it's navigating the logistics of constructing a house
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'on top of a remote mountain...'
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Why would you build a house where you can only get there by cable car?
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'..negotiating the ancient trees of a fragile forest...'
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You never see a building this close to the trees.
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I mean that's six inches away.
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'..having a sea view
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'whilst perched on the edge of a dramatic coastal shoreline...'
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I'd love to know how you actually built this
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on what appears to be a sort of vertical cliff face.
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'..or excavating the earth to build a home deep underground...'
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There is always a moment where you feel fear.
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nature is never to come back the same way.
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Since earliest times, humans have had a close affinity
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with the tranquillity and isolation of the forest.
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The joys of living so close to nature
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is why I chose to build my own family home in the woods.
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But building in this natural habitat can be fraught
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with environmental obstacles and technical challenges.
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We built the road three times, it kept washing away.
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It was a long three years.
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Piers and I will be travelling from the forests
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of the Catskill Mountains of America...
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Usually, if we see this, it's in a building that has cost £150 million.
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It's been made like a piece of jewellery.
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..to the ancient woodlands of Europe and New Zealand.
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Discovering what it takes to design, build and live
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in some of the world's most extraordinary forest homes.
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It's a tight rope you walk, it can go spectacularly wrong.
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What a beautiful morning!
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The first stop on our architectural adventure
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takes us an hour's drive out of Madrid to an ancient pine forest
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on the outskirts of the town of San Lorenzo de El Escorial.
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Look at the dappled light, it is beautiful.
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- Is it up here somewhere? Are we nearly there?
- I think it is.
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We're heading to an unconventional four-bedroom home,
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where one architect took on the seemingly impossible challenge
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of building a house which would weave right amongst the trees
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in the forest, without damaging them.
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- Most people clear the trees from a site before they build.
- Yeah.
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But this guy kept the trees,
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allowing the house to weave among them.
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- So is that why the design's so extreme?
- Yeah.
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Because they've had to take the trees into account?
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It was not just a crazy idea about doing some weird shape.
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It was actually about wanting to preserve the qualities of the trees
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that existed on the site.
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- Stop, stop, stop, stop! I think that's it.
- I think it is.
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It could only be it, couldn't it?
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Check out the fence.
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It's quite industrial.
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It looks a little bit like Ford open prison in Sussex.
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- Does it?
- Yeah!
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Have you got the buzzer to get us in?
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Oh, er, yes, I have somewhere. Here.
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- I'm pressing everything. Oh, yes!
- Oh, there we are.
- Ha-ha!
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I love it when that happens!
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GATES SQUEAK
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Richard, the owner of this house,
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is a publisher and editor of an architectural magazine,
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and wanted his own home to challenge the conventional.
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This is incredible, seeing that so close.
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It's almost touching, but not quite.
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I mean, it's beautiful, looking up there.
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I suspect when the wind blows,
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this will almost touch the building.
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It must do.
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And it'll be calculated just so it doesn't quite touch.
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And underneath here, of course,
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there'll be foundations that go down beneath the tree roots.
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If you were here and you weren't careful,
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you'd kill a lot of the very thing you were trying to use. You'd kill the trees.
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Yeah, that's the danger. And, of course, then you'd end up
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with a house that was in a barren piece of land with no trees.
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Casa Levene is a major piece of angular engineering.
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The floor plan of this structure
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cleverly takes the shape from voids left between the trees.
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Inside, individual zones have been designed like branches,
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each separately coloured to create a different atmosphere.
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Outside, the building has been entirely clad in basalt,
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a type of dark volcanic rock, to contrast the colourful interior
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and reflect the surrounding trees.
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I really like buildings that have the same material on the roof
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as on the walls.
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- Is it slippy?
- No, it is fine.
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My experience of basalt is limited.
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THEY LAUGH
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Oh, this is cool.
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But what a landscape. I mean this is brilliant, this landscape.
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- Look at the trees, they're literally poking out of there.
- Yeah!
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WHISPERS: It's a bit like...being in a nest.
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- We're cocooned, aren't we?
- I like it, I really like it.
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There is a real respect for nature that's creeping back into
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architecture in the last 20 years or so.
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And, historically, we didn't really care about nature,
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we just battered nature into submission.
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But here they've looked at the site,
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they've kept almost all the trees,
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and then they've just looked at where you can build
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and then they've filled in the gaps.
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And what, of course, we've ended up with is a building
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that has come out of the shape of the site
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rather than an architect tradition.
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I like that. I find that quite exciting.
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Externally, the form of this building shows a complete empathy
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with the forest.
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But on the inside, the architect has had the freedom
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to let his imagination run wild.
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Oh!
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Bright yellow!
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'The use of bold colours and industrial materials
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'create a vibrant atmosphere,
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'providing an extraordinary contrast to the serene woodland outside.'
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Look at the shadows on the floor. I mean, that's beautiful.
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It's a hell of a colour, actually,
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and it's a brave choice, but I really like it.
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'Colour theory has been used to create two distinct atmospheres.
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'Lively oranges and reds to lift your mood,
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'and blues and greens to relax and focus.'
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But I also like this transparent acrylic,
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and I love the way the toys become quite decorative.
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- This is quite quirky, isn't it?
- It is.
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I'm not quite sure - jury's out for me on this,
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what is it? A poly or a plastic?
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- This is an acrylic. It's a type of plastic, but it's acrylic.
- Yeah.
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I love the low tech nature of it.
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It's pretty cheap and quite easy to fix.
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And this metal here, I mean, that...
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stainless steel that wraps around is really beautiful.
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This riot of material and colour, I think is really refreshing.
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And then into this beautiful blue space,
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and the flash of the lime green Perspex here,
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it's quite exciting, this use of colour, isn't it?
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- Really exciting.
- Stimulating.
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Every element of this house pushes the boundaries
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of a domestic dwelling.
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Even the kitchen is wrapped in industrial stainless steel.
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Can I ask you something?
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Where do you stand on a stainless steel kitchen?
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Don't say on the surface!
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Do you like them or, do you not like them?
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I think they're great. They're really practical.
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I love things that can be the same colour all the way around.
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Some people would say it's a little bit too like a hospital.
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It means that the kitchen is part of the architecture,
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it isn't something that's just been stuck in the corner
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and it makes it less kitchen-like.
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What do you mean?
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Because most of us, our kitchens, well, they are by their very nature, kitcheny!
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If it was made out of something and there was just a standard set of units in the corner,
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- it would be a bit of a let down.
- Is your kitchen kitcheny?
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It doesn't have conventional units.
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It just has a big island that everyone cooks at.
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If a man's going to have an island,
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I'm surprised it's you, because it's very suburban, an island.
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So social. It's so social!
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Don't you quote that suburban thing at me.
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It's sociable. Listen, I'm going to go and make you something!
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Oh, hello, Caroline, I can't see you any more, it's really antisocial!
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I hate cooking looking at a suburban bit of stainless steel.
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What I want to do is be in the view and talk to people,
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and actually experience the space.
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I think kitchens are about the space and the poetry of cooking.
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They're not about the units.
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If it were me, my life would be all about the birds here.
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I would have a pair of binoculars permanently there.
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I'd spend my whole life just watching nature.
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And I'd spend my whole time marvelling at the spatial sequence,
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how wonderful it is,
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and just basking in the sheer delight of it all.
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Oh, he can't help it.
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Chop off his head, it says "architect" right the way through the middle!
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This unusual house began with a very unusual brief
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for architect Eduardo Arroyo.
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Tell me how it came about, this project?
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So, one day, the client, Richard,
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arrives in the office and says, "I want a house to change my life."
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- That's pretty powerful, isn't it? A pretty powerful statement.
- Yes.
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Scary at the same time.
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And when you came here, what did you think of the site initially?
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It was quite shocking, because it was completely packed with trees.
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Most of them are 100, 200 years old.
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So my first response was, "It's impossible to build anything here."
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But Eduardo and his team weren't going to be defeated
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by the plot of land, and embraced the challenge of building a home
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in what most architects would consider an unworkable location.
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Show me some early sketches that show the evolution of the house,
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I'm really interested in that.
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One of my favourites
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was the one we did the first day we were in the site.
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We did a very strict and precise work of measuring all the trees,
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the distances, the thickness of the trees.
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And once we had that very precise technical plan,
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to activate a very rough and intuitive ideas
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of how to use this forest.
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How did that feel as the form was beginning to emerge?
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The forest was guiding us.
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It was guiding us, how the forest let ourselves occupy it.
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To me it is very exciting to build things
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that haven't been built before.
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Coming back to this house, how do you feel walking around it?
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I normally don't like to come back to my buildings.
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I think once you have finished a work, then I release myself.
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So, it feels very good to see that, even if there are some changes,
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and life has developed inside, absorbing what has happened inside,
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not getting destroyed by it,
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which means that the building is very strong.
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This house is all about the trees,
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and what that means is when Eduardo first came here,
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what he did was work out exactly where the trees were
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and what it enabled Eduardo to do
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was to strike a line around the buildable volume
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and there, very naturally,
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can you see the shape of this house
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which sits beautifully in the space left over by the trees?
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With that, what Eduardo was then left with
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was the problem of how to build next to a tree
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and this house is built right up to the trees.
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Typically you need to be way outside the tree canopy,
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because that's where the roots are,
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and often, you know, if you have a tree trunk, like that,
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the tree roots spider out from that,
249
00:12:16,640 --> 00:12:20,840
to about the same distance as the canopy spreads.
250
00:12:20,840 --> 00:12:25,960
What Eduardo did was to work out that he could put these micropiles,
251
00:12:25,960 --> 00:12:29,480
little piles down between the tree roots.
252
00:12:29,480 --> 00:12:31,680
Typically what they do, they're rammed into the ground
253
00:12:31,680 --> 00:12:33,040
or driven into the ground,
254
00:12:33,040 --> 00:12:37,720
so what you have is a building built off these delicate fingers of steel
255
00:12:37,720 --> 00:12:39,880
that go down between the roots.
256
00:12:39,880 --> 00:12:43,200
Trees are really vulnerable to being disturbed.
257
00:12:43,200 --> 00:12:46,200
And if you sever roots, trees will die.
258
00:12:46,200 --> 00:12:49,440
So this is the only way you can build on a site like this.
259
00:12:52,880 --> 00:12:56,960
Just as the forest has dictated the unusual shape of this house,
260
00:12:56,960 --> 00:13:00,600
it's also heavily influenced the interior living spaces.
261
00:13:02,680 --> 00:13:06,960
From here, I really feel like I'm floating in this canopy.
262
00:13:06,960 --> 00:13:09,440
The sheer poetry of being in the trees
263
00:13:09,440 --> 00:13:11,240
with all this light bouncing around
264
00:13:11,240 --> 00:13:14,240
and all these brilliant surfaces reflecting that light -
265
00:13:14,240 --> 00:13:15,760
that's really magical.
266
00:13:19,240 --> 00:13:21,000
I think this is the perfect place to sit
267
00:13:21,000 --> 00:13:24,720
because I can hear the wind rustling through the pines and the birdsong.
268
00:13:26,480 --> 00:13:30,600
It's great the way this house doesn't have conventional rooms and conventional doors.
269
00:13:30,600 --> 00:13:35,400
It just has spaces that you can use in beautiful and inventive ways.
270
00:13:35,400 --> 00:13:38,240
And just if I really listen carefully,
271
00:13:38,240 --> 00:13:40,480
I can just about hear Piers,
272
00:13:40,480 --> 00:13:43,880
banging on about suburbia and conventional living,
273
00:13:43,880 --> 00:13:49,360
and how dull it is to have sinks in the kitchen and beds in bedrooms!
274
00:13:49,360 --> 00:13:52,280
Often people think that houses like this are difficult to live in,
275
00:13:52,280 --> 00:13:55,520
difficult to really occupy in an informal way.
276
00:13:55,520 --> 00:13:58,920
But this is a child's bedroom that is full of life.
277
00:13:58,920 --> 00:14:02,840
And I love the way these pictures sit alongside something
278
00:14:02,840 --> 00:14:04,840
that's really high architecture.
