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The House That Was Never Built: Remembering Architect Pip Cheshire

Recently, while travelling in South America I learned of the passing of New Zealand architect Pip Cheshire.

He was only 75 years young.

Some people enter our lives briefly and yet leave an imprint that lasts for years. Pip was one of those for me.

A Dream Overlooking the Sea

Some of you will remember that I once had a grand, slightly romantic vision: to subdivide the front of the 10-acre section and build a beautiful home overlooking the sea — a home shaped by light, proportion, and soul.

Designed by Pip.

We spoke on Zoom. We explored possibility. I was genuinely excited about working together.

But life intervened. Forces constrained against the project. The house was never built.

And yet the dream was real.

On 27 Apr 2021, at 4:33 PM, Pip Cheshire <Pip@cheshirearchitects.com> wrote:

Good afternoon Cassandra and Laurie, thank you for your kind email note and for the link to your lovely property.  Perhaps we could talk or zoom sometime later in the week?  I am pretty free Thursday around lunch time or later in the afternoon- let me know what works best for you.

Best wishes

C H E S H I R E  A R C H I T E C T S

Pip Cheshire

Architect

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From: Cassandra Gaisford <cassandra@worklifesolutions.co.nz>
Sent: Friday, 23 April 2021 4:28 PM
To: Cheshire Mail <mail@cheshirearchitects.com>
Subject: Mail from the website

Hello from The Bay of Islands

We are interested in embarking on a modest new build, either for our existing site which we are exploring subdivision potential on our current home, or procuring a new site

We love your designs! Something along the lines of https://cheshirearchitects.com/residential/fielding-house-cheshire

You can find out more about us and our current home in the following House and Garden magazine

https://www.stuff.co.nz/life-style/homed/nz-house-garden/300186752/sea-views-warmth-nature-and-great-neighbours–what-more-could-you-want

We look forward to hearing from you

Warmest wishes

Cassandra ( and Laurie)

Architecture-of-the-soul. Pip Cheshire

On 5/05/2021, at 4:10 PM, Pip Cheshire <Pip@cheshirearchitects.com> wrote:

Dear Cassandra and Laurie,

Good afternoon. I enclose a letter outlining process and fees for your consideration as we discussed.  I am very excited about working with you two to make something special in that beautiful bit of the country and look forward to getting together to get underway.  Please let me know if there is anything in the attached that you would like clarification of or to discuss,

Best wishes

C H E S H I R E  A R C H I T E C T S

Pip Cheshire

Architect

Organic Architecture and the Soul

Those of you who have followed my journey know I once returned to architecture school because of my deep love for organic architecture — the idea that a building should belong to its landscape, not dominate it.

The philosophy is most famously associated with Frank Lloyd Wright, who believed architecture should grow naturally from its site rather than be imposed upon it. (You can read more about organic architecture here:
https://www.theartstory.org/movement/organic-architecture/)

Pip Cheshire embodied that spirit in a uniquely New Zealand way — refined modernism, quiet confidence, deep attention to proportion and place. Quiet luxury.

For readers unfamiliar with his work, here is a thoughtful overview of his career and projects:
https://homemagazine.nz/pip-cheshire-cnzm/

And the firm he co-founded continues his architectural legacy:
https://cheshirearchitects.co.nz/

Pip Cheshire designed homes that breathed.

Homes that understood the land.

Homes that felt inevitable rather than imposed.

Our first Zoom meeting with Pip was scheduled for 29 April 2021.

From: Meeting Room Cheshire <cheshireimac@cheshirearchitects.com>
Date: 28 April 2021 at 8:46:50 AM NZST
To: Cassandra@worklifesolutions.co.nz
Subject: Zoom meeting re house

Cheshire Architects is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Meeting with Pip Cheshire re house

Time: Apr 29, 2021 04:00 PM Auckland, Wellington

Join Zoom Meeting

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83426932381?pwd=Q0k3anZqUEtrTzIzTWRWU2FmcjNtUT09

In terms of the New Zealand COVID lockdown cycle, that places it during:

🇳🇿 Alert Level 3 (for most of the country)

  • 23 March 2020 – NZ entered Alert Level 3
  • 25 March 2020 – Alert Level 4 nationwide (first full lockdown)
  • 27 April 2020 – NZ moved from Level 4 to Level 3
  • 13 May 2020 – Level 2
  • 8 June 2020 – Level 1

But that was the 2020 cycle.

By April 2021, New Zealand was mostly living at Alert Level 1, with occasional short regional Level 2 restrictions due to Auckland clusters.

Specifically:

  • In late April 2021, Auckland was at Alert Level 1, following a brief Level 2 period earlier in the year (February–March 2021 outbreak).
  • The country was largely open domestically.
  • International borders were still closed.
  • Mask use was encouraged on public transport.
  • Businesses and meetings were operating normally, though many professionals still preferred Zoom.

So our meeting:

29 April 2021
During a relatively calm COVID phase
After the intense 2020 lockdowns
In a period where people were cautiously rebuilding, planning, and imagining future projects again

That timing feels significant.

