architecture

Sustainable House Day '14 - Billabong Houses open by Julian Rutt

One of the Billabong Houses is open for 2014 Sustainable House Day!

Started in 2001, Sustainable House Day is a national day opening the most environmentally progressive homes to the public. To quote the website:

On Sunday 7 and 14 September, you have the opportunity to tour an amazing array of everyday Australian homes all built and created around the ideal of reducing their footprint on the earth.

By partaking in Sustainable House Day you can tap into local knowledge to learn how to successfully integrate renewable energy, recycling, and other sustainable practices into your home and lifestyle. This unique event is a valuable resource for anyone looking for inspiration, ideas and the key to sustainable living. Our homeowners, sponsors and local sustainable groups look forward to sharing their knowledge with you.

For the first time, Sustainable House Day is being spread across two weekends, with one of the Billabong Houses open on both weekends. Demand was high last year with 6 hours of back to back tours.

There are all kinds of homes open for viewing, everything from brand new homes, to extensions and renovations of existing houses, check the SHD 2014 website for more information.

http://sustainablehouseday.com/item/julians-house/

First post, a sign of things to come, creativity and an upcoming event by Julian Rutt

Welcome to my first post!

Here in this blog section, I aim to provide a little bit of a point of discussion about Adelaide architectural, design and urban happenings, built-environment sustainability issues all local  national and global, architectural imagery (given indoors is where we spend most of our time and as increasing amounts of people move to urban centres) and of course only the most interesting of happenings at Lumen...

Cities are often seen as the scourge of the environment, taking up arable land, promoting car use and resource consumption, but they shouldn't necessarily be seen so negatively - given much of the world's population now live in cities, cites are now the crucible for environmental change, where the biggest bang-for-buck can occur and where architects and urban professionals working in the built-environment can make the biggest change. Lately, Adelaide has been witness to some kind of design/urban/transport renaissance that was so sorely needed. With a very large ecological footprint per capita and a very car-centric transport system in favour for decades, recent years have seen elements of the creativity of the Dunstan era when Adelaide stood out as the place to be living in Australia - following Melbourne's revitalisation of its laneway links, testing Copenhagen-like bike infrastructure and an outcome/design-led focus being given to city developments over the bottom-line bean-counting driven process of times past - Adelaide is at somewhat of a crossroads, between those who want Adelaide to become more of a globally relevant city, and those who would seek the status quo keeping the car as our primary source of transport (despite the looming issue of peak oil).

 

In any case this is about quality over quantity and leads me into the guts of this first post... So I'm helping to give a talk to members of the Institute of Architects soon about the reasons architects should use professional photography to document and showcase their work. As someone who has spent a few years on architecture award juries, it is quite noticeable when architects use non professional photographers/themselves to photograph buildings. While there is debate on where South Australian architecture fits within national fee rates, considering the time spent designing, documenting and then administering a building's construction, there is little reason that there should not be the effectively tiny proportion of the total fees put aside for professional images of the work. Photography at times seems even worse hit by the 'everyone is a professional' issue that architecture suffers (with everyone watching anything from Grand Designs to The Block) in that many buying a Digital SLR camera often feel like a professional they once wouldn't have dared when it was all captured on much-more expensive and less-forgiving film. So combining two of my great loves, architecture and photography, I'm aiming to help show architects why they need professional photography, and how to take better photos of architecture when they travel with well-known Adelaide Architectural photographer David Sievers presenting the seminar, at the SA Chapter of the Institute of Architects, Thursday 19th June. Drinks and refreshments provided!