279
00:14:12,720 --> 00:14:15,120
What's fantastic about this house, Caroline,
280
00:14:15,120 --> 00:14:17,720
is that it's so poetic.
281
00:14:17,720 --> 00:14:20,520
It's all about the experience of being in the trees,
282
00:14:20,520 --> 00:14:22,960
in this extraordinary landscape.
283
00:14:22,960 --> 00:14:26,200
Nature's been respected, the trees are exactly where they were,
284
00:14:26,200 --> 00:14:29,720
and the house just flows around the trees.
285
00:14:29,720 --> 00:14:31,920
It's wonderful for that.
286
00:14:31,920 --> 00:14:33,440
But for my taste...
287
00:14:33,440 --> 00:14:35,240
It's a little conventional!
288
00:14:35,240 --> 00:14:36,760
PIERS LAUGHS
289
00:14:45,680 --> 00:14:47,560
The next leg of our forest journey
290
00:14:47,560 --> 00:14:49,920
takes us to the United States of America.
291
00:14:53,760 --> 00:14:56,760
We're heading two and a half hours north of New York
292
00:14:56,760 --> 00:14:58,720
to the Catskill Mountains.
293
00:15:01,640 --> 00:15:06,200
The owner and principle architect of our second forest house, Tom Gluck,
294
00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:10,920
wanted a weekend home for his family to escape the bustle of busy city life.
295
00:15:10,920 --> 00:15:13,920
It's spectacularly beautiful, isn't it? It's kind of dreamy.
296
00:15:13,920 --> 00:15:15,720
- Spring!
- Spring in the woods.
297
00:15:15,720 --> 00:15:18,600
- Spring in a deciduous forest.
- Oh, it doesn't get any better.
298
00:15:18,600 --> 00:15:21,840
- So green. Lime green everywhere!
- Lovely. Young leaves.
299
00:15:21,840 --> 00:15:24,480
It's quite romantic to live in among the trees, isn't it?
300
00:15:24,480 --> 00:15:25,840
Really romantic.
301
00:15:27,680 --> 00:15:31,120
Tom's challenge was to come up with a design which would be large enough
302
00:15:31,120 --> 00:15:33,360
for a three-bedroom family home,
303
00:15:33,360 --> 00:15:36,080
but would lessen its impact on the surroundings
304
00:15:36,080 --> 00:15:40,120
by minimising the footprint within this densely wooded plot.
305
00:15:40,120 --> 00:15:41,880
I know it's the modern way,
306
00:15:41,880 --> 00:15:45,360
and I know glass and steel can be absolutely wonderful and exciting,
307
00:15:45,360 --> 00:15:47,280
but I want this to be a home.
308
00:15:47,280 --> 00:15:51,000
I want it to be an incredibly poetic experience of being in the woods.
309
00:15:51,000 --> 00:15:52,760
And a home?
310
00:15:52,760 --> 00:15:54,120
Not so fussed.
311
00:15:55,280 --> 00:16:00,120
Tom's towering vision was to build a stairway into the forest canopy,
312
00:16:00,120 --> 00:16:02,600
using the most contemporary materials
313
00:16:02,600 --> 00:16:05,200
to create a treehouse with a twist.
314
00:16:05,200 --> 00:16:06,440
SHE GASPS
315
00:16:07,600 --> 00:16:10,400
Oh! Hang on! Hang on!
316
00:16:10,400 --> 00:16:12,640
That's not at all what I thought it was going to be!
317
00:16:12,640 --> 00:16:14,520
That's amazing. It's green!
318
00:16:14,520 --> 00:16:16,720
- It is green.
- It's green!
- But I wonder whether that's...
319
00:16:16,720 --> 00:16:19,400
It is green, actually. Look at it! I mean, that is...
320
00:16:19,400 --> 00:16:21,880
Oh, look, there's yellow. There's yellow, there's yellow.
321
00:16:21,880 --> 00:16:23,320
It's got a yellow staircase.
322
00:16:23,320 --> 00:16:26,080
- Perfect.
- Right, I'm having a look at.
323
00:16:30,240 --> 00:16:31,280
It's, um...
324
00:16:31,280 --> 00:16:32,800
It's, it's, it's...
325
00:16:32,800 --> 00:16:35,760
It's, God, it's not at all what I thought it was going to be like!
326
00:16:35,760 --> 00:16:37,720
I like buildings that are intrigue-y.
327
00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:40,160
And, actually, there's nothing worse than a pretty building
328
00:16:40,160 --> 00:16:41,640
that gives you everything in one hit.
329
00:16:41,640 --> 00:16:44,080
Well, this is not a pretty building, so you're all right there.
330
00:16:44,080 --> 00:16:46,800
Well, I'm not so sure. I think it's really good-looking, actually.
331
00:16:46,800 --> 00:16:50,080
It's really composed and quite pert.
332
00:16:50,080 --> 00:16:52,480
Mindful to conserve this woodland,
333
00:16:52,480 --> 00:16:55,080
Tom designed a house to fit on a small footprint
334
00:16:55,080 --> 00:16:58,280
the size of a static caravan.
335
00:16:58,280 --> 00:17:01,760
Instead of putting the three double bedrooms side by side,
336
00:17:01,760 --> 00:17:03,720
he's stacked them on top of each other
337
00:17:03,720 --> 00:17:06,400
and placed a large cantilevered living area
338
00:17:06,400 --> 00:17:08,080
30 feet above the ground.
339
00:17:09,600 --> 00:17:13,560
The living room is part supported by the stacked bedrooms underneath
340
00:17:13,560 --> 00:17:17,080
and a slender V shaped column picks up the additional load,
341
00:17:17,080 --> 00:17:19,960
allowing the building to teeter high into the canopy
342
00:17:19,960 --> 00:17:22,280
without toppling over.
343
00:17:22,280 --> 00:17:24,360
Do you know what it reminds me of, Piers?
344
00:17:24,360 --> 00:17:26,760
It reminds me of A, a comprehensive school
345
00:17:26,760 --> 00:17:29,080
and B, one of those fire towers
346
00:17:29,080 --> 00:17:31,400
that they build for firemen to practise on.
347
00:17:31,400 --> 00:17:34,520
It feels like a kid could have designed it.
348
00:17:34,520 --> 00:17:36,320
- It's almost made out of Lego, isn't it?
- Yeah.
349
00:17:36,320 --> 00:17:39,160
And I don't know about your kids but if my kids built a tower,
350
00:17:39,160 --> 00:17:41,840
it was always balanced precariously with the biggest bit at the top!
351
00:17:41,840 --> 00:17:43,680
SHE LAUGHS Yeah!
352
00:17:46,080 --> 00:17:50,920
With ambition to create a living space with views high above the forest canopy,
353
00:17:50,920 --> 00:17:54,520
Tom has taken the layout of a conventional three-bedroom house
354
00:17:54,520 --> 00:17:56,800
and turned it on its head.
355
00:17:56,800 --> 00:17:59,800
Here they put the bedrooms at the bottom and the best bit,
356
00:17:59,800 --> 00:18:01,880
all the living space, at the top,
357
00:18:01,880 --> 00:18:05,160
which probably just peaks over those trees and gets the mountain view.
358
00:18:06,720 --> 00:18:09,720
To blend into this densely wooded habitat,
359
00:18:09,720 --> 00:18:14,080
Tower House was entirely clad in glass to reflect the forest,
360
00:18:14,080 --> 00:18:16,240
making it almost invisible at times.
361
00:18:20,000 --> 00:18:21,240
Oh, this is good.
362
00:18:21,240 --> 00:18:24,080
- This is good, cos you get the mountain reflected in this.
- Yeah.
363
00:18:24,080 --> 00:18:26,800
And, actually, the colour makes sense here, doesn't it?
364
00:18:26,800 --> 00:18:28,400
Yeah, because it disappears.
365
00:18:28,400 --> 00:18:31,160
Here is a building that is defined by where it is.
366
00:18:31,160 --> 00:18:33,360
It does mimic the landscape and trees.
367
00:18:33,360 --> 00:18:36,640
- I quite like that, I think that's a good thing.
- Yeah.
368
00:18:36,640 --> 00:18:39,160
And remember that all of the buildings that we love in the UK
369
00:18:39,160 --> 00:18:42,600
were all pretty radically modern buildings once,
370
00:18:42,600 --> 00:18:44,320
that stood out like a sore thumb.
371
00:18:44,320 --> 00:18:47,720
You know, I suspect that all of the manor houses, rectories, farmhouses,
372
00:18:47,720 --> 00:18:51,320
barns that were built hundreds of years ago were quite stark,
373
00:18:51,320 --> 00:18:53,640
alien things, a little bit like this.
374
00:18:53,640 --> 00:18:57,160
Do you know, Piers, I'm starting to really quite like this tower.
375
00:18:57,160 --> 00:18:59,480
It's like a princess's tower in the forest,
376
00:18:59,480 --> 00:19:01,520
and I'm starting to really love it.
377
00:19:01,520 --> 00:19:03,320
And here's something funny, look, see that?
378
00:19:03,320 --> 00:19:07,920
There's a door there, and round here, there's a door here, the same,
379
00:19:07,920 --> 00:19:10,960
so I love this sense that you don't quite know which is the front
380
00:19:10,960 --> 00:19:12,360
and which is the back.
381
00:19:12,360 --> 00:19:14,680
- OK, go on, then, you take that one.
- OK.
- Let's go.
382
00:19:14,680 --> 00:19:17,440
- I'll take the high road.
- All right, then, and I'll take this...side.
383
00:19:17,440 --> 00:19:18,720
THEY LAUGH
384
00:19:20,640 --> 00:19:21,960
It's locked!
385
00:19:21,960 --> 00:19:24,400
Bit of time to myself. So important, I think.
386
00:19:24,400 --> 00:19:26,040
Oh, yes!
387
00:19:27,320 --> 00:19:28,960
It's like a proper home!
388
00:19:28,960 --> 00:19:31,480
It's like a proper home! It's like people live here.
389
00:19:31,480 --> 00:19:35,240
It's got stuff, and it's got places to put boots.
390
00:19:35,240 --> 00:19:38,400
I like the yellows, like the sun hitting you. I think it's fantastic.
391
00:19:38,400 --> 00:19:41,240
- Hi, Caroline, are you there?
- Oh, he's back! Look out.
- Here we are.
392
00:19:41,240 --> 00:19:42,640
What do you think?
393
00:19:42,640 --> 00:19:44,760
- I love it's informality.
- Yeah.
394
00:19:44,760 --> 00:19:47,840
You know, you come in, there's dirt on the floor and logs.
395
00:19:47,840 --> 00:19:50,240
Really hadn't expected that, actually.
396
00:19:50,240 --> 00:19:52,680
This yellow is great isn't it? The underside of this.
397
00:19:52,680 --> 00:19:57,120
You're immediately, well if you're a kid, you want to run upstairs.
398
00:19:57,120 --> 00:19:58,800
- You do.
- You can hear their voices.
399
00:19:58,800 --> 00:20:01,000
You can hear the thundering of their feet.
400
00:20:01,000 --> 00:20:02,200
"I'm going to do that, now."
401
00:20:02,200 --> 00:20:04,440
And you hear the thundering of their feet as they head up.
402
00:20:04,440 --> 00:20:08,040
- Can I hear the thundering of your feet?
- Yeah!
403
00:20:08,040 --> 00:20:09,840
I'm going to go right to the top.
404
00:20:09,840 --> 00:20:11,840
I'm just going to linger down here a bit longer.
405
00:20:11,840 --> 00:20:13,600
- OK.
- See you in a bit.
406
00:20:13,600 --> 00:20:15,720
I love it that Caroline's so excited.
407
00:20:15,720 --> 00:20:18,480
Because there's a kind of freedom this house is giving her.
408
00:20:18,480 --> 00:20:21,000
It's a kind of frivolous house in some ways.
