Showing 10 items
matching the walls around us
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Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1982
... The Walls Around Us... of the book Softcover The Walls Around Us Book Robin Boyd Angus ...SoftcoverLetter inside front cover dated 7 October 1982 from Mary Coleman to "Mrs Boyd" enclosing and advance copy of the bookwalsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1982
... The Walls Around Us... melbourne Walsh St library Softcover The Walls Around Us Book Robin ...Softcoverwalsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1962
... The Walls Around Us... Around Us Book Robin Boyd F.W. Cheshire ...Hardcover with Dust JacketRBF Acquisitionaustralian architecture, domestic architecture, walsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1982
... The Walls Around Us... melbourne Walsh St library Softcover The Walls Around Us Book Robin ...Softcoverwalsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1982
... The Walls Around Us... melbourne Walsh St library Softcover The Walls Around Us Book Robin ...Softcoverwalsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Book, Robin Boyd, The Walls Around Us, 1982
... The Walls Around Us... melbourne Walsh St library Softcover The Walls Around Us Book Robin ...Softcoverwalsh st library -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Newspaper, Guide To Appreciation Of Architecture, 05.01.1963
... The Walls Around Us... Around Us".... Around Us". The Walls Around Us Photocopy, thick paper very ...The article is a review of Robin Boyd's book "The Walls Around Us".Photocopy, thick paper very discolouredthe walls around us -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Letter, F.W. Cheshire Pty Ltd, A Fabinyi (F W Cheshire) to Robin Boyd, 07.01.1963
... of "The Walls Around Us" and other articles which reference... of "The Walls Around Us" and other articles which reference ...This letter from A. Fabinyi contains copies of a review of "The Walls Around Us" and other articles which reference "The Australian Ugliness" and Robin Boyd. FW Cheshire are the publishers of "The Australian Ugliness" and "The Walls Around Us". -
Robin Boyd Foundation
Article, Japan Interior Design, An Architect's House in Melbourne, Australia. Architect: Robin Boyd, Feb-62
... of Australian architecture, The Walls Around Us, as well as a book... of Australian architecture, The Walls Around Us, as well as a book ...This Japanese journal features a photographic article on Boyd's Walsh Street home. It was written by a Japanese architecture student who visited Walsh Street with a group of 6 such students in 1961. A translation of the text follows. ________________________________________________________ "An Architect’s House in Melbourne, Australia Author: Tamon Okubo This house was built by architect Robin Boyd as an experimental work. Although in a residential area of Melbourne, the site is a 40 x 126 ft rectangle in a corner of a former park with high rise buildings on either side. Due to its location, the design focuses on protecting the privacy of the house from the outside and on the composition of the interior space, creating a somehow introverted plan. However, the interior is not completely closed from the outside; it is cleverly designed to provide both views of the rooves of nearby houses as well as the mountains in the distance. Firstly, the couple’s room and the children’s rooms are in separate buildings. These two independent structures are connected by a courtyard. The ceiling of the courtyard is partly open, so one can look out from the second-floor terrace of the couple’s room. The walls on both sides of the courtyard are of opaque glass to ensure privacy from outside. In both buildings brick walls with three-inch steel pipe inserted into the brick cavities form the structure and separate each room. The roof is connected to pairs of 3/4-inch thick cables, spaced four feet apart, attached to the brick walls of both buildings and supported by wooden posts that separate the glass panels in the rooms. The cables are not tightly strung together but are loosely suspended from the front structure, where the entrance is, to the rear one. The upper cable in the courtyard is covered with vine. The materials used are insulation board for the roof, raw timber for the structural materials, native jarrah for the timber sections of the interior walls and white eucalyptus for the joints. Robin Boyd – A Brief Personal History 1919 Born in Melbourne, Australia 1947 As an architect, was the first director of the Small Homes Service, a public housing research institute established to provide homes for needy Australians. 1960 Wins the American Institute Architects Prize (the Japanese architect, Kenzo Tange, was awarded the same prize in 1959). In the same year he was elected an honorary member of the Institute. Mr Robin Boyd is currently writing a book on the history of Australian architecture, The Walls Around Us, as well as a book on Kenzo Tange. He is a frequent visitor to Japan to exchange ideas with Japanese architects and is quite a Japanophile. " This is a photocopy of the article from Japan Interior Design No 17. Pages 4-5 are glued together, and pages 6-7 are glued together, p8 p9, p10 are separate. There is writing on it (not Robin Boyd's hand). Geoffrey Serle, Robin Boyd's biographer, may have given it to Patricia Boyd.walsh st library -
Eltham District Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Digital Photograph, Jim Connor, River Bend House, 130 Laughing Waters Road, Eltham, 7 September 2013
Laughing Waters Walk, 7 Sep 2013 This Society excursion was a follow up to the Laughing Waters Story told to us by Jane Woollard at our Annual General Meeting in March 2013. It involved a walk commencing from the corner of Laughing Waters and Overbank Roads along Laughing Waters Road to its eastern end and returning partly over the same route - a total distance of about 2.5km. On the way we visited the two artist in residence properties, River Bend and Birrarung, to view the houses on them that are associated with Alistair Knox, Gordon Ford and others in the local mud brick and artistic community. We also able to walk around the derelict ruin which was once home to Gordon and Sue Ford, Boomerang House. An unexpected afternoon tea was offered to us by the artists in residence at Birrarung House and we had a brief opportunity to view inside the house. River Bend was designed and built by Alistair Knox for Rosemary and Bill Cuming in 1968. It sits in a deep cutting on a steep slope above the Yarra River and features floor to ceiling windows and glass doors set into mission brown timber frames and walls of reclaimed bricks in pinkish hue. Rosemary laid the brick paving around the house, a copy of the shell paving found in the ancient French town of Colmar, where the family had lived for a period. The kitchen was equipped with a 1960s stove as well as a cast iron wood stove reclaimed from Rosemary's sister's home in Armadale. Max and Tini Huygens, migrants from Holland, purchased the property in 1975 and named it Tilwinda from an Aboriginal word meaning 'hole in a rock'. In late 1981 Tini died after a short illness, but Max continued to live at Tilwinda until he moved to a retirement village in 2000 and the property was sold to Parks Victoria. Renamed River Bend, the property became part of the Laughing Waters Artist in Residency Program in 2008. Nillumbik Shire Council upgraded the property in 2012 with solar panels, a heat pump for hot water and double glazing to improve the comfort of the artists in residence and make the house more energy efficient. For a more in-depth description of the property and biographies of the various artists in residence commencing from 2008 to 2015, see Jane Woollard's book, "Laughing Waters Road; Art, Landscape & Memory in Eltham" published 2016.2013-09-07, activities, artists in residence, eltham district historical society, heritage excursion, jim connor collection, laughing waters road, river bend house