McGonigle McGrath Architects wins 2024 RSUA Award for Longhurst, which can comfortably ‘sit within the canon of significant modern houses’
2024 RSUA Award
Longhurst, Belfast, Antrim
McGonigle McGrath Architects for private client
Contract value: Confidential
GIA: 443m2
Longhurst is a substantial new villa in a residential area on the southern outskirts of Belfast. In contrast to its more traditionally designed neighbours, which stand assertively and distantly at the centre of their large plots, Longhurst is a fine exploration of a modern house that is generated by and responds to the topography and orientation of the site. The architect has skilfully orchestrated a beautiful unfolding sequence of spaces that begin with a modestly scaled, almost Japanese entry courtyard, then carefully step down the slope finally opening out to expansive living spaces, terraces and lawns to the south. The design hides the villa’s scale from external gaze, presenting an almost mute expression to the access lane, while the glazed, garden-facing south elevation reveals its sheer generosity. The quality of detail, materials and construction is exemplary. This is clearly a house for relaxation and entertaining friends on a grand scale.
The villa secretes itself within what was once the Longhurst Estate – a mature parkland landscape that was parcelled up into large plots. While the surrounding, very large, quasi traditional villas stand as far from the service lanes and their neighbours as possible, McGonigle McGrath Architects has located its villa to the north of its site, engaging directly with both the lane and the sloping topography. This radical difference in approach to site is further and emphatically emphasised through a very different architectural expression.
Longhurst’s architecture is urbane, courteous, and contemporary. Still, it carries an almost nostalgic air, alluding to a time long gone. There is perhaps a ghost of Ludwig Mies van Der Rohe’s design for the Villa Tugendhat (built in 1930 in the Czech city of Brno) in its horizontality and how it steps down the hill from the modest entrance to the glazed elevations overlooking the gardens. In contrast to that house, which appears lightweight through its material abstraction, Longhurst is characterised by a sense of weight and materiality through its in-situ concrete, dark timber, and smooth render. There is no doubt that Longhurst can sit within the canon of significant modern houses.
An exquisite architectural promenade flows from the discreet entrance into the small, landscaped courtyard. A compressed series of circulation spaces weave down the hill, animated and marked by vertical light shafts and the occasional glimpse through the plan. The house is carefully zoned to afford privacy to guest accommodation and family accommodation.
The architect is known for the precision and care with which it details and makes its buildings, and Longhurst is no exception. However, what this villa also reveals is a sophistication of designing in plan and section that is rare.
See the rest of the RIBA RSUA Northern Ireland here. And all the RIBA Regional Awards here
To see the whole RIBA Awards process visit architecture.com
RIBA Regional Awards 2024 sponsored by EH Smith and Autodesk
Credits
Contractor Annvale Construction
Structural engineer McAuley and Browne
Quantity surveyor/cost consultant David Gould Associates