409
00:20:21,000 --> 00:20:23,760
Because some buildings slow you down and are quite serious,
410
00:20:23,760 --> 00:20:26,080
like churches and cathedrals,
411
00:20:26,080 --> 00:20:28,240
but there's a real informality to this.
412
00:20:28,240 --> 00:20:30,480
I also like that this is a bit untidy,
413
00:20:30,480 --> 00:20:32,800
because it shows that the owners aren't precious
414
00:20:32,800 --> 00:20:35,400
because the architecture speaks for itself.
415
00:20:38,120 --> 00:20:40,200
Oh, follow me.
416
00:20:40,200 --> 00:20:42,720
Oh, yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!
417
00:20:42,720 --> 00:20:45,880
This is a proper house! This is a proper house!
418
00:20:47,000 --> 00:20:48,680
Oh!
419
00:20:48,680 --> 00:20:50,240
And look at the views!
420
00:20:51,320 --> 00:20:55,000
And on that side, you've got the most beautiful view of the forest.
421
00:20:55,000 --> 00:20:57,560
Absolutely beautiful. It's breathtaking.
422
00:20:58,880 --> 00:21:00,840
I could easily be a bird
423
00:21:00,840 --> 00:21:03,560
so I could live here quite happily
424
00:21:03,560 --> 00:21:05,160
with my kids and my husband,
425
00:21:05,160 --> 00:21:07,440
just looking at that beautiful view.
426
00:21:08,560 --> 00:21:10,880
Oh! It's just lovely.
427
00:21:14,600 --> 00:21:17,040
This is the most extraordinary experience,
428
00:21:17,040 --> 00:21:20,520
being up high and being able to see so far.
429
00:21:20,520 --> 00:21:22,280
But, also, this is a beautiful space.
430
00:21:22,280 --> 00:21:25,320
It's well structured. It's really informal.
431
00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:27,360
It's really lived in.
432
00:21:27,360 --> 00:21:29,760
But also this is really fun, too.
433
00:21:29,760 --> 00:21:31,520
Just this little bit of...
434
00:21:31,520 --> 00:21:34,560
Well, this glimpsed view up into the stairwell.
435
00:21:34,560 --> 00:21:37,120
- It's lovely, isn't it?
- It's lovely, it's lovely.
436
00:21:37,120 --> 00:21:38,280
And you can go...
437
00:21:38,280 --> 00:21:41,600
- LOUDLY: "Supper's ready!"
- Yeah!
- "Come up!"
- "Now!"
438
00:21:41,600 --> 00:21:43,120
"Off your iPad and Minecraft!"
439
00:21:43,120 --> 00:21:44,640
THEY LAUGH
440
00:21:44,640 --> 00:21:46,760
- Come thundering up those stairs!
- Yeah.
441
00:21:46,760 --> 00:21:50,200
It's so brilliant that we are not talking about this
442
00:21:50,200 --> 00:21:53,520
as an architectural structure, or even as a thing of beauty,
443
00:21:53,520 --> 00:21:55,640
although I think it is a thing of beauty,
444
00:21:55,640 --> 00:21:59,560
- we're talking about it as parents and how we live.
- Yeah.
445
00:21:59,560 --> 00:22:03,040
I love it that there's stuff on the floor, and kids' toys.
446
00:22:03,040 --> 00:22:04,360
And it shows, in a way,
447
00:22:04,360 --> 00:22:06,800
that architecture and home can really coexist.
448
00:22:10,360 --> 00:22:13,160
The owner and the principle architect of Tower House
449
00:22:13,160 --> 00:22:15,760
is from a famous family of American architects.
450
00:22:17,440 --> 00:22:20,600
Tom Gluck has travelled from their New York office
451
00:22:20,600 --> 00:22:22,960
to meet us in his family's woodland estate.
452
00:22:24,400 --> 00:22:27,720
- Tom.
- Really good to meet you.
- Nice to meet you.
- Caroline. This is Piers.
- Hi, I'm Piers.
453
00:22:27,720 --> 00:22:30,240
- Hi, great to meet you.
- We've been loving your house, Tom.
454
00:22:30,240 --> 00:22:33,360
- It's fascinating.
- Absolutely loving your house. It's like a playhouse.
455
00:22:33,360 --> 00:22:36,960
- It's like a treehouse for grown up boys, isn't it?
- That's the way we think of it.
456
00:22:36,960 --> 00:22:39,400
- Is that what you thought of when you first came up with it?
- It is.
457
00:22:39,400 --> 00:22:41,760
- Is it?
- Well, I'm not sure it's what we thought of when we first
458
00:22:41,760 --> 00:22:43,720
came up with it, but it's the way we think of it now.
459
00:22:43,720 --> 00:22:45,600
You've known this wood all your life?
460
00:22:45,600 --> 00:22:46,640
We first came up here,
461
00:22:46,640 --> 00:22:48,760
my parents brought me here when I was six months old.
462
00:22:48,760 --> 00:22:51,560
- Does it feel like it's part of you, this ground?
- It does.
463
00:22:51,560 --> 00:22:55,120
We've been building and playing architecturally on the property
464
00:22:55,120 --> 00:22:56,560
for 40 years.
465
00:22:56,560 --> 00:22:58,200
This is the most recent addition.
466
00:22:58,200 --> 00:23:00,720
We'd always known there was this plateau up here.
467
00:23:00,720 --> 00:23:02,760
We suspected there might be views.
468
00:23:02,760 --> 00:23:04,800
- But you didn't know?
- We didn't know for sure,
469
00:23:04,800 --> 00:23:06,480
because it was heavily wooded,
470
00:23:06,480 --> 00:23:09,320
- and you can look through this way and you can't see very far.
- Yeah.
471
00:23:09,320 --> 00:23:11,840
So we actually built a tower out of scaffolding,
472
00:23:11,840 --> 00:23:14,640
to get up about 40 feet, tied off the trees,
473
00:23:14,640 --> 00:23:17,200
and when we got up there and had a decent view,
474
00:23:17,200 --> 00:23:20,760
we committed to this kind of upside-down treehouse
475
00:23:20,760 --> 00:23:23,520
where all of the living space is on the top.
476
00:23:23,520 --> 00:23:26,480
'I'm intrigued to hear there's a whole wealth of buildings
477
00:23:26,480 --> 00:23:28,760
'hidden in these woods.
478
00:23:28,760 --> 00:23:32,640
'Exploring some of Gluck's other work is a temptation I can't resist.'
479
00:23:32,640 --> 00:23:35,920
So I'm going to leave you two to look at the house and I'm going look at your other ones.
480
00:23:35,920 --> 00:23:38,640
- Sounds good. Enjoy it.
- See you later.
- Take pictures.
- I will.
481
00:23:38,640 --> 00:23:40,880
- Shall we look around?
- Sure.
- I don't know why I'm asking,
482
00:23:40,880 --> 00:23:42,960
cos I sort of imagine that I live here already.
483
00:23:42,960 --> 00:23:45,080
Yeah, no, that's great. What's for lunch?!
484
00:23:50,880 --> 00:23:54,040
We're going now to see something called the Scholar's House,
485
00:23:54,040 --> 00:23:55,840
that is Tom's mother's office.
486
00:23:59,080 --> 00:24:02,480
Actually, there are quite a lot of links between this little cabin
487
00:24:02,480 --> 00:24:04,120
and Tower House.
488
00:24:05,800 --> 00:24:07,280
Beautiful coming up.
489
00:24:07,280 --> 00:24:13,280
I really like this panorama that you get of the tree canopy.
490
00:24:13,280 --> 00:24:15,560
And of course so many parallels up here
491
00:24:15,560 --> 00:24:17,480
between this and the Tower House.
492
00:24:17,480 --> 00:24:20,560
The same round columns pulled away from the corners
493
00:24:20,560 --> 00:24:24,440
so you get very open corners of just glass meeting glass
494
00:24:24,440 --> 00:24:26,040
and also of course,
495
00:24:26,040 --> 00:24:30,320
the low sills and all around, there's built in storage.
496
00:24:30,320 --> 00:24:32,080
It's great.
497
00:24:32,080 --> 00:24:34,480
I think in many ways this feels a bit of a baby brother
498
00:24:34,480 --> 00:24:35,960
to the Tower House.
499
00:24:38,520 --> 00:24:40,440
This is just superb, Tom.
500
00:24:40,440 --> 00:24:42,960
- I mean, you must never get used to that.
- That's the big reveal.
501
00:24:42,960 --> 00:24:45,120
It really is, isn't it?
502
00:24:45,120 --> 00:24:46,720
We live full-time in Manhattan.
503
00:24:46,720 --> 00:24:50,240
We have this roughly two-hour drive up from the city
504
00:24:50,240 --> 00:24:52,640
and you kind of leave all the stress
505
00:24:52,640 --> 00:24:55,200
of the crazy city lives that we live.
506
00:24:55,200 --> 00:24:57,920
And as you come, I come up the stair, I come up to this space.
507
00:24:57,920 --> 00:25:01,040
You really kind of feel... Feel the stress drop away.
508
00:25:01,040 --> 00:25:02,560
It's very rejuvenating.
509
00:25:02,560 --> 00:25:06,680
So when you first started thinking about putting the building together,
510
00:25:06,680 --> 00:25:08,760
tell me how it works? Do you draw?
511
00:25:08,760 --> 00:25:12,120
Do you get blocks? How does it go, that process?
512
00:25:12,120 --> 00:25:16,240
So we did a lot of initial work in model, in physical models.
513
00:25:16,240 --> 00:25:18,440
My oldest child, our son, was just born.
514
00:25:18,440 --> 00:25:21,720
I spent of lot the time designing the house with the baby on my lap
515
00:25:21,720 --> 00:25:24,320
while my wife would get some much-needed sleep.
516
00:25:24,320 --> 00:25:27,880
It was literally block, two blue foam blocks
517
00:25:27,880 --> 00:25:32,520
and it was about the composition of the elements
518
00:25:32,520 --> 00:25:33,880
and the small footprint,
519
00:25:33,880 --> 00:25:36,040
so it has a small impact on the forest floor.
520
00:25:36,040 --> 00:25:39,400
Then once we knew we wanted to get up high and see the view,
521
00:25:39,400 --> 00:25:41,560
then it was a question of, how do we pull this off?
522
00:25:41,560 --> 00:25:44,280
And so one way of thinking about this house is
523
00:25:44,280 --> 00:25:49,080
if you have a typical hallway with bedrooms that run off of it,
524
00:25:49,080 --> 00:25:52,800
we take this thing and we tilt it up, so instead of the hallway
525
00:25:52,800 --> 00:25:54,480
you have the yellow stairs,
526
00:25:54,480 --> 00:25:57,440
and then we have three bedrooms that help get the living room,
527
00:25:57,440 --> 00:25:59,040
which is on the top floor here,
528
00:25:59,040 --> 00:26:02,840
up high enough so that then you can really experience the big view.
529
00:26:02,840 --> 00:26:04,680
Was there ever a time when you thought,
530
00:26:04,680 --> 00:26:07,320
"I don't know quite what I've built here?"
531
00:26:07,320 --> 00:26:12,920
So before we put the glass on, the side of the house is massive.
532
00:26:12,920 --> 00:26:15,120
I mean, it is 40 feet tall, it's a massive surface.
533
00:26:15,120 --> 00:26:18,040
And when it was just covered in its waterproofing,
534
00:26:18,040 --> 00:26:20,600
it really was not invisible.
535
00:26:20,600 --> 00:26:22,760
But once the glass goes on it, and it just reflects,
536
00:26:22,760 --> 00:26:25,000
it's like camouflage, cos it reflects what's around it.
537
00:26:25,000 --> 00:26:29,680
And how close are you to what your initial dream was for this property?
538
00:26:29,680 --> 00:26:31,400
We, I have to say, we love it.
539
00:26:31,400 --> 00:26:32,920
One of the things we enjoy the most,
540
00:26:32,920 --> 00:26:35,000
is because we're always having people up,
541
00:26:35,000 --> 00:26:39,360
is having people who aren't used to being in capital A architecture.
