High on solitude

Dwarfed by the spectacle of the Southern Alps, this humble hideaway captures a visceral sense of place. Snowgrass Hut hunkers into the heights of Inverary Station – a farm that has been in the same family for close to 100 years. 

Owner John Chapman and builder Dave Leslie share a love of this big-sky country and collaborated from concept to completion on a hut that celebrates its splendid isolation.   

Designed to be built off-site and then transported and craned into place, the dwelling is a prototype of form and function, with more planned for the future. 

As such it was a test case not only in terms of resource consent but for the prefabrication process. “Getting involved at a very early stage gave us the ability to iron out any potential problems and provide some direction,” says Dave. 

Quite a bit of that was needed the day the 12.5m x 3.6m building was delivered in two sections. The crane was stretched to its limits of weight and reach to manoeuvre it onto site, touching the land as lightly as possible. 

The Leslie Construction team – charged with joining the dots in this remote, high-altitude environment – came well equipped with tools, but also puffer jackets and beanies. “There aren’t many houses in New Zealand that are 700 metres above sea level,” explains John. “Dave and his team were totally invested. They shared my enthusiasm and insistence on quality.”  

This sense of ownership shows – but not in a look-at-me way. Recessive against the hillside, the one-bedroom pod, clad in board-and-batten the colour of the greywacke mountains, has a warm heart. An innovative SIPs panel system that used a sandwiched panel of strandboard with a polystyrene core gives the shell good rigidity and thermal efficiency. 

A back wall, designed on a 10-degree angle to evoke the feeling of sheltering beneath a rock overhang, was a challenge that involved measurements precise to the millimetre. Inside, poplar ply ceilings and wall linings feature a negative detail; the glazing frames vignettes of snow-dusted Mt Somers; and a wood-burner keeps Jack Frost at the door. 

On the deck made from fallen Douglas Fir off the farm, a bathtub is the perfect spot for full immersion in the landscape. “We get such incredible feedback from guests – part of that is location, but part of it is build quality,” says John, who now catches up with Dave for deerstalking expeditions and a quiet beer.  

Finished in just six months, this gem of a retreat set out to offer shelter and repose. But along the way, it has cemented a friendship.

Client: goabovebeyond.nz

Location: Inverary Station | Mid-Canterbury

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