One of our favourite houses in our February/March issue is Selby, the 1973 gem just outside Havelock North designed by Miles Warren. It's pure class, from its park-like setting shown above right down to its signature foundation stone and exterior lights:
These are some more of the outtakes from Paul McCredie's excellent shoot, images that we couldn't fit into the magazine. Here's the entry court, which shows the drama of those sawn-off gabled forms.
This particular diagonal line (in the shot below) points to the main entrance.
This shot (below) shows the swimming pool, as well as the pool house and garden tower. Both the latter structures were built some years after the home was completed - the tower, for example, was finished in 1993.
Just inside the front door, a window reveals a smaller sitting room, set a few steps down from the home's main pavilion.
The main living room is a much more baronial affair, with lofty heart rimu ceilings supported by dramatic diagonal beams.
This shot (below) shows the swimming pool, as well as the pool house and garden tower. Both the latter structures were built some years after the home was completed - the tower, for example, was finished in 1993.
Selby's owners, John and Helen Foster, gave the house the garden is deserved, a beautiful, formal blend of manicured plants overlooking the tree-lined sheep paddock.
Here we are in the entry court again, with a shot that reveals how fully resolved every detail in the house is.
Here we are in the entry court again, with a shot that reveals how fully resolved every detail in the house is.
Incidentally, Selby is for sale (you can view the listing at the Bayleys website here). We normally avoid featuring properties for sale in our pages, for fear of becoming a real estate publication, but in Selby's case we made an exception because the house is so exceptional.