542
00:26:39,360 --> 00:26:42,000
And they come up with their kids and they don't even know what
543
00:26:42,000 --> 00:26:46,040
architecture is, but their response is universally the same,
544
00:26:46,040 --> 00:26:48,720
which is, it's so easily understandable,
545
00:26:48,720 --> 00:26:52,280
and so successful in the way it makes you feel when you're here.
546
00:26:52,280 --> 00:26:55,680
So in fact, you've kind of achieved more than you ever expected to
547
00:26:55,680 --> 00:26:58,280
- with the build?
- Yep. Yep. In this case.
548
00:26:58,280 --> 00:27:00,000
It's not always the case!
549
00:27:00,000 --> 00:27:01,240
I'm sure it isn't!
550
00:27:09,280 --> 00:27:12,200
- Hello!
- There you are!
- You great big butch architect!
551
00:27:12,200 --> 00:27:14,760
While you've been wafting around a big beautiful house,
552
00:27:14,760 --> 00:27:16,280
I've been chopping wood.
553
00:27:16,280 --> 00:27:17,680
Oops, sorry!
554
00:27:17,680 --> 00:27:18,840
So sorry.
555
00:27:18,840 --> 00:27:21,200
So, do you think this is a good house, Piers?
556
00:27:21,200 --> 00:27:22,880
I like this house more and more.
557
00:27:22,880 --> 00:27:25,640
I mean looking at it now in this evening light,
558
00:27:25,640 --> 00:27:27,720
it really is mesmeric, isn't it?
559
00:27:27,720 --> 00:27:29,080
It is. Because when I first saw it,
560
00:27:29,080 --> 00:27:31,640
I thought this is a sort of big glass thing,
561
00:27:31,640 --> 00:27:34,640
where there should be wood, but actually it works really well.
562
00:27:34,640 --> 00:27:37,280
I think nature is so beautiful and in a way, this stuff,
563
00:27:37,280 --> 00:27:38,720
this wood is so perfect,
564
00:27:38,720 --> 00:27:41,960
to try to build a building out of this doesn't always make sense,
565
00:27:41,960 --> 00:27:44,960
but this is subtle, and delicate, and appropriate.
566
00:27:44,960 --> 00:27:47,360
And it's really easy to be clumsy in this landscape,
567
00:27:47,360 --> 00:27:48,960
but this building isn't.
568
00:27:57,840 --> 00:28:00,200
The next stop on our forest adventure
569
00:28:00,200 --> 00:28:04,280
takes us across the Hudson River and to the hamlet of Shokan,
570
00:28:04,280 --> 00:28:07,360
deep in the heart of the Catskill Park.
571
00:28:07,360 --> 00:28:10,720
This area of upstate New York is a woodland playground
572
00:28:10,720 --> 00:28:13,320
for the rich and famous.
573
00:28:13,320 --> 00:28:16,920
Movie stars and musicians have all lived here.
574
00:28:18,640 --> 00:28:21,600
It's quite a famous place, actually, in cultural history.
575
00:28:21,600 --> 00:28:26,360
I think Hendrix and Bowie both were drawn to the Shokan area.
576
00:28:28,160 --> 00:28:31,200
We're heading to a hi-tech weekend forest home,
577
00:28:31,200 --> 00:28:34,800
owned and designed by New York architect Jay Bargmann.
578
00:28:36,000 --> 00:28:39,280
Jay's day job is for an acclaimed international firm
579
00:28:39,280 --> 00:28:41,600
responsible for designing iconic buildings -
580
00:28:41,600 --> 00:28:45,160
like the skyscraper in London now known as the Walkie Talkie.
581
00:28:47,080 --> 00:28:50,920
This is the first house Jay has designed for himself.
582
00:28:50,920 --> 00:28:55,000
But rather than building in the urban environment he's used to,
583
00:28:55,000 --> 00:28:58,840
Jay picked a wooded hillside plot with no infrastructure in place.
584
00:29:00,000 --> 00:29:04,440
So no roads, no running water, and no electricity.
585
00:29:04,440 --> 00:29:05,840
Jay's picking us up this morning.
586
00:29:05,840 --> 00:29:08,560
He's going to take us to the house which is nice, actually,
587
00:29:08,560 --> 00:29:09,840
in case it is difficult to find.
588
00:29:09,840 --> 00:29:12,320
Really nice. So I think he said out of town. And...here we are.
589
00:29:12,320 --> 00:29:14,320
Here, here, here, here.
590
00:29:14,320 --> 00:29:15,600
Airport? Hang on.
591
00:29:19,120 --> 00:29:22,480
There's a chopper over there, just landed.
592
00:29:22,480 --> 00:29:25,560
- You must be Jay?
- How are you?
- Good to see you, I'm Piers.
593
00:29:25,560 --> 00:29:29,240
- I'm Jay.
- Caroline.
- I'm Jay, how are you?
- Very good to meet you. Lovely to meet you.
594
00:29:29,240 --> 00:29:31,840
Slightly nervous that we're meeting you at an airport?
595
00:29:31,840 --> 00:29:33,480
Yes, well we set up something.
596
00:29:33,480 --> 00:29:36,480
The house is not really remote, but at the top of a hill,
597
00:29:36,480 --> 00:29:39,120
and maybe the best way to see it is from the air.
598
00:29:39,120 --> 00:29:41,000
Are we going in this, are we?
599
00:29:41,000 --> 00:29:43,440
This is a friend of ours, and it's his helicopter.
600
00:29:43,440 --> 00:29:45,160
He's an aerobatic pilot.
601
00:29:45,160 --> 00:29:46,760
- Brilliant.
- That's really exciting.
602
00:29:46,760 --> 00:29:50,080
- You need the keys, which I'll give you these. That gets you in the front door.
- Great.
603
00:29:50,080 --> 00:29:53,680
We'll catch up with you later this afternoon.
604
00:29:53,680 --> 00:29:57,360
- Have a good flight.
- Thank you very much, we'll see you at your house!
605
00:29:57,360 --> 00:29:59,120
See you there!
606
00:30:00,560 --> 00:30:02,600
Oh, lift-off!
607
00:30:09,480 --> 00:30:11,640
How high are we, Davie?
608
00:30:11,640 --> 00:30:13,880
We're 900ft above sea level.
609
00:30:13,880 --> 00:30:15,720
And travelling how fast?
610
00:30:15,720 --> 00:30:18,000
About 130mph.
611
00:30:18,000 --> 00:30:19,960
Oh, this is the way to see this place.
612
00:30:19,960 --> 00:30:23,160
Look at the Catskills, isn't it beautiful?!
613
00:30:23,160 --> 00:30:25,160
- Yeah.
- Oh, wow, this is amazing.
614
00:30:25,160 --> 00:30:27,960
And here's the Hudson.
615
00:30:27,960 --> 00:30:30,040
So, I can see the house right now.
616
00:30:30,040 --> 00:30:33,000
- Oh, can you?
- If you look at that peak in front of us...
617
00:30:33,000 --> 00:30:36,080
- It's, kind of, really dark.
- There it is. There it is.
618
00:30:36,080 --> 00:30:37,960
- Can you see it, Caroline?
- No, I don't, I'm...
619
00:30:37,960 --> 00:30:39,600
- Oh, yes, I've just seen it.
- Yeah.
620
00:30:39,600 --> 00:30:41,760
It's quite dark, it's quite hard to see, isn't it?
621
00:30:41,760 --> 00:30:44,680
What a glamorous way in. You said an approach is important for a house.
622
00:30:44,680 --> 00:30:50,080
- It is SO important.
- This is quite an approach, isn't it?
623
00:30:54,680 --> 00:30:56,320
CAROLINE LAUGHS
624
00:30:57,560 --> 00:30:59,200
'What an entrance!
625
00:30:59,200 --> 00:31:00,760
'I feel like a Bond villain,
626
00:31:00,760 --> 00:31:04,600
'flying into my villainous secret lair.'
627
00:31:04,600 --> 00:31:06,840
Oh, Piers, it's quite glamorous!
628
00:31:06,840 --> 00:31:08,160
Piers, Piers, Piers!
629
00:31:08,160 --> 00:31:10,640
Look at it here with the helicopter in front of it.
630
00:31:10,640 --> 00:31:13,200
"Oh, I've been expecting you, Mr Bond!"
631
00:31:13,200 --> 00:31:15,000
THEY LAUGH
632
00:31:21,400 --> 00:31:23,280
This imposing structure almost
633
00:31:23,280 --> 00:31:25,760
launches itself into the forest clearing.
634
00:31:27,040 --> 00:31:31,080
But when Jay bought this virgin plot it was covered in trees.
635
00:31:31,080 --> 00:31:33,160
It took a month just to clear the site
636
00:31:33,160 --> 00:31:35,160
before they could start building.
637
00:31:38,240 --> 00:31:41,640
Rather than create an oblong structure to sit across the view,
638
00:31:41,640 --> 00:31:44,360
Jay cleverly rotated the plan 90 degrees
639
00:31:44,360 --> 00:31:48,160
to maximise the forest views from three sides.
640
00:31:49,840 --> 00:31:53,760
Due to strong winds, the house was constructed much like a skyscraper.
641
00:31:54,760 --> 00:31:56,800
The foundations are exposed concrete,
642
00:31:56,800 --> 00:32:00,280
with a steel superstructure used to create the height and strength
643
00:32:00,280 --> 00:32:02,600
within the building.
644
00:32:02,600 --> 00:32:05,800
Jay used a series of internal trusses and tension rods
645
00:32:05,800 --> 00:32:09,480
to hold this aircraft-hanger sized building completely rigid,
646
00:32:09,480 --> 00:32:11,680
retaining its millimetric precision.
647
00:32:13,800 --> 00:32:17,280
Continuous bands of tinted glass wrap around the house,
648
00:32:17,280 --> 00:32:19,240
mirroring the surrounding woodland.
649
00:32:20,400 --> 00:32:22,840
Piers, this is nice.
650
00:32:22,840 --> 00:32:25,240
I do love that reflection of those trees.
651
00:32:25,240 --> 00:32:28,840
Yeah. And it is unusual to have a house pointing at the view,
652
00:32:28,840 --> 00:32:31,240
cos, typically, you'd orientate a house along the view...
653
00:32:31,240 --> 00:32:34,680
- Along the view, yes, absolutely.
- ..and pointing out is unusual.
654
00:32:34,680 --> 00:32:36,800
- He deliberately chose to do that, didn't he?
- Yeah.
655
00:32:36,800 --> 00:32:39,000
To focus the attention on the view.
656
00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:41,000
And also to get the view along that way.
657
00:32:41,000 --> 00:32:43,200
Listen, I've got the keys, do you want to go straight in?
658
00:32:43,200 --> 00:32:45,680
- I would love to go straight in.
- Yeah?
659
00:32:45,680 --> 00:32:47,720
And the door works like a dream!
660
00:32:47,720 --> 00:32:49,360
And attention to detail.
661
00:32:49,360 --> 00:32:53,120
- Look at that.
- Now, it's quite dark.
662
00:32:53,120 --> 00:32:55,040
Er...
663
00:32:55,040 --> 00:32:57,000
"System ready".
664
00:32:57,000 --> 00:33:00,000
"Room"? "Vestibule"? Hang on. Is this vestibule?
665
00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:02,280
- Yes! It is vestibule!
- Look at that! wow!
666
00:33:04,720 --> 00:33:06,960
The interior of this state-of-the-art house
667
00:33:06,960 --> 00:33:08,760
exposes every detail of its
668
00:33:08,760 --> 00:33:10,800
highly engineered construction.
669
00:33:13,440 --> 00:33:15,640
A double-height open-plan living area
670
00:33:15,640 --> 00:33:18,440
provides panoramic views of the surrounding forest
671
00:33:18,440 --> 00:33:21,680
from every position inside this extraordinary home.
672
00:33:22,680 --> 00:33:27,400
AS BOND VILLAIN: So, do you like my home, Mr Taylor?
673
00:33:27,400 --> 00:33:30,520
The world will be mine!
674
00:33:30,520 --> 00:33:35,360
Mwah-ha-ha-ha-ha!
