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Sustainable Keast Park Community Pavilion is the Ultimate Lawn Sports Haven in Australia

09/19/2012
by
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The <a href="http://www.timberawards.com.au/index.php?option=com_k2&amp;view=item&amp;id=218" target="_blank">Keast Park Community Pavilion</a> is the ultimate lawn sport facility with a dedicated bowling green just a stone's throw from the beach. Located on the coast outside of Melbourne this community pavilion combines a number of amenities for the local residents including toilets, recreation, meeting rooms, a cafe and a direct connection to the ocean. The community project was designed by <a href="http://www.jcba.com.au/" target="_blank">Jackson Clements Burrows</a> and built from sustainably sourced timber to maximize its solar resource and harvest rainwater for toilets and landscape irrigation.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The original community facility was in disrepair and badly in need of an update.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    So <a href="http://www.jcba.com.au/" target="_blank">Jackson Clements Burrows</a> worked with the city and local residents to design a multi-purpose space for everyone.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The Keast Park Community Pavilion consists of a two-story timber pavilion with a large bowling green to the north and a boardwalk connecting the parking to the beach and ocean.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The project provides space for the Carrum Bowls club, Sea Scouts, multi-purpose centre/cafe with toilets, provides greater opportunity for the overlap of different activities and age groups, and was considered as an important objective of the project.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Oriented to the east/west, the pavilion makes use of solar passive design with the help of a verandah and large overhangs to provide shading.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Cross ventilation and natural daylighting through the louvered walls reduce artificial cooling and lighting.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Water tanks underneath the building collect rainwater harvested from the roof so it can be used for toilet flushing and landscape irrigation.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The project was built with sustainably sourced plantation timber, for which it received an <a href="http://www.timberawards.com.au/index.php?option=com_k2&amp;view=item&amp;id=218" target="_blank">Australian Timber Design Award</a>.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Jackson Clements Burrows and the community pavilion also received the <a href="http://www.vcc.vic.gov.au/page/awards" target="_blank">2012 Coastal Building and Design Award</a> from the Victorian Coastal Council.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Open spaces on the ground floor are shaded and provide protection from the elements, but are still open.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    The building and the landscaping echo the general forms of the surrounding dunes.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    Materiality of the building and coastal landscape form has been selected from sustainable sources where possible, including plantation timber cladding and decking.
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  • Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows
    A sizable crowd enjoys the bowling greens on a beautiful night.
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Keast Park Community Pavilion-Jackson Clements Burrows

The Keast Park Community Pavilion is the ultimate lawn sport facility with a dedicated bowling green just a stone's throw from the beach. Located on the coast outside of Melbourne this community pavilion combines a number of amenities for the local residents including toilets, recreation, meeting rooms, a cafe and a direct connection to the ocean. The community project was designed by Jackson Clements Burrows and built from sustainably sourced timber to maximize its solar resource and harvest rainwater for toilets and landscape irrigation.

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Categories:  Architecture
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