Sustainable by Remote Locations named Winner of the Excellence in Sustainable Living Award

July 8th – What a great night for the Sustainable Team and our valued repeat Clients!

Nominated for Excellence in Sustainable Living, Sustainable by Remote Locations are thrilled to say our spectacular McLaughlin Home brought home a victory!

Being recipients of Dual 2004 QMBA Awards for Vicki and Darren’s first Sustainable home, it brings us great pride to once again be able to share this exciting achievement with such valued and long time clients.

About the McLaughlin Home

The McLaughlin Home displays our strong Sustainable philosophies, attention to detail and sophistication, which has allowed us to lead in the ‘design and construct’ arena of low energy/passive powerful architecture and is showcased in this stunning home.

The home is uplifting, comforting and perfectly suits the lifestyle of Vicki and Darren, who expect and respect their visitors and family’s need for space and enjoyment!

The McLaughlin home is a monument of individualism and a place of refuge, while offering a solid family foundation to encourage a simpler and more honest society!

And WOW! What about that view! So close to the city you can almost touch it!!!

GET YOUR FIX: Australian House & Garden

Undertake some smart retrofits and you can boost your home’s sustainability, writes Sarah Pickette.

Building regulations require today’s new homes to be more eco-friendly than ever before. But if, like most Australians, you’re not living in a freshly constructed home, you’ll need to embrace retrofitting if you want to improve your home’s environmental cred. “A lot of homeowners are daunted by the word ‘retrofit’,” says Brett McKenzie, CEO of Sustainable, a Queensland building design and construction firm specialising in such modifications. “They assume it’s going to be an expensive and complicated process. But retrofitting just means updating your home with the technology and materials we have available to us today. It’s making small but effective improvements within the bounds of your existing home’s design.”

There is no one-size-fits-all answer to the question of what works best, says McKenzie, but he believes in improving every home’s passive solar design by exploiting it’s orientation and ensuring it’s eaves and exterior shading are up to the job, and facilitating good cross-ventilation.

Air-leakage prevention is the number-one retrofit suggested to homeowners by Nick Mayo, sustainability adviser and owner of Canberra’s Sustainable House. “It is so important to draught-proof your home. Air gaps around doors, windows, vents and even power points are the cause of so much energy wastage.” He advises choosing quality seals for doors, which cost more but could last up to 30 years. Insulation is the next thing to check, says Mayo. “Get an infrared camera and take pictures of your home’s exterior. Using thermal images, you can determine the amount of heat loss from your walls and roof, and pinpoint exactly where the greatest losses are occurring.” If you identify major weak spots, blow-in insulation for your walls can be very effective, he adds, noting that rockwool is his preferred material.

Both McKenzie and Mayo agree that putting in photo-voltaic panels or a solar hot-water system is a smart move because it pays for itself in a couple of years and minimises energy costs after that.

New Heights for Sustainability

Advanced Energy Now In The Big Leagues

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Recent statistics have revealed that the market for innovative energy products and services is now as large as the fashion and clothing industry in the US.

Last year saw record growth in this industry worldwide, up by about 15% since 2013 and boasting a reported revenue of US $1.3 Trillion dollars.

Advanced energy spans right across a number of segments with building efficiency being the largest.

This is really exciting for us, the great news shows a combined, global effort to becoming more sustainable.

If you’d like to get in touch to see how we can help with the sustainable design and construction of your home, from landscaping to recipe houses click here.

More info at – Green Tech Media

Welcome To The Future

The Sand Tower Town

Arcology in the Sahara

French architectural design firms Nicholas Laisné Associés and OXO Architectes have put together a concept for a huge arcology in Morrocco, in the Saharan desert.  La Tour des Sables would be a self contained city that rises 1,400 feet above the ground. This would include space for living, agricultural and working units.

futurue1

They have mentioned 2025 as a date to begin building. Whether or not this stunning design actually gets built; this is a fascinating look into what large eco- sustainable buildings could look like in the future.

Click here for more info. 

Australia’s Most Sustainable Cities

Melbourne & Sydney…Great for coffee, NOT for Sustainability!

Some of Australia’s most popular cities have taken a beating lately when statistics revealed neither Melbourne or Sydney were in the top 5 most sustainable cities in Australia.

