Comment by Adrian Welch:
These courtyard houses were the first AMA properties to be completed at Caer Amon and represent a considered break from typical new Scottish houses. The courtyards are welcoming and the choice of quality materials good. The planting range is strong and fresh and consistent across the properties.
The tall white walls provide privacy for these expensive houses but in places create fairly cavernous spaces on the street. The mix of brick, render and medium-toned wood is successful. The dark brick base course of the courtyard houses is surprisingly not repeated in the crescent and the street-edge walls where a painted render base course exists.
The rotundas and pitched, slated roofs suggest a modern interpretation of traditional Scottish housing that has been criticised by some but I feel is appropriate. The trademark layering of Richard Murphy is visible here, but in a softer way than say the screens and channels of the Fruitmarket, and this assists the interpretation creating houses that are both contemporary and rooted - more Aalto than Mies for example.
The Crescent is for me not as welcoming as the courtyard houses, maybe because the proportions have neither a vertical nor a horizontal dominance. The elevations are energised by the steps in plan, corner windows and expressed 'split portico' roof oversails. There's something anthropomorphic about these terrace properties: staring eyes below a mop of brown hair with heavily defined central parting?
Between the pronounced planes, high above the paired doors, are galvanised hoppers that look like small bathtubs popping through the render. However the exposed timber underside to the roof provides welcome warmth and the overall detailing is crisp and contemporary. The raised deck at the back cleverly contains a garden over garage space accessed generally from a rear lane. This device is more common in high density areas - such as Amsterdam and London - but is to be encouraged, an efficient use of land.
Views welcome:
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Remaining to complete in early 2007 is the south section of the Crescent by AMA.