675
00:33:35,360 --> 00:33:38,080
I was suspicious, I have to say, when we arrived,
676
00:33:38,080 --> 00:33:40,920
because it's a big statement, let's face it, here.
677
00:33:40,920 --> 00:33:44,400
But the view is so dramatic, and then this room,
678
00:33:44,400 --> 00:33:47,320
I mean, this room is really majestic.
679
00:33:47,320 --> 00:33:49,920
- This is almost cathedral-like.
- Sitting here and looking up,
680
00:33:49,920 --> 00:33:53,920
- I could be looking up at the roof of my local DIY superstore.
- Yeah.
681
00:33:53,920 --> 00:33:56,080
- I mean, it's exactly like that.
- Yeah.
682
00:33:56,080 --> 00:34:00,440
What is it that makes this so beautiful?
683
00:34:00,440 --> 00:34:03,360
There's real care, real consideration,
684
00:34:03,360 --> 00:34:07,360
and then you take off the shelf components like these little
685
00:34:07,360 --> 00:34:09,960
open Metsec trusses, we call them...
686
00:34:09,960 --> 00:34:12,520
- And you compose them...
- Is that that one? That one that does that?
687
00:34:12,520 --> 00:34:14,600
- That's the ones that goes across.
- The zig zaggy one.
688
00:34:14,600 --> 00:34:16,720
The zig zag ones. That's a really cheap, off the peg...
689
00:34:16,720 --> 00:34:19,120
- You see that everywhere. Normally it's orange...
- Yeah.
690
00:34:19,120 --> 00:34:22,120
..but just to see it black, suddenly becomes very beautiful, doesn't it?
691
00:34:22,120 --> 00:34:26,480
Yeah. And I think, also, there's real refinement where you need it.
692
00:34:26,480 --> 00:34:30,680
So here, that is a beautiful bit of truss, and that's in tension,
693
00:34:30,680 --> 00:34:34,240
that's pulling quite hard, stopping the sides from wobbling around.
694
00:34:34,240 --> 00:34:37,400
I mean, there is real precision, alongside the everyday.
695
00:34:40,080 --> 00:34:43,800
Stainless steel surfaces are featured throughout this house,
696
00:34:43,800 --> 00:34:47,520
capturing reflections of the surrounding environment.
697
00:34:47,520 --> 00:34:49,880
I like the staircase, the way it's...
698
00:34:49,880 --> 00:34:52,600
- It's beautiful.
- Yeah.
- I mean, look at this, Caroline. That...
699
00:34:52,600 --> 00:34:55,320
is a solid... You're aligning your chair.
700
00:34:55,320 --> 00:34:58,600
It's like a house that makes you be really neat. Do you do that at home?
701
00:34:58,600 --> 00:35:00,520
Do I hell. PIERS LAUGHS
702
00:35:00,520 --> 00:35:03,120
I mean, this is solid steel.
703
00:35:03,120 --> 00:35:05,360
It's so tactile.
704
00:35:05,360 --> 00:35:08,200
- Yeah.
- All you want to do is stroke it
705
00:35:08,200 --> 00:35:11,640
all the way up the stairs.
706
00:35:11,640 --> 00:35:14,360
That is the most beautiful weld I've ever seen.
707
00:35:14,360 --> 00:35:17,880
- It's been made like a piece of jewellery.
- It has.
708
00:35:17,880 --> 00:35:20,400
You know, it's really hard to impress me with this sort of stuff,
709
00:35:20,400 --> 00:35:25,080
but coming here and seeing the level of attention, the level of care,
710
00:35:25,080 --> 00:35:26,960
the level of passion...
711
00:35:26,960 --> 00:35:30,240
This is extraordinary because usually if we see this,
712
00:35:30,240 --> 00:35:33,200
it's in a building that has cost £150 million,
713
00:35:33,200 --> 00:35:36,440
the Gherkin or something, one of Foster's buildings,
714
00:35:36,440 --> 00:35:39,480
and to bring that level of thinking down to this scale
715
00:35:39,480 --> 00:35:43,120
is a real privilege and a delight to see.
716
00:35:43,120 --> 00:35:45,600
And, yes, I'm impressed by all of this.
717
00:35:45,600 --> 00:35:47,720
I am quite wowed by it, actually.
718
00:35:49,200 --> 00:35:52,440
Every single detail of this house is hi-tech.
719
00:35:53,560 --> 00:35:56,000
But I like my creature comforts,
720
00:35:56,000 --> 00:35:58,520
and there's no sign of a kettle anywhere.
721
00:35:59,680 --> 00:36:01,720
- I'm interested to see how it works, as well.
- Yeah.
722
00:36:01,720 --> 00:36:05,920
So, I'd like you to make me a cup of tea.
723
00:36:05,920 --> 00:36:08,760
OK. So, this is the kitchen, and...
724
00:36:08,760 --> 00:36:11,360
Good test.... It has taps, it has sinks,
725
00:36:11,360 --> 00:36:13,720
there's a hob and an oven.
726
00:36:13,720 --> 00:36:16,560
- Oh, fridge, here we are.
- SHE LAUGHS
727
00:36:16,560 --> 00:36:19,400
- Milk.
- Milk, excellent.
- Look!
728
00:36:19,400 --> 00:36:21,360
A cup of cha! Great.
729
00:36:21,360 --> 00:36:25,760
- So, tea...
- Yeah.
- ..cups. This can make hot water.
730
00:36:25,760 --> 00:36:28,200
So that says... "Alien"?
731
00:36:28,200 --> 00:36:30,600
Oh, "Align", I haven't got my glasses on.
732
00:36:30,600 --> 00:36:32,800
THEY LAUGH
733
00:36:32,800 --> 00:36:34,160
I need a power point now.
734
00:36:34,160 --> 00:36:36,560
- Here we are. Right, I'm going to bung a saucepan on.
- Good idea.
735
00:36:36,560 --> 00:36:40,640
What's that, Piers? That little one? Is that soap?
736
00:36:40,640 --> 00:36:42,200
I think we've just blown up Russia(!)
737
00:36:42,200 --> 00:36:43,840
THEY LAUGH
738
00:36:43,840 --> 00:36:45,160
Oh, wave your hand about.
739
00:36:45,160 --> 00:36:47,760
- That one on. I think it's got a remote control.
- Hang on.
740
00:36:47,760 --> 00:36:49,880
It's probably...turn it on with an app.
741
00:36:49,880 --> 00:36:52,760
- This isn't working.
- Do you think it's voice activated?
742
00:36:52,760 --> 00:36:54,960
Make my tea - go!
743
00:36:54,960 --> 00:36:56,800
No, we're struggling here, aren't we?
744
00:36:56,800 --> 00:36:59,520
So, this is a house that is supposedly really easy to use,
745
00:36:59,520 --> 00:37:00,720
we know our way around,
746
00:37:00,720 --> 00:37:02,960
until we get to make a cup of tea.
747
00:37:02,960 --> 00:37:04,400
And it was going so well,
748
00:37:04,400 --> 00:37:06,520
until we tried to boil the water.
749
00:37:06,520 --> 00:37:09,080
- I'm going to persevere with this thing.
- Izzy whizzy...
750
00:37:09,080 --> 00:37:11,960
SHE LAUGHS ..get busy!
751
00:37:11,960 --> 00:37:15,760
- This isn't on. This isn't on, Piers. This is not on.
- It doesn't reach!
752
00:37:15,760 --> 00:37:19,400
- Are you serious?
- I think I'm going for a lie-down. Do you mind?
753
00:37:19,400 --> 00:37:21,040
Hang on, hang on, hang on.
754
00:37:21,040 --> 00:37:23,040
How come I'm now making the cup of tea?
755
00:37:23,040 --> 00:37:24,680
You're making me a cup of tea.
756
00:37:24,680 --> 00:37:26,120
White, no sugar, thanks.
757
00:37:26,120 --> 00:37:28,040
I am going to go and have a lie down.
758
00:37:28,040 --> 00:37:30,600
- See you tomorrow.
- See you later, Piers.
759
00:37:30,600 --> 00:37:35,200
I won't let this beat me. I'm a man, I know how to make things work.
760
00:37:35,200 --> 00:37:37,320
WHISPERS: Welcome to my library.
761
00:37:37,320 --> 00:37:40,920
Ah look, you can see where the ideas come from, here.
762
00:37:40,920 --> 00:37:44,280
All these load-bearing structures from Germany.
763
00:37:44,280 --> 00:37:48,080
Here we go. A bit of lukewarm water. She won't notice.
764
00:37:48,080 --> 00:37:50,440
Here's your lovely cup of tea. You like it weak, don't you?
765
00:37:50,440 --> 00:37:52,920
Oh, Piers, you didn't get it going, did you?
766
00:37:52,920 --> 00:37:55,160
It's impossible. I think that is one of the problems
767
00:37:55,160 --> 00:37:57,440
with very elaborate houses like this,
768
00:37:57,440 --> 00:37:59,920
that when you come to do anything, it's too complex.
769
00:37:59,920 --> 00:38:02,320
- Do you think we're just ill-informed?
- Probably just stupid.
770
00:38:02,320 --> 00:38:03,560
THEY LAUGH
771
00:38:03,560 --> 00:38:05,800
And foreign!
772
00:38:14,240 --> 00:38:17,360
After letting us explore his home, Jay's back,
773
00:38:17,360 --> 00:38:20,600
and he's brought his airline-pilot wife Cindy with him.
774
00:38:23,520 --> 00:38:26,120
- This is the first house you've built for yourself, isn't it?
- Yes.
775
00:38:26,120 --> 00:38:29,000
- Right, right.
- And you've been an architect for how long?
776
00:38:29,000 --> 00:38:32,120
- 40 years.
- Yeah. It feels to me like there's a lifetime's worth
777
00:38:32,120 --> 00:38:33,560
of experience in this house.
778
00:38:33,560 --> 00:38:37,480
So, what it is, I think, it's a lifetime of knowing what not to do.
779
00:38:37,480 --> 00:38:40,640
It's not trying to be complicated, not trying to be flashy,
780
00:38:40,640 --> 00:38:42,320
not trying to be nouveau,
781
00:38:42,320 --> 00:38:44,120
not trying to be anything but just...
782
00:38:44,120 --> 00:38:45,760
Build something that you can see
783
00:38:45,760 --> 00:38:47,800
every part of the construction.
784
00:38:47,800 --> 00:38:50,120
Were you involved in the early stage, Cindy?
785
00:38:50,120 --> 00:38:51,880
I found the lot.
786
00:38:51,880 --> 00:38:53,640
- Did you?
- Yes. I came up here,
787
00:38:53,640 --> 00:38:57,000
it was just all woods and rock but it was just the view that...
788
00:38:57,000 --> 00:39:01,560
- was stunning.
- So, the very second time we came up, this was the view.
789
00:39:01,560 --> 00:39:06,200
You're always sitting in the clouds or sitting in the colour red.
790
00:39:06,200 --> 00:39:10,720
- Yeah.
- Or sunrise, that the objects take on a character.
791
00:39:10,720 --> 00:39:12,480
So, this is a typical sunrise.
792
00:39:13,880 --> 00:39:16,800
To achieve such incredible views of the forest,
793
00:39:16,800 --> 00:39:20,160
Jay's construction team had to fell a patch of woodland,
794
00:39:20,160 --> 00:39:24,080
build a road and install utilities from scratch.
795
00:39:24,080 --> 00:39:25,480
This is the road being built.
796
00:39:25,480 --> 00:39:28,320
We built the road three times. It kept washing away.
797
00:39:28,320 --> 00:39:30,600
That was the single... I learned how to engineer a road
798
00:39:30,600 --> 00:39:33,120
- from the guy that...
- Right.
- ..built this road.
799
00:39:33,120 --> 00:39:35,520
- That's the...
