The Great Compression
In Auckland, New Zealand, architect Michael O’Sullivan and his partner Melissa Schollum braved a miniscule budget, withering looks from friends, and nasty nail-gun injuries to design and build their perfectly proportioned family home.
One of the most effective ways to make a small home feel larger is to live in an even smaller one first—something architect Michael O’Sullivan and his partner Melissa Schollum experienced firsthand. The house O’Sullivan designed and built for himself, Schollum, and their three young children in Auckland, New Zealand, has just two bedrooms and is a modest 1,200 square feet. This, however, is positively luxurious compared to their previous accommodations, a 450-square-foot former classroom they purchased, moved onto their property, and lived in for almost two years while their new home was built beside it.
The old classroom, which was sold and moved off the property after the new house was completed, could only be described as constricted. O’Sullivan and Schollum’s sons Seamus, then just a year old, and Finbar, then a newborn, slept in cribs squeezed side-by-side in a communal sleeping area separated from the small kitchen, dining, and living space by a curtain. When O’Sullivan’s 10-year-old son Remana would come to stay, the only available place for him to sleep was under the dining table. “People would visit and look at us in disgust, as if they were thinking, How could you do this to your kids?” O’Sullivan remembers.
Those friends don’t look disgusted when they visit nowadays. O’Sullivan and Schollum’s new home may be compact in size, but it is also a light-filled, inventive, one-of-a-kind abode that elicits equal amounts of admiration and envy—especially when it is revealed that, thanks to a lot of free labor from O’Sullivan and the couple’s helpful neighbors, the house cost just over $100,000 to build. And after all that time in the tiny former classroom, the new home feels much bigger than they dared to expect. “The inherent fear for most architects is designing a house that’s too small and too confining,” O’Sullivan says. “We didn’t worry about that because we had already lived in a small place for so long.”
In the suburb on the mountain’s lower slopes, Michael O’Sullivan and his sons Seamus and Finbar exchange motorcycle tips outside the compact, innovative home O’Sullivan designed.
Even so, you can see why people thought they might be crazy. O’Sullivan was determined to build the house himself, but because Schollum, a former travel consultant, was busy taking care of the children, he also needed to keep working at his architecture firm, Bull/O’Sullivan Architecture, to ensure the family had an income to pay for their new place. This required the adoption of an exhausting new routine: O’Sullivan would go to the office around 5 o’clock each morning and return home in the afternoon to work on the house until sundown, all the while trying to keep to their almost-impossible budget.
There was another major complication: Despite being handy, O’Sullivan had never actually built a house. He quickly discovered his aspirations outstripped his abilities, as he spent hours puzzling over how to make things work. His lack of prowess with an automatic nail gun meant he once shot a nail through a copper water pipe, causing a leak that a plumber had to be called in to repair. More seriously, on another occasion he accidentally shot a nail into his hand, resulting in a wound that required stitches at the local hospital. The upside to these difficulties was that they gained the attention of neighbors, who offered to lend a hand. After this, O’Sullivan had help from at least a few of them almost every evening. Even better, some of them had actual building experience.
The house is in a harborside suburb on the flanks of Mangere Mountain, one of the most beautiful of the more than 40 dormant volcanic cones that punctuate the Auckland isthmus. The summit’s 360-degree views of the Manukau Harbour and surrounding landforms made it a site of great strategic importance to early Maori tribes. It is also an area whose proximity to some of the city’s less affluent suburbs means property there is still relatively affordable. Most of the neighborhood is made up of one-story weatherboard homes built in the 1940s and ’50s; O’Sullivan and Schollum’s subdivided site, which had no existing house on it, includes a driveway shared with neighbors and features a diverse range of mature trees, including a large American oak beside the street, mauve-flowered Australian jacarandas on the southern boundary, and a handful of ti kouka, the slender New Zealand natives also known as cabbage trees.
Melissa Schollum stands at the brass island bench in the kitchen. O’Sullivan, who designed and built the house, spent many hours creating the wooden joinery (including the tall, slender windows and their timber shutters) and the intricate ceiling. The cupboards under the marble bench in the kitchen are made of glass to allow more light into the space. The dining table and chairs were designed by Sam Haughton of IMO.
O’Sullivan developed his design while closely observing the way the sun played across the site in different seasons. He began by building a series of cardboard models, eventually deciding to locate the house close to its southern boundary with its living areas facing north and west (which, in the southern hemisphere, is the correct orientation for optimum solar gain). The home’s living pavilion is nearest the street, its mono-pitch roof angling upward to pull late-afternoon sun through tall, slender windows. On the west, it opens to a deck shaded by the oak, while on the east, a larger deck features an outdoor dining area and a lockable gate to prevent the kids straying onto the driveway. Auckland’s temperate climate means both these outdoor spaces are usable all year. The laundry, bedrooms, and bathroom are arranged in linear fashion off a corridor along the back of the eastern deck.