Our closest major city Brisbane however faired quite well! Last year Brisbane and Darwin were named as Australia’s most sustainable cities.

This was based on Brisbane’s high ranking for health and high scores for biodiversity, water and sustainable development. Through its Green Heart program, Brisbane City Council aims to achieve carbon neutrality by 2026.

Well done Brisbane!

Brisbane city reflected in the river at sunset with colored lights

Source: Green Lifestyle Mag & Brisbane Times

Individual Home at Moreton Island

This archetypal house built on one of Queensland’s beautiful sub-tropical islands promotes the comfortable and relaxed style enjoyed by only its few lucky inhabitants, it also stands as one fine example of Sustainable Houses. Purpose designed and hand constructed it creates a form which is simplistic in approach however sophisticatedly encapsulates the essence of modern living to provide enjoyment of the wonderful lifestyle we often take for granted.

This single level house represents the essence of the traditional Queenslanders and is an integration of beauty, practicality, passive solar design and ventilation, resource efficiency and craftsmanship. It remains close to nature and in harmony with the surrounding environment whilst maximising the views of the surrounding landscape it nestles into. 

The brief for the house was to construct a retreat to escape the city life and to experience the splendour of the natural and beautiful South-East Queensland environment.

The site provided challenges through constraints to the design and construction of the house. One of the main challenges being the sites remoteness since there is little infrastructure on the island including only bush tracks and accessed only by four wheel drive vehicles. All the materials for the construction could only be delivered by the barge that services the island. We also had to ensure that the cut into the site was as minimal as possible, in order to respect the land and minimise our footprint. Our challenge was to design and build a functional and livable house with a small footprint, maintaining privacy, whilst maximising the views and the aspect, that didn’t impact too much on the site.

Sustainable Houses & The Benefits

The form takes in essence two pods linked via a verandah breezeway come outdoor living room. Encouraging the feeling of being at one with nature, this transforms during summer storms into an interactive sensory experience. The breezeway provides a connection between the main living and bedroom pods, with each being open plan and having openings on all sides, capturing the breeze and eliminating the need for air-conditioning.

The main feature of this sustainable house is the large open planned living area which connects seamlessly the timber deck, capturing the magical views across the greenery of the adjoining national park bush land and to the existing wooded area to the rear of the property. To cope with the insects the deck has removal screens to ensure protection at night time, allowing the area to be fully utilised throughout the year. The master bedroom is located near the main living area providing a secluded private area and has a walk-in-robe and ensuite and provides the ability to live self contained in its own pod.

The plant allows the reuse all your household water for keeping lawns and gardens lush and green. Ozzi Kleen Sewerage systems act as a digestive system using a unique cyclic fully aerobic sewage treatment process. This means there is no septic process, so no septic smells, it’s environmentally friendly producing nutrient rich water to reuse on gardens, and is cost efficient to run (only half the running cost of other aerobic sewerage systems).

The external clad walls are lined with Reflecta-Cell which provides both thermal and acoustic insulation of a very high standard. This ideal product manages the humidity and corrosive elements extremely well. It also doubles as an acoustic insulator, saving the cost of installing an additional product into your building

The underside of the raked roof areas along with the ceilings to the flat ceiling pod are lined with Reflecta-Guard which is a premium insulation product, providing the best R-values amongst the GreenInsulation product range. It is arguably one of the most advanced insulation products available in the marketplace and has been used extensively world-wide.

View the Individual Moreton Home here.

Contact us today!

Individual Home at Toowong

The client’s design brief was to create a low energy eco house designed for a sophisticated but simplistic lifestyle. The design inspiration was based on one’s original impression of the site: intrigue, relief and seclusion in a mature garden.

The house design captures that intrigue by way of a captivating roof structure, which delivers a sense of journey by a horizontal roof plate punching straight out of the front facade.

Inside the multi-level three bedroom home there is an overwhelming sense of volume, delivered by the unobstructed view throughout the home.

Suspended platforms hover in the refreshing but simple void space and highlight the alluring feel of the home.

