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Boxing clever with garage conversion
The Irish Times Date Published, July 13, 2000
By Jim Cusack
One of this year's unusual RIAI awards is recognition of
the application of the architect's skill to what is probably
Ireland's most commonplace building job - the garage conversion.
The award was given to the relatively new practice, Box Architects,
for its serenely beautiful work on Carol and Oliver Whelan's
garage at their home in Dún Laoghaire.
Thousands of garages are "converted" to play rooms or extra
bedrooms annually. And, in their citation for the conversion,
the RIAI judges said: "Garage conversions are probably the
most common of all domestic extensions. In most instances
the design solution ranges from a simple match of the existing
house to plain appalling. This solution is entirely different."
The judges applauded the conversion's enhancement of the
living space, allowing it to "flow freely" from the interior
to the garden through clever use of a glazed door and screen.
It was a conversion, that "breaks the boundaries".
Gary Mongey and Dave Dwyer, the partners in Box, said that
their intention in the scheme was driven by the client's desire
for additional living space and to make a physical link with
the external environment. They set out to achieve this by
creating an "inside/outside" space by projecting the horizontal
plane to an exterior wooden deck. "It is about light and the
movement of light."
They also pointed out that with ever increasing rise in
the price of houses, more and more people were extending rather
than trading up, and the application of good architecture
standards to conversions and extensions gave people a better
quality of living space rather than a mere add-on.
Part of the achievement of "inside/outside" space literally
hinges on the large pivotal glazed door that leads from the
garage on to the decking and garden.
The RIAI award is the second prestigious prize for Box's
garage conversion. Last September, it won the Opus Building
of the Year at Plan Expo in the RDS.
Then, Ciaran O'Connor, chairman of the judging panel and
senior architect of the Office of Public Works said: "It was
uplifting to see the creative effort expended by the architects
in tackling the normally mundane brief of low-cost garage
conversion with intelligence, ingenuity and innovation."
Mr. O'Connor described the work as an example of where "architectural
skill transcends pure utility to give a caring client with
a limited budget a memorable space".
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