Colour Collab: Greg Young

Greg Young’s eponymous Christchurch based practice works on a wide variety of projects, from commercial and industrial to residential and heritage, including a VW Kombi van and an alteration to a Krisel designed butterfly home in Palm Springs.

Greg Young’s Colour Collab features Resene Alabaster, Resene Baltic Sea, Resene Red Oxide, Resene Siam and Resene Corn. Image:  Toaki OkanoArt direction by Thomas Cannings

What led you into the world of architecture?

Greg Young (GY): I took a fairly unorthodox approach. I’d enrolled at the Victoria University School of Architecture but decided to gain some experience in the real world and took a job in structural draughting while studying architectural draughting. I worked at a number of practices before ending up at Warren and Mahoney in Christchurch, which is where most of my training took place — whether they realised it or not. There, I was lucky to be working alongside some of the best architects in the country. Now, my own practice (started in 2003) is based in a Warren and Mahoney-designed building, right beside 65 Cambridge Terrace. My drawing board overlooks Sir Miles’ garden.

Tell us about the use of colour in your work.

GY: I choose colour very carefully in our designs, with an awareness of a project’s use, outlook, environment and inhabitants. Sometimes it’s a conscious decision to stay neutral and in the background while, at other times, we’re using colour and pattern for their own specific beauty. Heritage work is very particular and I find that my use of colour in other projects is influenced by this, whether it be vernacular colours of the past or Mid-century modern colours, adjusted for local context. My most recent colour award was a Resene Total Colour Maestro Award last year for the Dorset Street Flats (Heritage).

 Image:  Diederik van Heyningen

What influences your work?

GY: My early years were the 1990s, which was not a good period for architecture and colour. Mid-century architecture really appeals to me but I like to keep a wide mix of projects – it keeps the studio invigorated and ensures we’re always learning, rather than on ‘rinse and repeat’. In renovations and additions, I like to try and understand what the original intent of the architect was so any interventions we make can be referenced or are complementary in some way. I’m a big fan of learning from the past so I can understand the ‘why’ of architecture, and how I can apply it to our current projects. This applies to my use of colour as well — by looking to the past, I can see what works and what doesn’t.

What was the thinking behind your collab?

GY: Our recent work on the heritage-listed Dorset Street Flats, designed by Sir Miles Warren in 1956, saw us use colour to accentuate different elements of the building and to give the building’s geometry an artistic edge. I needed to scrape back many decades of fiddling, in some cases, to find the original colours. Miles had been inspired by Le Corbusier’s colourful Unité d’Habitation and the Finn Juhl House at Ordrupgaard Museum. On the back of one of the Dorset Street Flats drawings, we found an elevation sketch of the Finn Juhl House, so there’s no denying where his inspiration lay for them. The colours and forms of these flats lent themselves well to an artistic collab.

Tell us about your colour choises. 

GY: The colours are largely those used in the repair, strengthening and revitalisation of the flats post the Canterbury earthquakes. Resene Alabaster forms the backdrop on the concrete block and Resene Baltic Sea references some of the exterior and interior detailing. Resene Red Oxide and Resene Siam were used on exterior walls and doors, respectively, and Resene Corn playfully highlights structural steel bracing above the stair. Here, it has been used to represent the light cast by the project’s globe-shaped pendants at night.

See more from the Resene Colour Collab series here.

ArchitectureNow works with a range of partners in the A&D supply sector to source appropriate content for the site. This article has been supported by Resene.


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