Pt Leo Estate rises from the ground as an abstract architectural gesture that brings together built form, wine, sculpture, land and sea.
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Builder . LBA Construction Group
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Photography . Lucas Allen
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Videography . Lucas Allen
Located on the pristine Mornington Peninsula, Pt Leo Estate emerges from an ambitious, years-long shared vision to merge food, wine, and sculpture with the rare beauty of Victoria’s rugged coastline on the site of an established vineyard.
Contextually framed by the dramatic rural property, the forecourt’s sweeping, generous geometric planes evoke the wide, open spaces of the regional Australian landscape and pay homeage to the curvature of a specially commissioned Inge King sculpture situated at its centre. Proving an organic counterpoint, an asymmetrically placed mature Bottle tree forms a lone piece of landscape among the expansive brushed concrete driveway.
In the entrance forecourt, the Inge King sculpture and mature Bottle tree offer a man-made and living sculptural response to the architectural form of the building.
Guiding sightlines towards the building and the surrounding views, a simple curved concrete ribbon appears to rise from the ground.
Itself a sculptural response, the waved concrete form of the building and contemporary entrance forecourt creates an abstract representation of wine pouring from a bottle. Responding to the curved forecourt, the interior entry, cellar door and restaurant are arranged on a radial plan and celebrate a dynamic day-to-night transition. Throughout the day, the angle and orientation of the roof allows sunlight to filter gently into the building from the north while capturing long-ranging vistas of the vineyard and coastline towards the south.
In the evening, large steel light beams evoke the bracing of a wine barrel emit a simple glow and craft a more intimate sense of scale. A refined of material palette of oak panels and steel emphasise the central wine barrel theme, simultaneously adding warmth and acoustic absorption for an accessible, human-centred experience of space.
“An ambitious project, Pt Leo Estate was founded on a simple concept: give people an opportunity to experience the beauty of the Mornington Peninsula in a rare and spectacular setting.”
Stephen Jolson
The sculpture park wraps around the built form, an intermediary in the view between the architecture, vineyard or ocean. Home to Australia’s largest collection of privately owned sculptures, the park follows a meandering pedestrian path through the property that equally celebrates the artists and the natural beautify of the property.
A highly contextual design, Pt Leo Estate transgresses the line between architecture and landscape.
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