- Even finding the contractor,
800
00:39:35,520 --> 00:39:38,800
when we were looking for the team, we said, you know,
801
00:39:38,800 --> 00:39:42,720
it's a residential house but we were looking at commercial contractors,
802
00:39:42,720 --> 00:39:45,040
and they wouldn't look at us, and we're like, "Can you just
803
00:39:45,040 --> 00:39:48,760
"look at the drawings, because it's not your typical residential house."
804
00:39:48,760 --> 00:39:53,480
Executing Jay's vision of perfection was a slow process.
805
00:39:53,480 --> 00:39:56,080
The project required a team of highly skilled
806
00:39:56,080 --> 00:39:58,040
and talented master builders,
807
00:39:58,040 --> 00:40:02,960
who took three years to produce such an immaculately detailed home.
808
00:40:02,960 --> 00:40:07,000
I was looking for the botched welds and the clumsy connections,
809
00:40:07,000 --> 00:40:08,240
and there aren't any.
810
00:40:08,240 --> 00:40:12,560
We really got very excited by the quality of the welding on your stairs.
811
00:40:12,560 --> 00:40:14,320
I mean, it's so finely made.
812
00:40:14,320 --> 00:40:16,920
The guys that made that stair made the fittings on
813
00:40:16,920 --> 00:40:19,600
- the Pyramid at the Louvre in Paris.
- CAROLINE GASPS
814
00:40:19,600 --> 00:40:23,840
And these are friends of ours that worked with us 30 years ago.
815
00:40:23,840 --> 00:40:26,280
That makes perfect sense.
816
00:40:26,280 --> 00:40:28,560
You brought a sensibility that is
817
00:40:28,560 --> 00:40:31,520
from buildings that cost millions and millions and millions
818
00:40:31,520 --> 00:40:34,720
of pounds into something that's of a domestic scale.
819
00:40:34,720 --> 00:40:38,160
Do you think this is pretty close to
820
00:40:38,160 --> 00:40:40,840
a kind of perfection for you?
821
00:40:40,840 --> 00:40:43,960
No. I think this... I'd like to do it again.
822
00:40:43,960 --> 00:40:46,600
Yeah... I think this is just a step along the way!
823
00:40:46,600 --> 00:40:50,080
We'll do another house on the property or something, a guest house, something like that.
824
00:40:50,080 --> 00:40:52,720
- I don't know.
- But you still feel you've got more to say...?
- Oh, yeah.
825
00:40:52,720 --> 00:40:54,960
You'd do it again, but would you do it again, Cindy?
826
00:40:54,960 --> 00:40:56,520
I would have to think about it.
827
00:40:56,520 --> 00:40:58,200
THEY LAUGH
828
00:40:58,200 --> 00:41:00,160
It was a long three years!
829
00:41:02,240 --> 00:41:06,520
Jay has let us continue to roam free in his extraordinary home.
830
00:41:06,520 --> 00:41:09,800
And I'm noticing a distinct lack of doors or walls
831
00:41:09,800 --> 00:41:11,960
dividing up rooms!
832
00:41:11,960 --> 00:41:16,480
Not that that seems to bother Piers "Oh, I'm so unconventional" Taylor!
833
00:41:16,480 --> 00:41:20,120
I mean, rooms are a bit suburban, really, aren't they?
834
00:41:20,120 --> 00:41:21,440
SHE LAUGHS
835
00:41:21,440 --> 00:41:23,240
That's such a Piers thing to say.
836
00:41:23,240 --> 00:41:25,960
Well, I mean, you know, spaces are so much nicer.
837
00:41:25,960 --> 00:41:28,280
And, actually, this is a house that doesn't have any rooms,
838
00:41:28,280 --> 00:41:30,480
as far as I can see. I'm going to see if I can find some.
839
00:41:30,480 --> 00:41:31,800
Try and find me a door.
840
00:41:31,800 --> 00:41:35,200
Particularly, find one if it's on a lavatory, would you?
841
00:41:35,200 --> 00:41:38,920
Jay has taken open plan living to the extreme.
842
00:41:38,920 --> 00:41:43,400
He's used storage units to create a series of spaces with flexible uses.
843
00:41:43,400 --> 00:41:44,800
I hope this is a bed.
844
00:41:44,800 --> 00:41:48,640
Not just the wall collapsing on me!
845
00:41:48,640 --> 00:41:52,520
These storage partitions carve up this large space beautifully,
846
00:41:52,520 --> 00:41:55,040
without interrupting the forest views.
847
00:41:55,040 --> 00:41:58,720
It's a world away from the boxy rooms we're used to at home.
848
00:41:58,720 --> 00:41:59,920
Excuse me!
849
00:41:59,920 --> 00:42:02,320
I love the way that these aren't rooms.
850
00:42:02,320 --> 00:42:04,920
I think my least favourite two words,
851
00:42:04,920 --> 00:42:07,680
when you combine them in English, are "Master bedroom".
852
00:42:07,680 --> 00:42:09,760
I mean, it's just a ridiculous conceit,
853
00:42:09,760 --> 00:42:11,640
that you need a master bedroom.
854
00:42:11,640 --> 00:42:13,440
But I guess this is "The master bedroom".
855
00:42:13,440 --> 00:42:14,920
But actually, I mean...
856
00:42:14,920 --> 00:42:19,080
I love it, that's it's just part of a series and sequence of spaces.
857
00:42:24,120 --> 00:42:25,240
How interesting.
858
00:42:25,240 --> 00:42:29,440
- How interesting.
- Just blown away by the craftsmanship, actually.
859
00:42:29,440 --> 00:42:31,320
The sheer brilliance of
860
00:42:31,320 --> 00:42:34,960
how he's executed his vision is mind-blowing.
861
00:42:34,960 --> 00:42:38,520
And really, I find what he's done extraordinary.
862
00:42:38,520 --> 00:42:39,800
This is a real one-off.
863
00:42:41,160 --> 00:42:44,000
You ordered the helicopter, didn't you?
864
00:42:44,000 --> 00:42:45,520
No. I thought you did.
865
00:42:46,760 --> 00:42:49,240
It's going to be a long walk back to the hotel.
866
00:42:49,240 --> 00:42:51,080
SHE SIGHS
867
00:42:52,160 --> 00:42:54,520
The last leg of our forest adventure
868
00:42:54,520 --> 00:42:56,240
takes us further afield.
869
00:43:00,520 --> 00:43:04,440
We've flown halfway around the world to New Zealand's North Island.
870
00:43:07,200 --> 00:43:09,880
We're about half an hour outside Auckland.
871
00:43:09,880 --> 00:43:13,240
- 45 minutes.
- Yeah, I mean, if we were in London we'd be in Croydon now.
872
00:43:13,240 --> 00:43:16,160
And we're right on the edge of the world.
873
00:43:16,160 --> 00:43:19,560
We're heading to the village of Piha, on the west coast,
874
00:43:19,560 --> 00:43:22,600
home to the protected Waitakere Ranges Heritage Area.
875
00:43:24,560 --> 00:43:27,600
This is ancient virgin bushland,
876
00:43:27,600 --> 00:43:30,480
and you have to be so careful when you build here.
877
00:43:32,040 --> 00:43:34,400
We're off to see an extraordinary home,
878
00:43:34,400 --> 00:43:37,880
built on a plot of land covered in the native pohutukawa tree.
879
00:43:39,720 --> 00:43:41,800
The owners wanted a three-bedroom house
880
00:43:41,800 --> 00:43:44,480
that could function both indoors and out.
881
00:43:46,400 --> 00:43:49,000
The architect's biggest challenge was to find a way of
882
00:43:49,000 --> 00:43:51,400
bringing the forest right into the house
883
00:43:51,400 --> 00:43:54,560
whilst having to navigate strict conservation laws.
884
00:43:56,240 --> 00:43:59,720
This house that we're going to is called Under Pohutukawa,
885
00:43:59,720 --> 00:44:03,840
and I think they had to clear as few trees from the site as possible,
886
00:44:03,840 --> 00:44:06,640
and then nestle the house in among the trees.
887
00:44:06,640 --> 00:44:08,840
I like that sort of challenge offered to architects,
888
00:44:08,840 --> 00:44:10,520
I think it's really important to say,
889
00:44:10,520 --> 00:44:12,440
"No, you can't just have a clear site,
890
00:44:12,440 --> 00:44:14,000
"you have to work with what's here,
891
00:44:14,000 --> 00:44:16,520
"and nature comes first and the building comes second."
892
00:44:16,520 --> 00:44:18,600
Oh, Piers, Piers, Piers. Slow down.
893
00:44:18,600 --> 00:44:21,480
- Are we here?
- I think that's... It's here.
- Here we are.
894
00:44:21,480 --> 00:44:22,840
Wow.
895
00:44:24,080 --> 00:44:25,760
Is there a house there at all?
896
00:44:25,760 --> 00:44:28,120
Mostly you can see trees.
897
00:44:28,120 --> 00:44:31,240
And that must be a pohutukawa tree.
898
00:44:31,240 --> 00:44:32,880
Shall we have a look?
899
00:44:40,000 --> 00:44:42,120
Oh, look...
900
00:44:42,120 --> 00:44:43,840
Oh!
901
00:44:43,840 --> 00:44:47,240
It's like an enchanted forest in here.
902
00:44:47,240 --> 00:44:49,680
I love this. I love the sense of ducking down
903
00:44:49,680 --> 00:44:52,400
under these beautiful branches.
904
00:44:52,400 --> 00:44:55,600
There's something about coming into these gnarled, sort of,
905
00:44:55,600 --> 00:44:59,200
very textured...almost like arms,
906
00:44:59,200 --> 00:45:03,120
coming in to being embraced by the arms of the pohutukawa trees.
907
00:45:03,120 --> 00:45:05,080
A lot of people would want to be by the sea,
908
00:45:05,080 --> 00:45:06,920
or in the mountains with the view,
909
00:45:06,920 --> 00:45:09,960
but I like to be in the forest, and this feels like coming home.
910
00:45:11,440 --> 00:45:14,280
To make way for the house in this indigenous woodland,
911
00:45:14,280 --> 00:45:17,840
the planners agreed to the removal of four pohutukawa trees.
912
00:45:19,720 --> 00:45:22,680
A two-storey open-plan living and dining area
913
00:45:22,680 --> 00:45:24,680
nestles into the site.
914
00:45:25,960 --> 00:45:28,320
Placed to the rear and side of the house,
915
00:45:28,320 --> 00:45:31,120
two wooden-clad towers create private areas
916
00:45:31,120 --> 00:45:34,040
for bedrooms and bathrooms.
917
00:45:34,040 --> 00:45:37,880
The entire building is enclosed by a large glass roof,
918
00:45:37,880 --> 00:45:40,600
which is supported by steel and timber struts,
919
00:45:40,600 --> 00:45:44,000
mimicking the branches of the surrounding trees.
920
00:45:44,000 --> 00:45:46,880
The texture of this bark set against
921
00:45:46,880 --> 00:45:49,200
the textures of that cladding -
922
00:45:49,200 --> 00:45:50,840
it's wonderful, isn't it?
923
00:45:50,840 --> 00:45:53,000
And the cladding is a little bit like the bark,
924
00:45:53,000 --> 00:45:54,240
in that it has real depth.
925
00:45:54,240 --> 00:45:56,360
It's got bits of timber in three different layers.
926
00:45:56,360 --> 00:45:58,480
Yeah, it has, actually, hasn't it?
927
00:45:58,480 --> 00:46:00,600
Often contemporary buildings are really flat
928
00:46:00,600 --> 00:46:02,560
but this feels textured,
929
00:46:02,560 --> 00:46:05,880
layered and rich. And I love the way you can see through the building
930
00:46:05,880 --> 00:46:07,880
to the canopy the other side.
931
00:46:07,880 --> 00:46:10,680
Cos this house just sort of snuggles into the trees.
932
00:46:10,680 --> 00:46:12,640
- It does. It really does.
- The trees snuggle it up.
933
00:46:12,640 --> 00:46:15,160
And then... What are...? They're like trees, aren't they?
934
00:46:15,160 --> 00:46:17,040
They are. They are called structural trees...
935
00:46:17,040 --> 00:46:19,520
Which is really a way of supporting the roof.
