LAWN PAVILION

TYPE

LOCATION

STATUS

CLIENT

SITE AREA

FLOOR AREA

TEAM

Residential Addition

Rossmoyne, Western Australia

Unbuilt

Private

809m²

62m2 addition

Craig Nener

Ardalan Bateman

A pavilion on the front lawn contains a master suite addition designed for ageing in place.

Rossmoyne, WA

Creekview Courtyard is a new master suite wing addition designed as a private, long-term retreat—allowing the client to age in place while their adult children visit and occupy the main house.

Separated from the existing residence, the new wing is connected via a bridge-like sitting room that overlooks a birch-lined garden, softened by prairie-style planting. This vegetated buffer creates visual and acoustic separation between the generations while maintaining connection.

The addition contains a self-contained master suite with its own kitchenette, sitting area, study, ensuite, WIR, and bedroom. All rooms are connected by a linear enfilade corridor, anchored by a continuous bay window with a deep bench seat—offering rest points throughout and drawing natural light into the home’s core.

Subtle age-in-place features are embedded throughout: a continuous grab rail from the bathroom to the robe, generous doorways, and flexible living zones that prioritise ease of use and comfort.

At the courtyard’s apex, two stacker doors meet at an acute corner—fully retracting to dissolve the threshold between inside and out, and expanding the compact footprint into the landscape.

Creekview Courtyard is a quietly ambitious project—part architecture, part garden, wholly considered for the years ahead.

TYPE

LOCATION

STATUS

CLIENT

SITE AREA

FLOOR AREA

COLLABORATORS

Residential Addition

Rossmoyne, Western Australia

Unbuilt

Private

809m²

62m2 addition

Ardalan Bateman

A pavilion on the front lawn contains a master suite addition designed for ageing in place.

Creekview Courtyard is a new master suite wing addition designed as a private, long-term retreat—allowing the client to age in place while their adult children visit and occupy the main house.

Separated from the existing residence, the new wing is connected via a bridge-like sitting room that overlooks a birch-lined garden, softened by prairie-style planting. This vegetated buffer creates visual and acoustic separation between the generations while maintaining connection.

The addition contains a self-contained master suite with its own kitchenette, sitting area, study, ensuite, WIR, and bedroom. All rooms are connected by a linear enfilade corridor, anchored by a continuous bay window with a deep bench seat—offering rest points throughout and drawing natural light into the home’s core.

Subtle age-in-place features are embedded throughout: a continuous grab rail from the bathroom to the robe, generous doorways, and flexible living zones that prioritise ease of use and comfort.

At the courtyard’s apex, two stacker doors meet at an acute corner—fully retracting to dissolve the threshold between inside and out, and expanding the compact footprint into the landscape.

Creekview Courtyard is a quietly ambitious project—part architecture, part garden, wholly considered for the years ahead.