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Beachside homes are the ideal place for relaxation. Their convenient placement at a safe distance from the city helps assuage the stress of long workdays, especially with many lazy hours by the water. Architects sometimes reflect this leisurely ethos with a more ‘relaxed’ style of beach house design. Taking advantage of the lack of limitations set by the natural surroundings, these homes reject the rigidity (and oftentimes boxy) design of the urban environment in favor of more free-flowing curved and circular structures.
These seven beachside houses may adopt their unique designs for various reasons — as much aesthetic as functional — but like the water they border, they are free from strict shape or form.
Casey Key Guest House
By Sweet Sparkman Architecture and Interiors, Sarasota County, FL
St Andrews Beach House
By Austin Maynard Architects, VIC, Australia
Neighbored only by bushlands, scrubs and dunes, this beach house near Victoria, Australia is unencumbered by pre-existing buildings or styles. The architects took full advantage of this fact by opting for a perfectly cylindrical timber structure, which can be admired from afar from all angles (or lack thereof), a bold solitary figure amid the remote Australian landscape. And as the house patinas and weathers over time, it will become just as essential to the scenery as the wilderness nearby.
Carbon Beach House
By Kovac Design Studio, Malibu, CA
A passionate swimmer, the owner of this beach house in Malibu wanted to add an indoor pool among other new amenities. However, the architects needed to tread carefully, since the house — a modernist classic — was designed by John Lautner. As such, the architects replaced an awkward and incongruent addition from the 1990s with a new swooping structure of curving wood and concrete built in the same spirit as Lautner’s design. The new state-of-the-art indoor swimming pool is largely indistinguishable from the original building. It is surrounded by retractable glass that invites sunlight and the ocean breeze, blurring the boundaries between home and beach.
Austinmer Beach House
By Alexander Symes Architect, Austinmer, Australia
Tamarama House
By Porebski Architects, Tamarama, Australia
Situated on a hill overlooking the Tamarama beach, this vacation home for a family of four combines curvaceous white masonry and timber batten extensions with broad bay windows. The windows curve along with the rest of the building, allowing for unobstructed ocean views — no right angles to ruin the fun here.
Viewpoint House
By Diacono Arquitectos, Cariló, Argentina
Round House
By Dane Design Australia,
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