Houses

Courtyard House

BY CHROFI

- by Chrofi

New house Mungo Brush, NSW

While it may not be a well-known fact, prefabrica­ted houses have been an integral part of Australia’s built environmen­t since the early days of European colonizati­on. The first known prefabrica­ted houses in Australia were made in Sydney in 1804 for shipping to Newcastle and Van Diemen’s Land (present-day Tasmania). By the middle of the nineteenth century, prefabrica­ted houses were being packed and shipped from different parts of the world and assembled in emerging settlement­s across south-east Australia. Given this early and significan­t presence of prefabrica­tion within the Australian housing industry, you might have thought that this mode of constructi­on would be far more establishe­d than it actually is. However, numerous factors worked against the developmen­t of prefabrica­tion within Australia, namely market perception and a lack of good design– build integratio­n. Nonetheles­s, slowly but surely, the architectu­rally designed prefabrica­ted house has re-emerged in Australia. Courtyard House, a collaborat­ion between architectu­re practice Chrofi and prefabrica­ted constructi­on specialist Fabprefab, is a case study of how advanced building manufactur­e and good design can propel this industry out of the fringes and into the mainstream.

Courtyard House is not underpinne­d by the typical client–architect relationsh­ip. In this instance, the client was Fabprefab, a company that specialize­s in producing highly crafted prefabrica­ted houses.

The project was conceived as a prototype to test the potential of combining award-winning architectu­ral design expertise and the innovative processes of prefabrica­tion. Fraser Mudge, lead architect on the project, says that the aim of this collaborat­ion was to “lift the ambition of the prefab home.” Prefabrica­ted builds have a public image problem – when you look at them, “they’re so obviously a prefab,” explains Fraser – and this has hindered the acceptance of this mode of design and constructi­on, particular­ly in Australia. One of the main objectives of this prototype was therefore to show that a house that has been made in a factory and shipped to site can be designed just as well as another house that has taken nearly a year to build on-site from scratch. With this objective in mind, the house certainly does not disappoint.

Thrown into the design challenge was the off-grid nature of the project. The house is completely powered by solar energy – with enough power to run an airconditi­oning unit – and has its own drinking and wastewater treatment. This literally means it could be placed on any site anywhere in Australia. The site for Courtyard House is located in the beach-side forests of the New South Wales Central Coast. The house has been designed to meet the Bushfire Attack Level ratings for the fire-risk zone, and these components have been integrated into the design in a very considered manner.

This is one of the clear benefits of this project: its prefabrica­tion ensures that the quality of the build is controlled and compliant, and its architectu­ral design means that aspects such as ember screens and shutters are integral to the design. Nothing here is an afterthoug­ht.

Ed Callanan, constructi­on manager at FabPrefab, explains that the entire house – comprised of four modules – was built in the factory near Gosford. Everything was pre-installed, from the joinery and tiling to the appliances. This means that the whole process was faster and more cost-effective than on-site constructi­on, and with a higher-quality built result than might otherwise have been achieved. Fraser acknowledg­es the build quality as one of the biggest selling features of the project: in remote or isolated locations, it often is not possible to be certain of the quality of the trades that come on-site, making the end quality much harder to control. What you get with a house such as this is “certainty of design and certainty of build,” and this really is where the big promise of this type of project lies. Because the house is modest in size and 95 percent complete when it comes to site, customers can have a house of high-quality design and constructi­on for far less than the cost of a bespoke design and build, regardless of whether they are in an urban or rural setting. Both Fraser and Ed are adamant that prefabrica­tion is a far more cost-effective manner of building.

The house is not large in terms of square metres, yet it feels very open and spacious. The exterior and interior spaces are linked visually in the living areas, while the sleeping zone is more contained and protected. Australian timbers have been used to give the house the classic Australian “homestead feel.”

The potential of architectu­rally designed prefabrica­ted housing is not necessaril­y a silver bullet to the problems faced by those involved in the housing industry, be they clients, designers, legislator­s or builders. However, it does offer an alternativ­e to the unsustaina­ble, inefficien­t and costly paradigm of housing provision we are currently in. More than 170 years have passed since the first prefab boom came to Australia. Perhaps, in the coming years, we will be on the cusp of a new prefabrica­tion revolution that will enable good design to be more accessible to more people.

Products

Roofing: Lysaght Klip-Lok 700 Hi-Strength in Colorbond ‘Dune’ External walls: spotted gum hardwood timber cladding in WOCA Exterior Oil Silver finish Internal walls: Plasterboa­rd Windows: Custom timber ventilatio­n panels and fixed glass panels

Doors: Alspec Proglide sliding doors; anodized stainless steel frames

Flooring: Big River engineered timber flooring in ‘Blackbutt’ Lighting: Lights from Euroluce Kitchen: Caesarston­e Fresh Concrete benchtop; custom joinery finished in Fenix

Verde Comodoro laminate; Bosch appliances

Bathroom: Parisi tapware; Academy Tiles and Surfaces penny round tiles

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 ??  ?? 05 A sliding screen enables the courtyard to be either intimate or open to the surroundin­gs.
05 A sliding screen enables the courtyard to be either intimate or open to the surroundin­gs.
 ??  ?? 04 Sited in a clearing, the building appears as a three-dimensiona­l object floating in space.
04 Sited in a clearing, the building appears as a three-dimensiona­l object floating in space.
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Chrofi
+61 2 8096 8500 info@chrofi.com chrofi.com
Project team Tai Ropiha, Fraser Mudge, Darryl Chandler Builder and client Fabprefab Engineer SDA Structures Building services consultant BSE Landscape design Somewhere Landscape Architects
Architect Chrofi +61 2 8096 8500 info@chrofi.com chrofi.com Project team Tai Ropiha, Fraser Mudge, Darryl Chandler Builder and client Fabprefab Engineer SDA Structures Building services consultant BSE Landscape design Somewhere Landscape Architects

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