Sanctuary Magazine Issue 12 — Doing Your Block

Doing your block

Jane Canaway

Finally the builders have left, the painting’s done and even the carpets and furniture are in. But as the sun sets on your first day of new home-ownership, there’s an increasingly worrisome blot on your landscape – a so-called ‘garden’ full of nothing but clay and rocks.

Many new home owners find they are not only starting from scratch with no plants – some have been left with no topsoil, either.

“Most new developments have the topsoil scraped off before building starts,” explains Diane Cotter, who teaches sustainable design gardening.

“Most soils you buy now are scraped off a development somewhere then mixed with about 50% sand and have mushroom compost added. There is no glue or substance to it; nothing to hold it together.”

Ironically, the first thing a lot of new owners do is buy in topsoil, but while it may be easier to dig, few professional gardeners consider it better for plants.

“One site I worked on was a sloping block so they’d imported some topsoil to try and even it out,” Cotter recalls. “On the top end – the natural clay – everything grew really well, but on the lower side, which was filled with topsoil, if you felt the soil, it just ran through your fingers and everything struggled.”

Gardeners interested in growing native plants may find a scraped block is actually a bonus; dormant weed seed is removed – as is residual superphosphate, which favours weeds over wildflowers and is common on former farmland.

University of Melbourne researcher Paul Gibson-Roy has tried direct seeding native grassland species at a number of experimental plots across Victoria’s volcanic plains and achieved the best results on sites that had 5-15cm of topsoil removed first.

But for anyone wanting to grow exotics, lawn or vegetables, a rich, friable soil is best.

Cotter advises: “If you’re going to use topsoil then get one load first and mix it in, then a second load and mix it – otherwise you end up with layers that plants struggle with.

“It takes about 100 years to make an inch (2.5cm) of topsoil the natural way, and some of the stuff you buy is put together in one afternoon.”

In their defence, suppliers say quality topsoil can improve clays and sandy soils by adding organic matter. A spokesman from The Green Centre in Keilor, Victoria, said the company sells three qualities of topsoil: an economy version, comprising screened topsoil; a lawn mix with 25% compost added, and a premium blend that contains compost and cow manure. The centre also provides a recycling service by composting locally collected organic garden material.

But Sustainable Gardening Australia advocates against disturbing topsoil where possible, because it releases stored carbon back into the atmosphere, involves unnecessary transportation, can spread weeds, and disturbs the original composition of the soil.

Award-winning Melbourne landscaper Phil Johnson agrees: “You will never get better soil than what you get originally on your site.”

Johnson likes to work with the builder to make sure any soil that needs to be dug out or scraped off to put in footings is saved for later use.

“My goal is for nothing to leave the site,” he said.

Discussing a project on a very steep site, which he describes as “one of the most challenging sites for us”, he brought in extra topsoil to help even out some terracing, but the soil was from a neighbouring site and he essentially worked with the steep slope, rather than fighting it. [see attached pictures 6279 and 6245]

“Stormwater feeds into the top pond, which cascades down to the bottom billabong, and both are planted with indigenous aquatic species that help purify the water, create habitat and brings good indigenous seed to the area.

“Having water used in the landscape also creates habitat and has a cooling effect, as well as the aesthetics.”

His personal rule is to try and source all materials – rocks, mulches, decking and plant material – from within an 100km radius.

“Ideally, it’s best to consult with a landscape designer from day one to zone off and protect key trees. Also I like to design landscapes around the building so you are getting a functioning, sustainable design, and a seamless connection between the landscape and the building.”

Queensland-based company Sustainable Buildings has gone one step further to combine building and landscaping in one package.

Its landscaping manager, Tobias Volbert, believes that a holistic approach to the site – instead of planning a building first then garden as an afterthought – ensures a connectivity between the two.

“It avoids fragmentation,” he said. “It also means we can do any earthmoving in one go while the machinery is on site.

“We can better consider how the wind moves through the site and put in place an integrated water management plan by, say, using the water coming down the driveway to water the garden or putting water tanks under the building.”

With a master’s degree in Landscape Architecture from Hanover University, Germany, Volbert was intrigued by how some Australians view stormwater.

“Many people want to get it off site as soon as possible, then you see them coming out later with their hoses; we try to slow down the water flow to keep the water on the property for as long as possible because that makes so much more sense in drought environment.”

