Tempe
Between Indoor and Outdoor Living
This thoughtful alteration and addition re-imagines a 1930s freestanding brick and tile cottage in Tempe, transforming its inward-looking, thermally inefficient character into a home that merges the boundaries between inside and outside. The design centres on outdoor living as the key spatial driver, creating an experience of being inside when you are outside and outside when you are inside, founded on strong ecological and sustainable principles.
Design Concept
Three interconnected gardens weave through the suburban block, merging architecture and landscape.
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Courtyard garden
A densely planted courtyard garden between the living room and covered outdoor dining area channels the traditional "looking into garden" relationship inspired by Japanese houses. -
Rear garden
The rear garden unfolds as a vibrant outdoor living hub with play spaces, vegetable beds, rainwater harvesting, and a dramatic brick wall backdrop for outdoor cinema events. -
Green roof garden
Above the dining room, a green roof garden connects visually and spatially to the master bedroom, enhancing thermal comfort and providing a quiet retreat.
Together, these gardens enable the house to breathe with filtered summer breezes and natural light, making the home a sustainable shelter within nature.
Sustainability Features
- Passive solar design optimizing sunlight and shade
- Low-E acoustic glazing for energy efficiency and comfort
- High levels of insulation and thermal mass from green roof and recycled brick walls
- Energy-efficient lighting, taps, and appliances
- Native and edible landscaping promoting biodiversity and food growing
- Rainwater storage and re-use for laundry and irrigation
- Solar panels producing renewable energy
- Use of recycled timber and brick throughout
Project Team : Matt Day, Lachy Whitford
Builder : Tim Lambert Constructions
Structural Engineer : PMI Engineers
Landscape Architect : Even Spaces