Home Extension
3D printing has moved well beyond laboratory prototypes. Overseas, entire neighbourhoods have been printed using concrete extrusion systems, and families are already living in them. In Australia, the technology is […]
Read More →Remote work is now permanent for many Melbourne households, and the home office has shifted from spare room to core workspace. Proper acoustic design for a home office is no […]
Read More →Across Melbourne, residential construction has changed rapidly in the past five years. Labour shortages, rising material costs, and unpredictable weather have pushed build timelines out. Many homeowners now look for […]
Read More →Few building materials match rammed earth for natural beauty and thermal performance. In Melbourne, where we build in Climate Zone 6 with cool winters and mild summers, it offers real […]
Read More →Melbourne’s rainfall patterns are shifting, and new housing estates continue to expand into low-lying land across the west, north and south-east. As a result, flood-resilient home design in Melbourne has […]
Read More →Australians are reassessing how they build. Rising energy costs, stricter regulations, and carbon targets have pushed sustainable materials into mainstream discussion. In that shift, hempcrete construction in Australia has gained […]
Read More →For decades, the concrete slab has been Melbourne’s default foundation. It works well on many sites. But Victoria’s soil conditions are rarely simple. Reactive clay in the west, filled sites […]
Read More →Cross-laminated timber construction in Australia is moving beyond commercial offices and schools and into residential projects. Rising labour costs, tighter sustainability requirements under the National Construction Code, and demand for […]
Read More →Basements are common overseas but rare in Melbourne. Our reactive clay soils, variable water tables, and higher excavation costs make underground room construction in Victoria more complex than adding an […]
Read More →If your Melbourne home was built before 1990, it may contain asbestos. That is not a reason to panic, but it is a reason to plan carefully before any renovation […]
Read More →