Windyhill
Windyhill was commissioned by William Davidson, an early patron of Mackintosh, who entrusted the young architect with complete creative freedom. The resulting house is seminal to his architectural development, a prototype of his domestic ideals and a precursor to The Hill House.
Our project mirrors this origin. It was BARD’s first commission and responds to a brief from Windyhill’s current owner, David Cairns, who has meticulously restored the house to its original condition. He required a motor garage that could sensitively address the practicalities of the 21st-century life without disrupting the architectural harmony of the site.
The process demanded deep study of Mackintosh’s design intentions and inspirations. This led not only to our intervention but also to involvement in restoring other elements of the house, inside and out. Rather than mimic Mackintosh, we chose to respond, abstracting and extending his narratives into the present.
The garage comprises three primary elements: a concrete basin where ground and wall become one; tapering steel stanchions that rise to support a plate steel roof; and hand-finished translucent glass, encasing the structure in an atmosphere akin to trapped fog. The garage acts as a seed, an early gesture ahead of a future bloom, echoing Mackintosh’s design ethos. Though technically complex, the execution leaned more toward jewellery-making than traditional construction, made possible by the exceptional skill of craftspeople who brought the vision to life. This project has been our honour to deliver.
Back to Infrastructure, Urban Design and Landscape
- Buildings Archive 2024
- Buildings Archive 2023
- Buildings Archive 2022
- Buildings Archive 2021
- Buildings Archive 2020
- Buildings Archive 2019
- Buildings Archive 2018
- Buildings Archive 2017
- Buildings Archive 2016
- Buildings Archive 2015
- Buildings Archive 2014
- Buildings Archive 2013
- Buildings Archive 2012
- Buildings Archive 2011
- Buildings Archive 2010
- Buildings Archive 2009
- Buildings Archive 2008
- Buildings Archive 2007
- Buildings Archive 2006