Given the chance, who wouldn't want a home in paradise?
It's a fair bet that a good few out of every 100 visitors look longingly at
the real-estate ads in Phuket Magazine and think, "If only …"
For some, of course, the "ifs" are far outweighed by the
lure of island lifestyle. The corner of the ad pages are turned down, calls
and visits follow; then comes the big decision — usually sometime around
sunset.
A few, however, aren't content to choose from the vast
range of pre-packaged property options Phuket has to offer. Instead, they
decide to go it alone. If the idea of owning a tropical home seems daunting,
actually building according to one's dream design might seem too lofty an
aspiration. But it is possible, and the results never fail to surprise —
each a tour de force of individualism and determination.
Scott Bradley and his wife Toy have created just such a
masterpiece of personal inspiration — and perspiration — on the Panwa
peninsula. With an unparalleled panorama that takes in the full stretch of
Chalong Bay, the islands, and the Andaman beyond, their home sits high upon
the corner of the hillside, making for an impressive sight when approached
along the road that winds along the south side of the cape.
Lightly tinted glass fronts the house from ground floor
to roof, allowing access to the entire view from almost anywhere inside,
without admitting furniture-fading UV, and remaining optically comfortable
during the last gasps of the setting sun. The second floor cuts back,
leaving a high, open area at the front of the ground floor. Of the four
large bedrooms, all but one face that spectacular outlook, the fourth room
overlooking the rear gardens and a view across equally impressive forested
hillsides.

Scott, a shipwright by trade, has spent the last 12 years
polishing and preening some of the most beautiful superyachts to grace Phang
Nga Bay, and throughout his home the deft touch of his craft can be seen.
Few homes boast such immaculate finishing.
"A lot of midnights went into just sanding, varnishing
and polishing the floors," he says, now able to relax somewhat and enjoy
their creation. Toy and Scott worked the teak floorboards as they would have
the deck of a luxury yacht, laying 11 coats of varnish across the 550sqm of
floor, then sanding back between each coat to ensure the varnish took the
grain of the wood.
Further nautical touches include unique door and cabinet
handles created from lengths of stainless-dipped 316 steel rigging hawser,
and stairways banistered with polished stainless cabling and highly
varnished rails that shine in the late afternoon sun.
The task of applying and smoothing the 14-15 coats of
varnish upon the stair rails fell to Toy. Her work is matchless, and she
takes a modest pride in having been a part of this exemplary attempt to
achieve the perfect home. Attempt? Yes, because even now — after almost 18
months of construction and a year since finally deciding the house was
finished — Scott is still dreaming up improvements.
While Toy and Scott took the challenge of the lion's
share of the interior finishing, the couple also helped supervise at all
levels of construction. This included working with the architect on the
design: "At first I wanted to go for something Bali style, but then I
changed my mind, opting for something modern and sturdy. I wanted a home I
could enjoy year-round, not just for three months and then spend nine months
repairing it." They were intimately involved throughout the construction
process, as well, even to the point of helping the builders carry cement
while they were placing the fence foundations: "After we had finished for
the day the foreman bought me a beer with the rest of the workers."
The work didn't get Scott down. In fact, the whole
project brought back memories of his time as a boat-building apprentice in
Australia, where part of the training programme included six months working
on house construction. Even the many hours of sanding and polishing didn't
dissolve his resolve. The most back-breaking part of the process, he admits,
was the garden landscaping, in particular the planting of three mature
golden cane palms upon the hill beside the house. Still, cane palms are not
often found on even the largest of superyachts.