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Villa Coco Groove - Seminyak
Coco Groove is a
privately owned 3 bedroom modern
minimalist style villa located in the
heart of Seminyak just behind the
renowned Oberoi Hotel in Bali and just
minutes away from the beach. It will
take you only around 20 minutes to
travel from ad to the international
airport, a couple of minutes to the
tourist Mecca of Legian/Kuta and only 20
minutes from the island's pre-eminent
signature golf course, the Nirwana Bali
Golf Course. The golf course perhaps
boasts the most beautiful location of
any golf course in the world and has
recently been voted one of world's top
ten golf courses.
In a developing area of Bali in
Seminyak, in the south of the island,
the Singaporean owner of a plot of land
wanted a holiday property that was open,
convenient to live in, and yet
maintained some references to
traditional Balinese dwellings (though
not at all overtly). The site was
originally virgin paddy fields, and
though close to the sea, there was no
possibility of a view from the
single-storey structure, which was also
what the client requested.
Architect Ian Chee has designed a
complex that creates entirely its own
habitat within the surrounding walls.
Chee’s intention was to re-interpret the
traditional Balinese layout of a
dwelling. In this, there is a series of
small construction grouped in the same
compound, with a minimum of five areas:
entrance, bedroom kitchen, bathroom and
granary. The precise layout varies
according to status and caste, and
follows rules laid down in treatises,
some going back to the fifteenth
century. Masonry platforms are
traditional, as is the interpenetration
of interior and exterior space.
One of the bedrooms seen from its small
courtyard garden, planted with Bird of
Paradise plants (Strelitzia reginae).
The garden, which can be entered through
sliding glass doors, connects the
bedroom to the bathroom. The same
bedroom is seen from its entrance. A
full-height sliding door that can open
the room fully to the rest of the
compound. The living shelter is in the
background. The bathroom of another
bedroom seen from its courtyard garden,
open-air bathing is another Balinese
tradition that suits the climate. A
mirror running the entire width of the
bathroom enhances its open, natural
aspect.
The bedrooms and the TV/Study room are
fully air-conditioned. The master
bedroom offers a Chinese style antique
bed with en-suite bathroom and the both
guest rooms offer double bed bedrooms
with private bathrooms. All rooms have a
view to towards the pool and the large
open lawn shaded with tall swaying
coconut trees. Coco Groove has its own
in-ground pool tiled with beautiful
natural green color stone tiles. Behind
the pool overlooking the entire property
is a Balinese bale just perfect for
those afternoon naps. Alternatively you
can just laze beside the pool on one of
the outdoor lounges.
This house, completed in 2004 and with a
total built-up area of 550 square
meters, was conceived as a series of
bales (the Balinese version of a gazebo)
linked by a covered walkway and
orientated to take advantage of the
prevailing winds, using large
cantilevered overhangs and plated
pergolas for shade and protection from
rain.
By adapting the arrangement of a
traditional Bali home, the architect was
able to satisfy the client’s wish to
keep the guest quarters separate, and
these were located in a line extending
from the corner housing the kitchen,
service quarters and garage. The living
shelter followed by the master room
extends from this corner at a right
angle, while the house temple was placed
facing the sacred mountain Gunung Agung
in the opposite corner of the compound.
One entire wall of the compound is lined
by plantings of small trees. The water
connects the living area at firth with
the bathrooms that adjoin the master and
second bedrooms. The focus of the house
is the living shelter, roofed but open
on three sides. In the centre of this is
the sunken seating area, into which
steps lead down from two opposite
corner. Early morning sunlight streams
into the living shelter (overleaf), with
its dining table at left. The area faces
out on to the lawn, swimming pool and a
small bale in traditional style,
thatched with alang-alang grass.
As the architect comments, ‘In material
terms, we chose a palette of simple
finishes’. And in the bathrooms the
combination is of river pebbles set in
one wall, wood, concrete and polished
metal. A borderless mirror, projecting
slightly to accommodate concealed
lighting behind, gives a modern contrast
to the pebbles.
Woven bamboo matting in various forms is
used for cupboards and screens. A
bathroom door-handle is cast in metal
from one of the river pebbles used
throughout the house. A dressing-room
mirror, designed by the architect, is
set in the neck of a tailor’s dummy
imprint of bamboo matting has been left
in a concrete ceiling from the formwork. |