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Location

Dove Lake, Tasmania

Client

Tasmania Parks & Wildlife Service

Year

2022

Images

Anjie Blair

Land of

Big River Nation

Team

Peter Walker

Luke Waldron

Edwina Brisbane

Liz Walsh

Andrew Grimsdale

Rosella Sciurti

Jason Licht

Chi Chee Goh

+

Big River Nation

VOS 

Playstreet

Futago

ERA Planning & Environment

Aldanmark

COVA 

pitt&sherry

Green Building Surveying

Stantec 

NVC Acoustics

WT Partnership 

Kojin Engineering

Michael Small Consulting 

Aware365

Dove Lake Viewing Shelter

A shelter on the shores of a glacial lake in Tasmania curates an uninterrupted visitor connection to the landscape.

Built within the footprint of a former car park in the Tasmanian Wilderness World Heritage Area, the new Dove Lake Viewing Shelter draws on the tones, textures, and history of its immediate context to become a part of a unique natural and cultural landscape. The design balances the primary function of a shelter, a haven for visitors to a remote region notorious for its ever changing weather, with that of an experience — a space that gives pause, one that mediates the external environment for visitors instead of removing them from it.

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Enveloped by the landscape 

Dove Lake Viewing Shelter’s scored exterior creates a rhythmic pattern echoing Cradle Valley's geological characteristics while also promoting the growth of lichen over the concrete structure in the years to come. Robust materials and finishes were chosen to withstand extreme weather conditions, high volumes of visitors, and provide an enduring space that required minimal maintenance and energy consumption.

 

Sited carefully to conceal Dove Lake on approach to build a sense of anticipation for visitors, the footprint of the shelter is considerably less than the original car park which occupied the site. Endemic plant species, propagated from the surrounding environment, have been used to rehabilitate previously disturbed areas that are now given back to the delicate landscape.

A gallery framing a unique setting

Conceived as a series of connected cave-like chambers, the minimally-lit interiors draw visitors through a sequence of unadorned corridors and strategically-placed windows. These initially offer only glimpses of the landscape before dramatically revealing wide views of the lake and mountain in the main viewing chambers.

 

Deliberately void of decoration and modern comforts, the exposed interiors focus the visitor’s attention, slows their movement, and increases their awareness of their own impact on the surroundings. Light appears through ‘cracks’ at junctions between floor and walls, allowing the weather conditions to dictate the interior’s mood and visual tone.

A collaborative design connected to Country and Culture

The building is a chapel in which to contemplate the beauty of the natural landscape, its vast scale and magnitude of time over which it has formed. Etched distinctly on one of the courtyard-facing walls are the words ‘Always Was…Always Will Be’, acknowledging Australia's indigenous past and the Tasmanian Aboriginal community’s continued connection to the area. 

 

Designed in collaboration with Tasmania Parks & Wildlife Service, the local community, and members of the Big River Nation, the Dove Lake Viewing Shelter was built to provide an accessible visitor experience to one of Tasmania’s most valued natural destinations.

DOVE LAKE VIEWING SHELTER

Stripped-back Georgian heritage and specialist stonemasonry.

A sympathetic restoration shaped by modern tastes.

Contrast and balance, tradition and modernity. Just what a family home needs. We responded to Symmons Plains’ significance in Tasmania’s history while curating a contemporary home for the new custodians - a family of seven.

We aimed to reveal the richness of the stories that came before. Colonist John Arndell Youl built Symmons Plains in 1839 with a structure crafted using early Australian settlement techniques. Youl famously introduced the brown trout to Australia. His family lived at Symmons for seven generations until it was bought in 2011. When we demolished the building’s original concrete, it revealed an eclectic mix of bed springs and old fencing added for reinforcement; a history of its own. It felt exciting to arrive at an answer for open, contemporary living within a building essentially the antithesis of that.

2020

Tasmanian Architecture Awards

Colorbond Steel Architecture - Commendation

2020

Tasmanian Architecture Awards

Residential Architecture

Location

Dove Lake, Tasmania

Client

Tasmania Parks & Wildlife Service

Year

2022

Images

Anjie Blair

Land of

Big River Nation

Team

Peter Walker

Luke Waldron

Edwina Brisbane

Liz Walsh

Andrew Grimsdale

Rosella Sciurti

Jason Licht

Chi Chee Goh

+

Big River Nation

VOS 

Playstreet

Futago

ERA Planning & Environment

Aldanmark

COVA 

pitt&sherry

Green Building Surveying

Stantec 

NVC Acoustics

WT Partnership 

Kojin Engineering

Michael Small Consulting 

Aware365

Enveloped by the landscape

Dove Lake Viewing Shelter’s scored exterior creates a rhythmic pattern echoing Cradle Valley's geological characteristics while also promoting the growth of lichen over the concrete structure in the years to come. Robust materials and finishes were chosen to withstand extreme weather conditions, high volumes of visitors, and provide an enduring space that required minimal maintenance and energy consumption.

 

Sited carefully to conceal Dove Lake on approach to build a sense of anticipation for visitors, the footprint of the shelter is considerably less than the original car park which occupied the site. Endemic plant species, propagated from the surrounding environment, have been used to rehabilitate previously disturbed areas that are now given back to the delicate landscape.

A gallery framing a unique setting

Conceived as a series of connected cave-like chambers, the minimally-lit interiors draw visitors through a sequence of unadorned corridors and strategically-placed windows. These initially offer only glimpses of the landscape before dramatically revealing wide views of the lake and mountain in the main viewing chambers.

 

Deliberately void of decoration and modern comforts, the exposed interiors focus the visitor’s attention, slows their movement, and increases their awareness of their own impact on the surroundings. Light appears through ‘cracks’ at junctions between floor and walls, allowing the weather conditions to dictate the interior’s mood and visual tone.

A collaborative design connected to Country and culture

The building is a chapel in which to contemplate the beauty of the natural landscape, its vast scale and magnitude of time over which it has formed. Etched distinctly on one of the courtyard-facing walls are the words ‘Always Was…Always Will Be’, acknowledging Australia's indigenous past and the Tasmanian Aboriginal community’s continued connection to the area. 

 

Designed in collaboration with Tasmania Parks & Wildlife Service, the local community, and members of the Big River Nation, the Dove Lake Viewing Shelter was built to provide an accessible visitor experience to one of Tasmania’s most valued natural destinations.

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