After years of dreaming up everything from small house renovations to large office buildings for other people, O’Sullivan found an exhilarating freedom in designing and building his own home. “I was forever changing my mind on things—new opportunities to experiment were always coming into my head,” he says. The home’s northern face is clad in a modular aluminum weatherboard system O’Sullivan designed himself, while its southern side is coated in an easily applied glass-reinforced bituminous membrane normally used on roofs. He spent many hours designing and fabricating the kitchen’s cedar shutters and timber joinery, as well as the living pavilion’s intricate cedar weatherboard ceiling, which has triangular holes for recessed low-energy lightbulbs.
Four-year-old Seamus relaxes in the living room, whose plywood walls are covered with family photographs.
These labor-intensive touches mean the house packs a much bigger punch than its budget would otherwise have allowed. It also meant O’Sullivan and Schollum had enough cash for strategic splurges on materials that further enliven the home. In the kitchen, O’Sullivan created an island with ethereal brass cladding. The bathroom is lined not in the plywood that covers the rest of the house but in vivid green marble. Instead of interior doors, they opted for heavy velvet curtains. “We knew from our experience in our old place that curtains were sufficient for separation,” O’Sullivan says. “We felt doors would unnecessarily truncate the spaces.”
The end result is a place that transcends its bare-bones budget, making it hard to imagine a home more perfect for this site and this family. “Maybe because we had put so much into it, it instantly felt like home,” Schollum says. O’Sullivan, too, experienced an immediate sense of satisfaction. “It felt sensational as soon as we moved in,” he says. “I still come home early so I can watch the sun move through the space.” The house has since won a clutch of architecture awards, but perhaps the most ringing endorsement has come from the couple’s daughter, Mary, born two weeks after they moved into the house in September 2008. The unusually happy child almost always sports a smile, which her parents like to think of as her wordless way of expressing approval for the home they built just in time for her arrival.
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wow. this is a depressing kids room.
I agree. I like a simple de-cluttered look, but this is just too stark for a kids' room. Maybe they're going for "modernist Amish"? :-)
I think this is great. So fresh, natural, light and simple. It's very inspiring. I wish there was more of a market like this in America.
Right On! The self-built $100K house! Now that's progress! Shelbie, Taj, (comments above) Ask the kids if they are depressed with their room (I'm thinking they love it).
It actually says that the boy is in the living room.
Yeahhhh New Zealand Represent!
In the kids' room, that shot only shows the bunks - the other side of the room, which isn't in the slideshow, is full of colourful toys and shelves with books and pictures on the walls. So it doesn't feel like a penitentiary when you're there Just so you know!
What a beautiful array of light into a small area and the appearance of open space. Thanks for letting the old guy next door, he's my dad.
Hi Lovena, Thank you for your kind words. I could not have had built this without your dad. He helped me every evening, weekend and spare moment. He was there to tell me to stop at 11pm, there during the depths of winter making the windows in the dark, there to suggest the simplest ideas when I couldn't see the wood for the forest. He is great. I look forward to meeting you all one day soon. Lots of love Michael, Melissa, Remana, Seamus, Finbar and Mary.
This O'Sullivan character is clearly a genius. I for one will be recommending him for a Nobel Prize.
Well done, very airy and bright. What make and model of refrigerator is that
Have owned a 120 by 55 foot site in Northwest Indiana (Miller Beach) for several years and I too have changed my mind a thousand times regarding what type of home to build. But I absolutely love this! Particularly the sublte flow of the outdoor/indoor spaces. Curious regarding the size of the lot. Congratulations!
The floor plan is very similar to a Usonian, like the Jacob's House, built in the 30's. Excellent design. It's a pavilion house!
I love the brass kitchen island. Was this custom built or purchased? Like the marble in the bathroom, it seems like an expensive choice to add a little luxury to an otherwise very economical house. Great individuality in this home.
Hi Pat, Its a Fisher and Paykel fridge from New Zealand with an Iridium finish.
Hi Melvin, our site is the same as Miller beach, send me an email if you want to Michael@bosarchitecture.co.nz
Hi Modernist in Ireland, I had a Stainless steel fabricator weld the brass island up for me. Thanks for you kind words. Whats it like being a modernist in Ireland?
Congratualtions cousie. Your a star.
I am so proud of you both, nephew mine. It looks lovely on this site. Great publicity for you and you deserve it. with love Kath PS I could not see the kid's room, I reckon someone boo booed.
I am lucky enough to know this family and have been to their home many times (and enjoyed way too much wine). I can truly say there is nothing depressing about it! Awesome article Michael, well done.
You guys are inspirational... building that with $100k in Auckland is amazing! I really like the cladding... how did you make it? Fantastic website design too by the way!