936
00:46:19,520 --> 00:46:21,000
So, when it goes up to the sky,
937
00:46:21,000 --> 00:46:23,720
you're not looking at huge bits of structure, but you're looking at
938
00:46:23,720 --> 00:46:25,280
delicate limbs.
939
00:46:25,280 --> 00:46:27,320
So, I think we need to find our way in.
940
00:46:27,320 --> 00:46:31,080
- I know, but it's hard to leave these trees, isn't it?
- I know!
941
00:46:31,080 --> 00:46:34,520
Inside, the textures, tones and colours of this house
942
00:46:34,520 --> 00:46:37,560
are inspired by the trees that surround it.
943
00:46:37,560 --> 00:46:38,960
Wow.
944
00:46:38,960 --> 00:46:41,200
- I love this.
- Ohh.
945
00:46:41,200 --> 00:46:42,560
It's quite special, actually.
946
00:46:42,560 --> 00:46:45,360
- It's really special.
- It is. It is special.
- It's really special.
947
00:46:46,560 --> 00:46:51,080
The glass roof and walls make the house seem almost transparent,
948
00:46:51,080 --> 00:46:55,440
allowing the surrounding forest to be viewed from every direction.
949
00:46:55,440 --> 00:46:57,160
- Check out this, Caroline.
- Mmm.
950
00:46:57,160 --> 00:47:01,560
Look at this beautiful view back into the forest, here.
951
00:47:01,560 --> 00:47:03,640
- How exotic is that?
- Yes.
952
00:47:03,640 --> 00:47:06,040
And, again, you're in the trees again!
953
00:47:06,040 --> 00:47:07,560
Totally in the trees.
954
00:47:07,560 --> 00:47:10,880
I love the fact that everything has a slightly, sort of,
955
00:47:10,880 --> 00:47:14,920
filigree notion to it, so you can see through everything.
956
00:47:14,920 --> 00:47:18,240
- It's great from here, actually.
- That's extraordinary, isn't it?
- Yeah, love that.
957
00:47:18,240 --> 00:47:22,200
Seeing through the lamp shade, through the structural trees,
958
00:47:22,200 --> 00:47:23,880
through the actual trees to the sky.
959
00:47:23,880 --> 00:47:26,120
Through the roof to the sky to the real trees.
960
00:47:26,120 --> 00:47:28,040
And I'm in love with this cladding.
961
00:47:28,040 --> 00:47:30,440
- It's great, isn't it?
- I've not seen anything quite like it.
962
00:47:30,440 --> 00:47:33,200
- I really like this. And what are those holes for?
- Don't know.
963
00:47:33,200 --> 00:47:35,880
- Ventilation holes...
- Oh, is it a speaker?
964
00:47:35,880 --> 00:47:38,480
- Maybe it is.
- Maybe it's...
965
00:47:38,480 --> 00:47:42,080
- Oops!
- Look at that!
- You've broken it?!
966
00:47:42,080 --> 00:47:45,080
- There's the TV and everything.
- Oh, very cool.
967
00:47:45,080 --> 00:47:47,760
This is just plywood with bits of timber stuck on.
968
00:47:47,760 --> 00:47:50,520
So, that's quite an inexpensive way to do it, isn't it?
969
00:47:50,520 --> 00:47:53,680
- Totally.
- And because they've used different widths,
970
00:47:53,680 --> 00:47:56,680
it looks expensive and interesting and architectural
971
00:47:56,680 --> 00:47:58,360
and sculptural, doesn't it?
972
00:47:58,360 --> 00:48:02,040
What's lovely is that it doesn't act as a block for your eye
973
00:48:02,040 --> 00:48:04,680
because it has depth, and your eye keeps travelling.
974
00:48:04,680 --> 00:48:06,760
- A little bit like the canopy again.
- Yeah.
975
00:48:06,760 --> 00:48:09,720
And the building gets much more delicate
976
00:48:09,720 --> 00:48:12,480
- as it goes up...
- Yeah.
- ..like trees, and then it
977
00:48:12,480 --> 00:48:15,680
completely dematerialises against the sky, which is lovely.
978
00:48:15,680 --> 00:48:19,680
So, it feels like we're immersed in canopy all the time.
979
00:48:19,680 --> 00:48:21,440
Do you think this all opens up, Piers?
980
00:48:21,440 --> 00:48:23,840
Yeah, it does. These doors are all stacked down there.
981
00:48:23,840 --> 00:48:25,840
Do you think we should have a go at opening it all up,
982
00:48:25,840 --> 00:48:28,120
- and actually getting the full experience?
- I do.
983
00:48:28,120 --> 00:48:30,080
- I do.
- So, just the structure remaining.
984
00:48:30,080 --> 00:48:33,360
Yeah, we will just have, kind of, the trunks of the building.
985
00:48:33,360 --> 00:48:34,960
Here we are.
986
00:48:34,960 --> 00:48:37,240
- Get your fingers out of the way.
- Yep!
987
00:48:37,240 --> 00:48:39,200
- OK, I'm going all the way down.
- Great.
988
00:48:40,240 --> 00:48:42,560
Beautiful bits of glass, aren't they?
989
00:48:42,560 --> 00:48:44,760
Massive. This is what we use on stage
990
00:48:44,760 --> 00:48:47,000
- when we move trucks on and off stage.
- Yeah.
991
00:48:47,000 --> 00:48:50,280
You have a track in the floor to take bits of scenery
992
00:48:50,280 --> 00:48:52,920
on and off in exactly the same way.
993
00:48:52,920 --> 00:48:55,600
I love buildings that move, or bits of buildings that move.
994
00:48:55,600 --> 00:48:58,160
Why don't we do it more? We don't do enough of this, do we?
995
00:48:58,160 --> 00:49:01,600
You can muck about and change it, like a magic box, or something.
996
00:49:01,600 --> 00:49:04,920
Yeah. I think by law all houses should have to do this.
997
00:49:04,920 --> 00:49:07,720
And look, this suddenly creates a really good space, doesn't it?
998
00:49:07,720 --> 00:49:11,240
What's wonderful is that I don't know whether I'm inside or outside now,
999
00:49:11,240 --> 00:49:14,040
I'm just in a beautiful environment.
1000
00:49:14,040 --> 00:49:16,280
Why don't architects do this more often?
1001
00:49:16,280 --> 00:49:19,400
Cos I think this is one of the most valuable things that architects
1002
00:49:19,400 --> 00:49:20,960
could be doing for us, really.
1003
00:49:20,960 --> 00:49:23,760
People will tell you that we don't have the climate for it
1004
00:49:23,760 --> 00:49:25,600
in the UK but, actually, we do.
1005
00:49:25,600 --> 00:49:29,120
Because this isn't a warm day, this is 12, 13 degrees
1006
00:49:29,120 --> 00:49:32,640
but because it faces the right way, and it's protected from the cold winds,
1007
00:49:32,640 --> 00:49:34,760
it makes it a really usable space.
1008
00:49:34,760 --> 00:49:37,920
- Because people want to be outside.
- But historically, they didn't.
1009
00:49:37,920 --> 00:49:41,520
Historically we were fearful of natural landscape,
1010
00:49:41,520 --> 00:49:43,680
particularly quite wild landscapes like this.
1011
00:49:43,680 --> 00:49:47,800
So, we retreated in, and we looked at it through a pair of doors
1012
00:49:47,800 --> 00:49:50,760
or a little pair of windows.
1013
00:49:50,760 --> 00:49:53,000
The owners of this house, Gary and Sherry,
1014
00:49:53,000 --> 00:49:55,320
are property developers from Auckland.
1015
00:49:56,800 --> 00:50:00,400
Challenged with building on a plot covered with pohutukawa trees,
1016
00:50:00,400 --> 00:50:02,360
they enlisted award-winning architects,
1017
00:50:02,360 --> 00:50:04,320
Lance and Nicola Herbst,
1018
00:50:04,320 --> 00:50:08,600
to navigate the sacred trees and design their perfect holiday home.
1019
00:50:09,720 --> 00:50:12,480
What was your brief to them? What were you after?
1020
00:50:12,480 --> 00:50:15,120
Our brief was not a lot, actually.
1021
00:50:15,120 --> 00:50:18,400
We wanted light, good indoor-outdoor flow
1022
00:50:18,400 --> 00:50:21,440
- because we loved the outside a lot.
- Yeah.
- Three bedrooms...
1023
00:50:21,440 --> 00:50:22,800
And that was about it, really.
1024
00:50:22,800 --> 00:50:26,720
We had no concept of what sort of look we wanted.
1025
00:50:26,720 --> 00:50:29,000
And what was the first thing that they gave to you?
1026
00:50:29,000 --> 00:50:31,120
What was the first drawing like?
1027
00:50:31,120 --> 00:50:32,760
- It was this.
- It was this already?
1028
00:50:32,760 --> 00:50:34,600
- Yes, it was.
- Pretty much, yes.
1029
00:50:34,600 --> 00:50:38,080
- When we saw it...
- They were nervous, we were nervous!
- We were nervous.
1030
00:50:38,080 --> 00:50:39,960
I saw dollar signs in front of my eyes,
1031
00:50:39,960 --> 00:50:42,160
thinking, "This is going to cost a lot of money."
1032
00:50:42,160 --> 00:50:43,680
THEY LAUGH Yeah, yeah.
1033
00:50:43,680 --> 00:50:47,320
So, we took it away for two to three weeks, and we mulled it over.
1034
00:50:47,320 --> 00:50:49,640
- Did you make any changes to those initial drawings?
- No.
1035
00:50:49,640 --> 00:50:51,720
- No.
- No?
1036
00:50:51,720 --> 00:50:54,760
Well, it captured exactly what we wanted.
1037
00:50:54,760 --> 00:50:56,600
We didn't know what we wanted until we saw it.
1038
00:50:56,600 --> 00:50:59,160
When we saw it, it...
1039
00:50:59,160 --> 00:51:01,400
We thought, "Yeah, that's what we want."
1040
00:51:01,400 --> 00:51:04,360
We did put our utmost trust in the architects,
1041
00:51:04,360 --> 00:51:07,840
and believed in them and their work and what they were capable of.
1042
00:51:07,840 --> 00:51:09,680
They've got a skill you don't have,
1043
00:51:09,680 --> 00:51:13,080
and they can see things we can't see, so we thought,
1044
00:51:13,080 --> 00:51:14,480
"Let them go for it."
1045
00:51:14,480 --> 00:51:18,160
I think that the design that the architects came up with
1046
00:51:18,160 --> 00:51:22,520
made it easier to get through the council for consent.
1047
00:51:22,520 --> 00:51:24,280
Cos they're really strict, aren't they?
1048
00:51:24,280 --> 00:51:27,200
- They have preservation orders on all the trees.
- Pretty much.
- Very strict.
1049
00:51:27,200 --> 00:51:31,760
When the trees came out, we had to have our arborist on site,
1050
00:51:31,760 --> 00:51:34,880
the council had an arborist on site to make sure that
1051
00:51:34,880 --> 00:51:37,440
they took out exactly...just these four,
1052
00:51:37,440 --> 00:51:40,360
and that nothing else was damaged.
1053
00:51:40,360 --> 00:51:42,720
Once the trees had been carefully removed,
1054
00:51:42,720 --> 00:51:46,120
the house took 15 months to construct.
1055
00:51:46,120 --> 00:51:48,240
Gary acted as project manager,
1056
00:51:48,240 --> 00:51:52,560
keeping the workers on schedule and their budget on track.
1057
00:51:52,560 --> 00:51:54,760
- I was here every day.
- Worked alongside the builder.
1058
00:51:54,760 --> 00:51:57,760
- I was the catch-it and fetch-it man.
- Were you?
1059
00:51:57,760 --> 00:51:59,320
All the labouring work.
1060
00:51:59,320 --> 00:52:02,000
All the labouring stuff that the others didn't want to do!
1061
00:52:02,000 --> 00:52:04,320
So, do you know every inch of this building?
1062
00:52:04,320 --> 00:52:06,600
Every little bit of it. Yeah.