Dislike of the one-size-fits-all approach to building is a sentiment Volbert shares with garden designer Wendy Clarke.

“On a small slope they’ll just cut and fill without thinking about using the house afterwards,” an exasperated Clarke said. “The number of times I come across a house with a steep drive that’s impossible to get a pram up and cars are bottoming out.

“A slope is lovely to work with – it doesn’t have to be battled and contained.”

Clarke also advises builders and renovators to consider outdoor areas when planning doorways.

“You can end up with an area you don’t engage with because it’s not visible from the house, or an area of house you can look out on but can’t access.

“If you have a house that fits in with the block, you feel like your house is connected to the site rather than just stuck on it.”

STARTING FROM THE TOP

Even where the topsoil has been left, heavy machinery may have compacted it and any leftover cement, lime or mortar will have increased its alkalinity, so some soil first aid may be needed.

Test your soil first. Not only will you know what you are working with in the future but, by testing a patch near the house and another in an undisturbed area, you can gauge whether you need to correct its pH, too.

Acidity can be increased by adding compost or, for more instant or localized results, by adding iron chelates.

Garden lime can be used to increase alkalinity.

Thick clays can be made more friable by digging and watering in gypsum, which does not affect the pH.

After that, getting air and organic matter into the soil are the key goals. The easiest way is to dig in green mulch or compost.

Organic matter in the soil will:

  • Bind soil particles together, creating stability
  • Help the soil absorb plant nutrients such as calcium, magnesium and sodium
  • Significantly increase the soil’s water-holding capacity, especially in sandy soils.
  • Can increase the drainage of clay soils.

“It can be hard work and it takes time,” SGA-accredited designer Wendy Clarke says. “You have to keep digging in compost and mulch and waiting for the worms to come. Then you know you’ve got it right.”

Give Sustainable a call NOW on (07) 3201 1177 to talk to your highly awarded experts in sustainable home design and construction and start planning your new sustainable home today!

Individual Home at The Gap

The heavily vegetated block was previously home to a bush-walking track, which was used as the line for the original cut keeping the cut as minimal as possible on the site. The home has been designed to completely complement its bush setting, reflecting its relaxed and peaceful feel. After journeying up the driveway, the first vision of the home is breathtaking. The feature stonewall sets the ambience for the home – tranquil and working in harmony with its surroundings

Green Architecture

Flooded with natural light and ventilation, there is a large focus on the passive elements of the beautiful site and its form. A pool was created to play a major part in the passive ventilation of the home. Water storage has been incorporated underneath the pool, with separate rainwater tanks under the house for. This means that the residents do not have to rely on water supplies from local council, saving money on rates and allowing the house to utilise resources provided by the natural environment. The home also features a domestic sprinkler system, drawn from the pool, to fight any fires that enter the bush zone.

Individual Home at Brookwater

The Brookwater Design Studio features in the prestige Brookwater development which is located in Brisbane’s leafy western suburbs. Read below about one of the Sustainable Buildings in Brisbane.

The spectacular site is the inspiration for this striking Designer Home, with the dramatic slope of the terrain providing the basis for the innovative architectural Design. The site also offers passive solar and cooling elements and maximum use is made of these to enhance living conditions while making it economical and energy efficient home.

A key philosophy in developing this project was to always touch the earth lightly so as to disturb the least amount of soil in cut and fill. The Brookwater Design Studio reflects this by creating an important physical connection to the earth with a masonry blade wall running the length of the building, projecting out in a radius to fully capture the spectacular views and the magnificent nearby golf course.

Sustainable re-used the soil extracted from the foundations within the site to create the least possible disturbance to the surrounding environs.

The project was built with the belief that a home should be a monument of individualism, a place of refuge and also a solid family foundation. The Brookwater Design Studio reflects these beliefs by consisting of as few rooms as possible without becoming one large common room.

The Brookwater Design Studio’s colour schemes are inspired by the local native area and reflect the belief that colour inspiration derived from nature provides the most pleasing and timeless exteriors and interiors. This is one of the interesting factor of sustainable buildings.

The Brookwater Design Studio is Sustainable’s biggest award-winning development to date, see all awards here.

Phone: (07) 3201 1177