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Copperbelt Hotel

Copperbelt Hotel

PHOTOGRAPHY ADAM LETCH & MICKY HOYLE

This Cape Town family home is positioned below Lion’s Head with views of Table Mountain, Lion’s Head, Signal Hill, the city of Cape Town and the mountains of the Boland and the winelands in the distance. The architecture is shaped to take in as much of the surroundings as possible. The strongest gesture is the inverted pyramid roof, which creates a clerestory window around the upper level. It allows the building to open up, capturing views of Table Mountain and Lion’s Head that would otherwise have been lost. This has also opened up views of the sky, bringing the sun and moon into the home, heightening the connection to nature and its cycles.

A distinctive inverted pyramid roof gives this Cape Town home its strong aesthetic identity, but, more importantly, captures views of Table Mountain and Lion’s Head and creates a strong connection to its natural surroundings.

The house presents a stone wall, built in a traditional Cape way, to the busy city street that it sits on, revealing very little about its interior. At night, the inverted pyramid roof glows, creating a giant lightbox adding to the intrigue.

The entrance to the house is via a large metal door subtly positioned between the house itself and the traditional Cape stone wall.

One enters the house through the large metal front door – which sits between the house proper and the stone wall – into a small entrance lobby connected to a courtyard garden. From this restrained quiet space, a few steps take you up into the living space with its cinematic bold views over the city.

The living spaces on the top level offer bold cinematic views over the city through the clerestory windows that wrap around the upper level, while the inverted pyramid roof opens up views of the sky, sun and moon.

The house is arranged on three levels. The top level has the strongest views and holds most of the living spaces – the open-plan kitchen, dining room and lounge. The family’s work and bedroom spaces are on the mid-level with the garage, gym, cinema and guestroom on the lower level.

Each level has its own set of gardens and courtyards. These gardens extend from the mountain surface down against the house, screening the neighbouring buildings and intensifying the relationship with nature; and allowing light and air into spaces that would otherwise be dark and isolated.

The dark exterior breaks down the mass of the building, pushing it into the background. Internally, colours are muted, and the use of a washed oak gives the spaces warmth.

The furnishings are from OKHA furniture.

The sophisticated spaces were furnished using OKHA furniture. The Hunt Sofa, the Nate, Nicci Nouveau, Vince and Miles armchairs are placed on the upper and middle levels, and the Planalto dining table creates a focal point adjacent to the second-floor courtyard, which is used as a working/personal space. OKHA also provided the To Be One and Lean On Me floor lamps in the lounge area.

The entrance lobby connects with a courtyard garden, intensifying the home's relationship with nature and letting light and air into its interiors.

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