1063
00:52:06,600 --> 00:52:09,640
- Do you love the house?
- We do.
- Very much.
- Yeah.
1064
00:52:09,640 --> 00:52:14,080
How close to it is your dream house?
1065
00:52:14,080 --> 00:52:15,840
Oh, for me, I think it's there.
1066
00:52:15,840 --> 00:52:17,560
We're not looking for anything else.
1067
00:52:17,560 --> 00:52:19,280
Probably feet first out of here!
1068
00:52:19,280 --> 00:52:20,880
THEY LAUGH
1069
00:52:22,520 --> 00:52:26,080
Gary has told me that there is more to this place than meets the eye.
1070
00:52:26,080 --> 00:52:29,400
Apparently, there are some secret spaces to discover!
1071
00:52:31,160 --> 00:52:33,280
I don't know what this bit is.
1072
00:52:33,280 --> 00:52:35,000
It's like a sort of...
1073
00:52:35,000 --> 00:52:37,400
I don't know... Reading area, or...?
1074
00:52:37,400 --> 00:52:40,520
There's somewhere to lie down and sleep for the guests, or something,
1075
00:52:40,520 --> 00:52:43,720
down there. What it does give you is a brilliant view
1076
00:52:43,720 --> 00:52:45,360
of both sets of trees,
1077
00:52:45,360 --> 00:52:48,560
the real trees and the architectural trees,
1078
00:52:48,560 --> 00:52:50,360
which look wonderful from up here.
1079
00:52:50,360 --> 00:52:53,960
And it gives you a very, very nice view of Piers Taylor.
1080
00:52:53,960 --> 00:52:55,920
What do you think this is up here?
1081
00:52:55,920 --> 00:52:57,440
It's anything you want it to be.
1082
00:52:57,440 --> 00:52:58,720
And isn't that great?
1083
00:52:58,720 --> 00:53:01,920
Because rooms, you know, that's so 20th century,
1084
00:53:01,920 --> 00:53:03,560
so 19th century.
1085
00:53:03,560 --> 00:53:06,800
It's a beautiful space to do whatever you want, and, critically,
1086
00:53:06,800 --> 00:53:08,400
look at the trees.
1087
00:53:08,400 --> 00:53:11,680
Mmm, see, I'm going to translate for those of you at home that aren't architects,
1088
00:53:11,680 --> 00:53:14,320
It means, "It's a little corridor we didn't know what to do with."
1089
00:53:14,320 --> 00:53:16,720
PIERS LAUGHS It's a waste of space...
1090
00:53:16,720 --> 00:53:19,440
unlike anybody else here!
1091
00:53:19,440 --> 00:53:22,320
There's something kind of wonderful about the... Oops!
1092
00:53:22,320 --> 00:53:23,760
- Where have you gone?
- THEY LAUGH
1093
00:53:23,760 --> 00:53:26,520
- Are you still alive?
- I've just found...
1094
00:53:26,520 --> 00:53:27,960
I found a secret door!
1095
00:53:27,960 --> 00:53:29,680
SHE LAUGHS
1096
00:53:29,680 --> 00:53:32,480
And there's a bedroom behind me!
1097
00:53:32,480 --> 00:53:34,920
You're lucky you didn't fall down a big hole.
1098
00:53:34,920 --> 00:53:39,400
Mmm, it's a very, very nice bedroom.
1099
00:53:39,400 --> 00:53:41,280
Quite woody.
1100
00:53:41,280 --> 00:53:44,520
But very simple because it's not about being inside,
1101
00:53:44,520 --> 00:53:47,680
cos this place is all about the trees.
1102
00:53:53,120 --> 00:53:55,520
I can hear the sea,
1103
00:53:55,520 --> 00:53:57,800
I can smell the trees...
1104
00:53:59,560 --> 00:54:01,960
..and there's nothing there!
1105
00:54:01,960 --> 00:54:04,840
I think that's really brilliant.
1106
00:54:08,760 --> 00:54:12,000
Many people think of buildings in terms of what shape they are
1107
00:54:12,000 --> 00:54:13,480
and what colour they are,
1108
00:54:13,480 --> 00:54:17,080
but this house is so much about transparency and breaking down
1109
00:54:17,080 --> 00:54:18,920
the mass of the building.
1110
00:54:18,920 --> 00:54:21,880
If you cut a section through this house,
1111
00:54:21,880 --> 00:54:25,760
a solid bedroom block like this
1112
00:54:25,760 --> 00:54:28,920
and a series of decks that move up and down
1113
00:54:28,920 --> 00:54:31,360
to get you into the house, but in theory,
1114
00:54:31,360 --> 00:54:34,320
these bedroom pods would be a very big block,
1115
00:54:34,320 --> 00:54:36,720
so what this architect has cleverly done
1116
00:54:36,720 --> 00:54:39,440
is provide a solid roof there,
1117
00:54:39,440 --> 00:54:41,720
then a transparent roof,
1118
00:54:41,720 --> 00:54:44,920
and then he's held up that transparent roof
1119
00:54:44,920 --> 00:54:47,720
on the series of structural trees
1120
00:54:47,720 --> 00:54:50,320
that allow you to see
1121
00:54:50,320 --> 00:54:53,680
right the way through the house.
1122
00:54:53,680 --> 00:54:55,800
And I think what happens ultimately,
1123
00:54:55,800 --> 00:54:58,120
is that you forget the building's there
1124
00:54:58,120 --> 00:55:00,720
and you really feel like you're in the canopy.
1125
00:55:02,920 --> 00:55:06,080
To dig further into the challenges this house presented,
1126
00:55:06,080 --> 00:55:10,720
I'm meeting one half of the architect duo, Lance Herbst.
1127
00:55:10,720 --> 00:55:12,560
This is an extraordinary site.
1128
00:55:12,560 --> 00:55:15,120
Tell me what it was like for you first coming here?
1129
00:55:15,120 --> 00:55:17,000
So, coming to the site, was one of those things,
1130
00:55:17,000 --> 00:55:19,400
you looked at the site and it was essentially
1131
00:55:19,400 --> 00:55:22,560
99% covered in a mature pohutukawa forest
1132
00:55:22,560 --> 00:55:24,320
and you're first feeling is,
1133
00:55:24,320 --> 00:55:26,160
"We're never going to get a consent for this."
1134
00:55:26,160 --> 00:55:28,400
It was one of those that was so difficult
1135
00:55:28,400 --> 00:55:30,680
that we knew that the only way we knew we'd be able to
1136
00:55:30,680 --> 00:55:33,800
even get a consent was to come in with something very poetic.
1137
00:55:33,800 --> 00:55:36,520
And your first diagram for a building that nestled
1138
00:55:36,520 --> 00:55:39,960
- under these trees, what was that?
- It was trees.
1139
00:55:39,960 --> 00:55:41,520
Yeah. It was one of those.
1140
00:55:41,520 --> 00:55:43,840
It's an old... I mean, it's not a brand-new way of thinking.
1141
00:55:43,840 --> 00:55:46,160
Like, throughout the history of modernism,
1142
00:55:46,160 --> 00:55:48,720
there had been people who had tried to do buildings that are that,
1143
00:55:48,720 --> 00:55:52,360
kind of, reference to trees, so it literally was a case of,
1144
00:55:52,360 --> 00:55:54,800
"OK, we've got to have a go at this". And I mean, as you know,
1145
00:55:54,800 --> 00:55:56,920
as an architect, it's an incredibly...
1146
00:55:56,920 --> 00:55:59,680
It's tight rope you walk. It can go spectacularly wrong.
1147
00:56:02,240 --> 00:56:05,600
Building on this site involved sacrificing four ancient
1148
00:56:05,600 --> 00:56:07,320
pohutukawa trees,
1149
00:56:07,320 --> 00:56:10,720
and fuelled a passionate response from the architects.
1150
00:56:10,720 --> 00:56:13,000
We just felt that we needed to do something
1151
00:56:13,000 --> 00:56:16,120
that was a kind of... A memory of the trees that we had cut down.
1152
00:56:16,120 --> 00:56:18,680
So, we started using a number of metaphors
1153
00:56:18,680 --> 00:56:20,320
inside of that tree language.
1154
00:56:20,320 --> 00:56:23,280
You will notice, that even though these are very much tree structures,
1155
00:56:23,280 --> 00:56:25,560
they are also very geometrically rigorous.
1156
00:56:25,560 --> 00:56:28,920
It's an element which is neither man-made nor neither organic.
1157
00:56:28,920 --> 00:56:31,960
Because of course, when you try to mimic a tree, it looks ridiculous,
1158
00:56:31,960 --> 00:56:34,520
but here there is a tautness and a crispness.
1159
00:56:35,520 --> 00:56:38,880
The branches and trunks of these load-bearing structural trees
1160
00:56:38,880 --> 00:56:42,000
not only support the glass roof but also had to withstand
1161
00:56:42,000 --> 00:56:45,040
the rigours of the New Zealand's seismic terrain.
1162
00:56:45,040 --> 00:56:46,480
In New Zealand, we have a...
1163
00:56:46,480 --> 00:56:49,560
You know, it's a country of earthquakes. We have a seismic code,
1164
00:56:49,560 --> 00:56:53,080
so this structure needs to resist forces that actually aren't present
1165
00:56:53,080 --> 00:56:56,760
until they happen. So, structurally, there are massive, you know,
1166
00:56:56,760 --> 00:56:58,160
steel beams going through the roof
1167
00:56:58,160 --> 00:57:00,560
and tying back, and tying back, into that roof
1168
00:57:00,560 --> 00:57:05,000
to give the building resistance in the event of an earthquake.
1169
00:57:05,000 --> 00:57:08,400
Architects design and build a lot of buildings in their careers,
1170
00:57:08,400 --> 00:57:10,360
but only a few are really special.
1171
00:57:10,360 --> 00:57:12,800
Tell me whether this building is one of those for you?
1172
00:57:12,800 --> 00:57:14,680
- Oh, yes.
- HE LAUGHS
1173
00:57:14,680 --> 00:57:16,160
Yeah, this one will be hard to beat.
1174
00:57:16,160 --> 00:57:18,560
It was one of those moments where everything came together.
1175
00:57:18,560 --> 00:57:20,880
You know Gary and Sherry aren't clients, they're patrons,
1176
00:57:20,880 --> 00:57:23,640
and it's a completely different approach that someone takes
1177
00:57:23,640 --> 00:57:26,160
when they set about to make a building that is a piece of art,
1178
00:57:26,160 --> 00:57:28,160
compared to making shelter.
1179
00:57:30,640 --> 00:57:34,360
When we arrived, just being here amongst these trees,
1180
00:57:34,360 --> 00:57:36,720
I knew it was going to be special, but I don't think I realised
1181
00:57:36,720 --> 00:57:38,720
quite how special it was going to be.
1182
00:57:38,720 --> 00:57:41,760
A building like this happens maybe three or four times
1183
00:57:41,760 --> 00:57:43,240
in an architect's career,
1184
00:57:43,240 --> 00:57:46,040
and this reminds me of why I became an architect.
1185
00:57:46,040 --> 00:57:49,920
You're always looking for this opportunity, that is so rare,
1186
00:57:49,920 --> 00:57:53,720
when everything comes together - perfect site, perfect client,
1187
00:57:53,720 --> 00:57:54,960
perfect brief.
1188
00:57:54,960 --> 00:57:57,240
It's perfection in the pohutukawas.
1189
00:58:01,120 --> 00:58:04,280
'Next time, Piers and I will be exploring some of the most
1190
00:58:04,280 --> 00:58:07,360
'extraordinary coastal homes in the world...'
1191
00:58:07,360 --> 00:58:09,720
Oh! It's so beautiful!
1192
00:58:09,720 --> 00:58:13,200
'..to discover how architects have overcome the challenges of building
1193
00:58:13,200 --> 00:58:15,480
'incredible homes by the water.'
1194
00:58:15,480 --> 00:58:19,440
This is the pile that's stopping the whole house tipping into the sea.
96397
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