Sanctuary House

Brunswick East | Wurundjeri land
Sanctuary House integrates advanced environmentally sound construction techniques with natural materials and a wild landscape to provide an unexpected urban oasis in Brunswick East.
Project team: Ben Callery + Tim Shallue
Builder: Truewood Constructions
Photography: Reannon Smith
Openable timber shutters allow adjustable solar control while providing privacy. This liberates the house from the need for a front fence enabling the front garden to bestow abundant foliage on the botanically sparse neighbourhood, proposing a greener future. Slatted timber elements continue in the courtyard where a horizontal cantilevered awning integrates the building with the garden. The slats encourage deciduous vines to engulf the north-facing doors and windows and provide summer shade.
"What we like about living here is the sense of space - it feels huge, but has a small footprint (with plenty of storage). It's perfect for inter-generational living - the discrete zones can be closed off for privacy or opened up for a continual light and airy space.
Being able to open all the doors really enhances your sense of being outdoors -without the bugs. :)
The play of light is gorgeous and it's easy to be lazy on the sofa and just watch the clouds roll by. And the house is very quiet thanks to the double glazing, but the house itself breathes and sighs due to the HVAC system. The place has a great soul."
                                                             - Owners

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Sanctuary House integrates advanced construction techniques with natural materials and a wild landscape to provide an unexpected urban oasis in Brunswick East.

The house is built with SIPs (structural insulated panels) - a thermally sound and lightweight modular system. This contemporary method of construction enables building houses that are fast and resource-efficient to construct while being energy-efficient and naturally comfortable to occupy. In contrast to the slick metal cladding of the walls, timber-slatted screens are integrated into the façade to soften the house and make it a semi-transparent hideaway.

Openable timber shutters allow adjustable solar control while providing privacy. This liberates the house from the need for a front fence enabling the front garden to bestow abundant foliage on the botanically sparse neighbourhood, proposing a greener future. Slatted timber elements continue in the courtyard where a horizontal cantilevered awning integrates the building with the garden. The slats encourage deciduous vines to engulf the north-facing doors and windows and provide summer shade.

The U-shaped floorplan is designed around a central courtyard that directs winter sun into the living rooms over the double-storey neighbouring house. The courtyard also brings the beautiful natural landscape right up to the house including cooling plants and a pond. The rooms adjacent feel immersed in the garden’s wild serenity. Distant verdant views can be glimpsed across the whole site, expanding the sense of space in a compact 120m2 house on a small property.

The heavily insulated SIPs walls and roof are complemented by double glazing and thermal mass in the concrete floor. Operable internal and external blinds complete the thermally stable external envelope. Technology includes an HRV (heat recovery ventilation) system that efficiently exchanges warmth into fresh air brought into the house, an important strategy in contemporary air-tight houses. It distributes warm fresh air between all rooms allowing the whole house to be heated and cooled by only two air conditioners. The house is all-electric, with no gas, and incorporates solar power and electric vehicle charging.

The house is designed to be wheelchair accessible, single-level living with generous hallways and doorways and a relatively large bathroom with open shower, looking forward to aging in place.

The garden by Akas Landscape Architecture complements the house’s juxtaposition of the manufactured and the natural. A pond of river rocks and granite provides habitat for fish and frogs amongst a mixture of indigenous, native and exotic vegetation. Concrete sleepers provide paving and a bridge over the water before separating as they recede from the house and dispersing into nature.

We acknowledge the Wurundjeri people as the traditional custodians of the lands where we live, learn, design and build.
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