Hi Sean, Thank you for your kind words, The aluminium weatherboard is on I had designed called the Ullos board. I can email you a drawing if you wish.
Hi Michael, the more I see of your beautifully crafted home the more I feel deeply inspired about my own architectural journey in New Zealand. Your work, words and wisdom have always inspired me to do the best work I can. What an inspiration to see this kind of project in Auckland. Still a true builder at heart. Looking forward to visiting. Kindest regards, Jules and Family.
inspirational
i like it very much. it is a wonderful example of good use of space and light, and i agree that the flow from inside to outside works nicely. if some think the children's room is small or "depressing", follow the above suggestion and try to see it from THEIR perspective. looks to me like THE perfect space for boys... just over 100K is PERFECT. i hope y'all spend many happy years here. i just scanned the article but didn't see mention of lot size or acreage? perhaps, if your have enough land, you may expand as your family grows up?
Michael, Your home is beautiful & inspirational...a testament to our profession that "building your own designs" has a great impact on what gets made. May your family truly enjoy their creation. It inspires this architect to do the same. Keep those kinds of ideas going in your future work. Pacific NW architect.
small(ish) house made big by clever use of outside space. i like the indoor/outdoor balance.
Props to you fellas! This home is magical. Lovely to see Inn Zidd represented so well here.
I must say, this is one of my favorite houses I've seen in years. The entire plan behind living in the house is brilliant. Kudos. However, You're website has got to be on of the most annoying websites I've been on. As a web designer myself, it's extremely painful to simply peruse photos. I've enjoyed the additional photos of your house but it's just so darn skippy.
Hi Peter, Thank you for your kind words on our home, and thoughts on our website. Do you suggest we have more words on the website? feel free to email me. Michael@bosarchitecture.co.nz Regards Michael
What a inspirational build! The children's bedroom is wonderful (and not at all depressing) and as a child who once enjoyed bunk beds, I can attest to the adventure they bring. You have a done a beautiful job, congratulations. One question, what happens when the children get older or if your family gets bigger, is there room to extend for another bedroom and bathroom?
Thank you Irish Dwell fanatic, When the family gets bigger we will need to re think, The joy of building your own home is worthy of doing it again. What part of Ireland do you dwell from? Regards Michael
Michael, I think your house is amazing! I am in the process of starting a family and looking for a house at the moment (I am in Toronto, Canada) and is looking to find a place and totally remodel it into a very eco-friendly and modern space. My fiance and I are both quite young therefore do not have a huge amount of resources in terms of Money. I was worried that I would have to settle for something that I don't want and don't believe in, but this is quite inspirational to me. Nobody says that nice design and functionality has to cost a fortune!
Hi Judy, Thank you for your words, drop me an email on Michael@bosarchitecture.co.nz if you want. Good luck with the house hunting. Regards Michael
$100k my eye, the kitchen island and bathroom finish materials alone could cost half that alone.
I agree! 100k as a budget... no way. Other than that discrepancy... I love the simplicity in the design! Nice work!
Very nice. 100k is very hard to believe unless they made some shady deals for materials and had virtually no labour expenses. Apart from that i think the children's room has the charm of WWII barracks.
maybe the 100k was the architects fees ;-)
Great house! Thought the kid's room looked great. How fantastic to grow up in a place like that! The cedar board ceilings and triangular light cut-outs reminded me very much of Frank Lloyd Wright.
I like it. Though, dare I add to the critics vitriole... Hmmm, anyone ever had to polish brass? I remember that being punishment in the military. How many kids and adults and ONE bathroom! "Forced to choose between a boarding school or an oprhanage, they took the only sensible alternative and built wooden versions of the finest private submarine berthings any Kiwi brood would sure to love." Again, I loved the house. Wait... one more comment: Kids on a motorbike, where are there helmets? Their son in that bunk bed with a low ceiling, where is his helmet? Finally, I loved the house. Kudos to the family. I'm guessing that my fellow lackluster and surly negative comments came from my American bretheren. Folks, if you can't be creative in your criticism, then go look at the junk in Architectural Digest. I can't wait to get down to New Zealand, ever since reading about the great men of the ANZAC contingent that helped free the island of Crete during WWII I've been interested in all things kiwi. Long story short... a house that stirs such emotion must be good and at least it's not boring. Seriously, one bath?
Michael, you have created a beautiful home, well done.
Atom, We will keep a bunk free for you when you come to the south pacific, and the bath will be free!. Moira, Thanks for your comments, I trust Ireland is treating you well. Regards Michael
Michael you are the man!!! bless you!!
Lovely country, New Zealand, with lovely, intrepid people. Well done to Michael and his family for creating the home of their dreams. I wish I were half as skilled! Looks like a great location, too. Matt, UK
I was wondering if you have the plans for the bunk beds that you are willing to share?
Hi Amy, sure Michael@bosarchitecture.co.nz
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