April 2021 was that strange “in-between” era:

  • The first shock of COVID had passed.
  • We believed NZ had largely eliminated community spread.
  • The world still felt uncertain.
  • Borders were closed.
  • Many people were reassessing home, land, and how they wanted to live.

It makes sense that we were thinking about:
• Subdividing
• Designing a sea-view sanctuary
• Reimagining space

Lockdowns globally had made “home” the center of everything.

Our architectural dream emerged in that re-evaluation window.

That wasn’t random.

It was part of the collective turning inward.

As I sit here now — reflecting on times passed and opportunities missed, in Santiago, Chile, a busy city, warnings not to leave the hotel due to escalating crime — I am reminded that architecture at its core is about shelter.

Shelter is safety.
Safety is life.

We build homes not only to live in, but for sanctuary and to express who we are becoming.

Sometimes the houses we never build shape us more profoundly than the ones we do.

This week I also heard of the passing of actor James Van Der Beek, known for Dawson’s Creek, reportedly from bowel cancer. Whether public figures or private citizens, such losses remind us: health truly is wealth.

The World Health Organization defines health as “a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being” — not merely the absence of disease (https://www.who.int/about/governance/constitution).

We postpone dreams thinking we have time.

But time is the one currency none of us control.

The American Cancer Society notes that bowel cancer is one of the most preventable cancers when detected early (https://www.cancer.org/cancer/colon-rectal-cancer/about/key-statistics.html).

Awareness matters.
Prevention matters.
Living now matters.

Architecture matters, too.

Perhaps the house overlooking the sea was never meant to be constructed in timber, stone and glass.

Perhaps the dream was meant to expand me.

Perhaps the conversation with Pip was enough — a moment of alignment, recognition, possibility.

Dreams do not disappear when circumstances shift.

They change form.

They reappear in paintings, in writing, in courage, in sovereignty.

Architecture is not just what we build externally.

It is what we construct internally — belief, vision, resilience.

And so today, I give thanks.

For the conversation.
For the inspiration.
For the reminder that we are here for such a brief and luminous time.

Celebrate the moments.
Protect your health.
Build what you can — in bricks, in paint, in words, in love.

Do not give up your dreams.

They are the architecture of your soul.

Pip’s architecture never shouted.

It did not perform wealth. It did not impose ego.

It felt inevitable.

In many ways, his work reflected the principles of organic architecture — the philosophy championed by Frank Lloyd Wright — that buildings should grow from their site rather than dominate it. But Pip’s work was distinctly of this place. Modernist, yes. But softened by landscape, proportion, and humility.

He understood something rare: restraint is powerful.

The best spaces do not overwhelm you. They calm your nervous system. They allow you to breathe.

Perhaps that is why I was drawn to his work.

Because I have always been searching for calm.

I did not complete my architecture degree.

Two years into the interior architecture program at Wellington, I realized the formal path was not for me. Life pulled me elsewhere — into writing, painting, healing, reinvention.

For a long time, I wondered whether I had abandoned something important.

But now I see it differently.

Architecture did not leave me.

It lives in my paintings — in the way I think about composition and negative space.
It lives in my writing — in the way I structure emotional rooms inside a story.
It lives in my fascination with proportion, light, and sanctuary.

Studying architecture taught me to see.

And Pip embodied that way of seeing.

His death at 75 feels both too soon and yet a reminder that none of us are promised decades beyond today.

Pip touched my soul.

Pip inspires me because he chose mastery over noise. Quiet luxury over jarring noise.

Because he built with integrity.

Because his work was quiet and confident in a world that often rewards spectacle.

He reminds me that refinement takes courage.

That you can build a life — and a body of work — that does not need to shout to endure.

And perhaps most personally, he inspires me because for a brief moment, our paths intersected.

I was allowed to imagine something bold.

I was allowed to speak with someone I respected as an equal in vision.

I was allowed to dream architecturally.

Even though the house was never built.

Sometimes the projects that do not materialize physically shape us more profoundly than the ones that do.

That sea-view house expanded me.
The architecture degree expanded me.
The conversation expanded me.

Dreams do not disappear when circumstances shift.

They transmute.

They become art.
They become writing.
They become sovereignty.

Architecture, at its core, is about shelter.

And shelter is about safety.

And safety allows the soul to unfold.

Pip Cheshire built shelters that honored land and light.

I am still building mine — in paint, in words, in courage.

That is why he inspires me.

And that is why I am grateful.

I hope you enjoyed this post. Thanks for reading. You may also like to subscribe to my newsletter, where I share my art, my heart, and all things healing.

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Posted in: Blog

The House That Was Never Built: Remembering Architect Pip Cheshire

The Joyful Artist

ABOUT CASSANDRA
I am an artist, storyteller, intuitive guide, mentor and Reiki master. All my creations are infused with positive energy , inspiration, and light. I believe in magic and the power of beauty, joy, love, purpose, and creativity to transform your life. My greatest joy is helping your realize your dreams. That makes my soul sing!

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