An Antipodean Attica
Jane Franklin’s Greek temple in Van Diemen’s Land, the role of the architect James Blackburn, and the reaction of Hardy Wilson Read more
Asbestos Cement in Australia
The controversial history of the importation, the local manufacture, and use of asbestos cement, up to the time when its tragic effects became evident. Read more
Building in the Docklands
This deals with the site of John Batman’s house and Batman’s Hill more generally, the Yarra wharves, the West Melbourne Swamp, the early railway buildings and the Queen’s Warehouse. Read more
Composite Vernacular Constructions
Vernacular building is the building for ordinary people, constrained by the practicalities of environmental conditions and physical materials, and influenced by traditional culture, but not mediated by professional architects and engineers. Read more
Secret History of Victorian Modernism
These twenty-three letters and fragments are a sort of cross-section of the architectural world of Melbourne in 1952, but not so much a clinical microscope slide as a sort of cheerful, scurrilous laceration. Read more
The Barwon Park Aesthetic
Barwon Park is a gaunt and graceless hulk of a building, quite divorced from the mainstream of Victorian villas and mansions, and this is in fact its great point of interest. Read more
Brunswick Street Lost and Found
Studies of settlement and life in the heart of Melbourne’s first suburb. Read more
The Settler’s Cottage
The house at 1070 Mount Alexander Road was possibly built in about 1860, of recycled materials, including panels which may be part of a prefabricated structure. Read more
Wright, Griffin and Natco
This paper clarifies the origins of Walter Burley Griffin's 'Knitlock' construction and its putative relationship to Wright's "Textile Block". Read more
The Postwar Housing Solution
The housing crisis in Australia after World War II gave rise to local prefabrication and to the importation of buildings on a massive scale. The local industry drew partly upon experience gained during the war. The importation was from Britain and a number of European countries, but not at all from Asia or America. Read more
Lehmwickel
Lehmwickel, or earth wrapping, is a traditional German and northern French building technique of medieval or earlier origins, which was taken by German settlers to Latvia, Hungary, Rumania, the United States, Brazil and Australia. Read more