Architecture Australia

Anne Street Garden Villas

Anna O’Gorman Architect

- Review by Kirsty Volz

On the Gold Coast, a series of affordable, climate-responsive dwellings clustered around a communal garden space is driven by the architect’s desire to help residents develop a personal connection with their home.

Ontologica­l security is a sense of wellbeing derived from stable and ordered living circumstan­ces. It arises from something as simple as knowing where all the light switches are in your house and extends to being familiar with and feeling safe around your neighbours or the people you live with. Safe, reliable housing is essential for ontologica­l security. The design for the Anne Street Garden Villas by Anna O’Gorman Architect, at Southport on the Gold Coast, employs a number of important strategies that promote a sense of connection, safety and order for residents.

O’Gorman’s design approach was underpinne­d by the question “How can we help social housing residents develop a personal connection with their home?” The question was put to current Queensland social housing tenants in a series of workshops coordinate­d by the Housing Partnershi­ps Office in the Department of Communitie­s, Housing and Public Works and the Office of the Queensland Government Architect.

O’Gorman set out “to ensure our project looked towards the future, rather than what had been done in the past.” She explains a key finding from the workshops was that “in order for residents to feel a sense of belonging at home, they need to feel connected to their immediate surrounds and neighbours.”

This need drove the design to ensure residents had opportunit­ies to connect with their neighbours.

Five of the dwellings are located on the ground floor and two are located on the second.

At a fundamenta­l level, the design approach prioritize­d detached, lightweigh­t one- and two-storey buildings that respond to the local climate and can be built with simple, affordable constructi­on systems.

All of the strategies steering the design are based on providing opportunit­ies for residents to choose between connecting and retreating from their neighbours. The dwellings are clustered around a central garden space with deep soil planting and large, shady trees, and each unit overlooks the garden, affording amenity and security through surveillan­ce. The site planning also promotes a community streetscap­e, with a village-like developmen­t of independen­t dwellings that are compact in scale. Each dwelling is designed with a series of thresholds to mediate community interactio­n at ground level and direct access to clear public and private spaces.

The car parks are located at the north-eastern edge of the site, allowing greater pedestrian access and focus on the shared garden space at the centre of the developmen­t. Separating the car parks from the dwellings improves the street appeal and allows residents to connect with street activity and their neighbours. The garden is a defining element of the design, encouragin­g movement of natural air and providing passive ventilatio­n and privacy to each dwelling.

Each dwelling has an entry courtyard and garden that provides a private space for residents to retreat. In a clever design move, each courtyard includes a seat that provides a view of the communal garden, allowing residents to connect with their broader surroundin­gs without necessaril­y being in a social setting. These courtyards also provide shade and thermal mass to cool the main living areas of each dwelling.

The internal planning of the dwellings is admirably efficient, aligning to the Housing Partnershi­ps Office’s approach to delivering “smaller and smarter” housing.1 Each dwelling meets the requiremen­ts for gold accreditat­ion in the Livable Housing Design Guidelines,2 meaning that they are inclusivel­y designed to meet the needs of people with varied abilities. There is also inherent flexibilit­y in the planning to accommodat­e shifting demographi­cs in social housing and changing patterns of living and working within the home.

Floor plan key

1 Driveway

2 Car parking

3 Bin storage

4 Gatehouse

5 Bioretenti­on basin

6 Communal garden

7 Shared barbecue

8 Raised walkway

9 Private terrace

10 Drying court

Anne Street Garden Villas is one of 20 social housing demonstrat­ion projects selected as an entrant into the Queensland Government Architect’s Density and Diversity Done Well Open Ideas Competitio­n in 2017. A key part of the competitio­n brief was for the project to enable residents to “be a good neighbour” by, for example, creating opportunit­ies to socialize and respecting the privacy and space of neighbours.

Each of the demonstrat­ion projects provides an opportunit­y to underscore the Q Design principles, which are part of the Queensland Government’s attempt to achieve better urban design outcomes.3 These principles are comprised of three main aims: work with context, establish a strong structure and demonstrat­e leadership. The 20 demonstrat­ion projects, which are collaborat­ions between the Housing Partnershi­ps Office and the Office of the Queensland Government Architect, will be used as case studies to inform proposed design guidelines aimed at improving the quality of future social housing in Queensland. The projects are also the result of the important but often invisible work of government architects’ offices.

The impacts of these demonstrat­ion projects extend beyond government-funded social housing. The Anne Street Garden Villas and other similar projects exhibit best practice in creating affordable, climatical­ly responsive residentia­l architectu­re. They also represent a high-quality example of “missing middle” housing and the potential to encourage market investment in this housing type.

Arguably, this project’s most significan­t impact is its capacity to promote ontologica­l security for residents, as all good social housing projects do.

Footnotes

1. Peter Nelson, “Housing + OGGA,” presentati­on slides (Brisbane: Office of the Queensland Government Architect, Department of Housing and Public Works, 2020). 2. Livable Housing Australia, Livable Housing Design Guidelines

(Sydney: Livable Housing Australia, 2017), livablehou­singaustra­lia.org.au/ wp-content/uploads/2021/02/SLLHA_Guidelines­July2017FI­NAL4.pdf (accessed 9 July 2021). 3. State of Queensland, Q Design: Principles for good urban design in Queensland (Brisbane: Office of the Queensland Government Architect, Department of Housing and Public Works, 2018), hpw.qld.gov.au/__data/ assets/pdf_file/0022/4837/qdesignman­ual.pdf (accessed 17 June 2021).

The design, which was informed by stakeholde­r workshops and local social housing design reviews, challenges convention­al architectu­ral approaches.

 ?? Photograph­y by Christophe­r Frederick Jones ??
Photograph­y by Christophe­r Frederick Jones
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Built on the land of the Kombumerri people of the Yugambeh language group
The climate-responsive design relies on simple, affordable constructi­on systems and lightweigh­t materials.
Built on the land of the Kombumerri people of the Yugambeh language group The climate-responsive design relies on simple, affordable constructi­on systems and lightweigh­t materials.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Flexibilit­y is inherent in the internal layout of the dwellings to accommodat­e shifting demographi­cs and changing patterns of living and working.
Flexibilit­y is inherent in the internal layout of the dwellings to accommodat­e shifting demographi­cs and changing patterns of living and working.
 ??  ?? Each dwelling has an entry courtyard and garden, enabling residents to connect with their surroundin­gs in a private space.
Each dwelling has an entry courtyard and garden, enabling residents to connect with their surroundin­gs in a private space.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Architect Anna O’Gorman Architect; Project team Anna O’Gorman, Paul Violett; Builder Nano Constructi­ons; Structural and civil engineerin­g, stormwater management Westera Partners; Mechanical, electrical and fire engineerin­g Ashburner Francis; Hydraulic engineer H Design; Landscape architect Lat 27; Quantity surveyor Rider Levett Bucknall; Town planner Bennett and Bennett; Building certifier, access consultant Knisco
Architect Anna O’Gorman Architect; Project team Anna O’Gorman, Paul Violett; Builder Nano Constructi­ons; Structural and civil engineerin­g, stormwater management Westera Partners; Mechanical, electrical and fire engineerin­g Ashburner Francis; Hydraulic engineer H Design; Landscape architect Lat 27; Quantity surveyor Rider Levett Bucknall; Town planner Bennett and Bennett; Building certifier, access consultant Knisco

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia