Australian residential architectural styles#Victorian Italianate
{{Short description|Architectural styles}}
{{For|non-residential Australian architectural styles|Australian non-residential architectural styles}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{More citations needed|date=April 2018}}
File:Houses in Wool Street, Toowong, Queensland 01.jpg]]
Australian residential architectural styles have evolved significantly over time, from the early days of structures made from relatively cheap and imported corrugated iron (which can still be seen in the roofing of historic homes) to more sophisticated styles borrowed from other countries, such as the California bungalow from the United States, the Georgian style from Europe and Northern America, and the Victorian style from the United Kingdom. A common feature of the Australian home is the use of fencing in front gardens, also common in both the United Kingdom and the United States.
Climate has also influenced housing styles, with balconies and veranda spaces being more prevalent in subtropical Queensland due to the mild, generally warm winters experienced in the state. For many years, Australian homes were built with little understanding of the Australian climate and were widely dependent on European styles that were unsympathetic to Australian landscapes. In recent times, modern Australian residential architecture has reflected the climatic conditions of the country, with adaptations such as double and triple glazing on windows, coordination considerations, use of east and west shade, sufficient insulation, strongly considered to provide comfort to the dweller.
Another aspect of Australian suburbia is that the suburbs tend to have a combination of both upper middle class and middle class housing in the same neighbourhood. In Melbourne, for instance, one early observer noted that "a poor house stands side by side with a good house."Davison, Graeme. "The Past & Future of the Australian Suburb." Australian Planner (Dec. 1994): 63–69. This is somewhat less common today, with home renovations, gentrification and the teardown ("knock down, rebuild") method becoming more and more common in affluent suburbs, giving a broader distinction between wealthy and lower class areas. However, the teardown technique has led to home buyers purchasing land or older homes in poorer metropolitan areas and building extravagant homes on the land, which look out of place and excessive, failing to match with the remaining houses in the street.
Variation of styles
Because architectural styles have varied in Australia over the years (from villas to bungalows and brick renders), there is a slight inconsistency in the architectural flow of the suburban streets, with one writer noting that Australian housing styles tend to comingle and coexist awkwardly.{{cite book|last=Troy|first=Patrick|title=A History of European Housing in Australia|isbn=9780521777339|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2000}} This is less common in the United States of America and England, because most of the homes had been long established well into the 19th century and reflect a similar style in both regions. Home planners and architects in Australia have suggested adapting similar styles of new homes with the surrounding established homes to create a sense of uniformity.
{{Blockquote|text="In Australia, the artificial background of life is all highs and lows. A modernistic folly in multi-coloured brickwork may sit next door to a Georgian mansionette on one side and a sensible work of architectural exploration on the other." |author=Robin Boyd |source=The Australian Ugliness (1968)}}
History and styles
=Pre-colonial period ~40,000 BCE – 1788 CE=
File:Native Encampment by Skinner Prout, from Australia (1876, vol II).jpg
Indigenous Australians are traditionally semi-nomadic, rotating between different areas in conjunction with the seasons to harvest and maintain food-producing areas. They managed the land through controlled burning practices involving a biennial burning-off which stunted forest growth and encouraged crop germination.{{cite book |last=Pascoe |first=Bruce |date=2019 |title=Dark Emu |location=Broome |publisher=Magabala Books}}
The housing of the Eora people first encountered by Europeans in the Sydney region were shelters constructed of a semicircle of stick, covered with large sheets of bark which could be conveniently stripped off Melaleuca trees which grew profusely along waterways. Other types of simple structures were seen including lean-tos and in tropical regions raised sleeping platforms. Grass, leaves and reeds were used as a thatch where suitable bark was not available.
There are instances of Indigenous peoples constructing partially using dry-stone wall techniques in Western Australia.{{Cite web|url=http://home.vicnet.net.au/~aar/housing.htm|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20061030215615/http://home.vicnet.net.au/~aar/housing.htm|url-status=dead|title=The First Houses in Australia|archivedate=October 30, 2006}} The Aboriginal people also built dry-stone Fish Traps, of which the most extensive, ranging over 500 metres, is on the Barwon River at Brewarrina. Its age is unknown. It has been maintained and rebuilt after floods many times and is said traditionally to have been given to the local clans by the Creator Spirit.
It appears that in conjunction with such catchment schemes, there may have also been nearby sedentary settlements of people who maintained them. There is evidence at Lake Condah in Victoria of houses in conjunction with eel traps dating back about 8,000 years.Uncovering Australia. Sarah Colley. Published by Allen & Unwin, 2002. {{ISBN|1-86508-209-0}}
In January 2006 bushfires uncovered another nearby site of a village of stone houses that are large enough to have provided sleeping space for several families.{{Cite web|url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/worldtoday|title=The World Today with Sally Sara – ABC Radio|date=June 6, 2023|website=World Today}}
= Old Colonial period 1788 – c. 1840 =
Colonial architecture is the term used for the buildings constructed in Australia between European settlement in January 1788 and about 1840.
The first buildings of the British penal settlement in Sydney were a prefabricated house for the Governor and a similarly prefabricated Government Store to house the colony's supplies. Sydney was a tent settlement. Building anything more substantial was made unnecessarily difficult by the poor quality of spades and axes that had been provided and the shortage of nails.
The convicts adapted simple country techniques commonly used for animal shelters and the locally available materials to create huts with wattle-and-daub walls. So useful were the local acacia trees for weaving shelters that they were given the name Wattle. Some pipe clay was obtained from the coves around Port Jackson. Bricks were fired in wood fires and were therefore soft. Lime for cement was obtained by burning oyster shells.
The first imported roofing material was corrugated iron sheeting. Roofs of this type were to become part of the Australian vernacular. For many years imported roofing was in very short supply. Two local roofing materials were available- there were extensive reed beds near the Cook's river for thatching. There was also bark which could be peeled off a number of the indigenous trees in large sheets. Methods of heating and flattening the bark were used by the Aboriginal people and these were quickly assimilated by the convict builders.
The two most significant trees, both of which grew in the Sydney area, were the Melaleuca and the Iron Bark. The Melaleuca bark, having the texture of paper, could be peeled off the tree in layers up to {{convert|2|cm}} thick, a metre long and perhaps half a metre wide without serious damage to the tree. Although not particularly durable as exterior roofing, the material provided excellent insulation and was used for ceilings and lining the walls.
The resilient bark from the iron-bark tree was adapted as a major building material everywhere that such trees grew. It was widely used as a roofing material, was weatherproof, insulating and could last for thirty years. Houses of axe-hewn slabs with Iron-bark roofs continued to be built in rural Australia until WWII.
As better tools became available the Colonial builders became adept at working the extremely hard and durable timber of the native hardwood forests. The majority of houses were built of split logs rather than sawn timber. The technique employed for the construction of a wall was to chisel out a deep groove in a straight log, preferably of the local termite-resistant Cyprus pine which became the foundation. Split logs that had been adzed flat at the ends were then stood in the groove and another groove log was placed on top and slotted into place in a circular corner post. The gaps between the split logs were either packed with clay and animal hair or had narrow strips of metal cut from kerosene tins tacked over them. The interior could be plastered with clay, lined with paperbark or papered with newspaper, wrapping paper or calico. Cards, photographs, news clippings and commemorative items were often stuck directly onto the walls.
The technique of making durable hardwood roofing shingles was also developed. Where these shingles have been applied to brick houses, they have sometimes survived to the 21st century, covered by subsequent corrugated iron roofs.
In the earliest houses windows were usually small, and multi-paned with cylinder glass. When the cost of glass put it beyond reach of the home-owner, blinds of oiled calico were tacked across window openings in the winter months.
;Types of buildings
The simplest houses were of a single room, which, if the bread-winner prospered, became the kitchen to a more substantial residence, or conversely, became the living room with a lean-to kitchen added. Houses that grew piecemeal were generally asymmetrical, with the door leading into the original room.
Houses that were planned were generally symmetrical, and very simple, usually containing 2 to 4 rooms around a central hallway. The kitchen was frequently detached and entered from a rear verandah or covered breezeway where pantry or scullery might also be located. Fireplaces projected outwards from the walls of the house. Except in the case of some small inner-city Georgian row houses built of brick, houses generally had a verandah added to them, often on three sides.
One class of people who maintained the tradition of wattle and daub, with a bark roof was the squatters who did not have title to their land, and potentially had to move on every two years.
Very few 19th-century houses of wattle and daub or split timber have survived. A small number of split-timber cottages which later became kitchens may be seen adjacent to more substantial homes, generally painted to match the house and barely recognizable.
Most buildings erected in the first 50 years of Australian settlement were simple and plain. Convict huts, marine barracks, government stores and houses for officials were simple rectangular prisms covered with hipped or gabled roofs often with verandahs supported on wooden columns in the Classical manner. They were influenced in particular by the regulation British military buildings in India and other tropical locations.
At the time of the first settlement, Georgian architecture was the architectural vernacular in Britain. Craftsmen, including carpenters and plasterers were trained in the classic proportions associated with the Palladian style fashionable across Europe. Palladian ideals reveal themselves in some of the few larger homes of the Regency period such as Elizabeth Bay House. Neoclassism incorporating not only Greek but also sometimes Ancient Egyptian motifs, beginning in Europe about 1760, also influenced Australian architectural style. "Fernhill" at Mulgoa with its wide colonnaded verandah shows the influence of Neoclassicism.
As the Australian economy developed and settlements became more established, more sophisticated buildings emerged.
==Old Colonial Georgian style==
The vernacular style of the Old Colonial period. Buildings of this period were often rudimentary compared with British architecture at the time, but Georgian ideas of orderliness still influenced their shape and scale. Buildings built in this style often featured symmetrical facades, rectangular and prismatic shapes, and were well-proportioned.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 24 Similar to other British colonies in hot climates, the verandah became a common way to protect a house from the sun, and on single storey houses the Georgian verandah is usually a lower pitched extension of the main roof.
File:Elizabeth Farm-1.jpg|Elizabeth Farm Cottage, Rosehill; completed 1793; one of the oldest surviving residences in Australia
File:(1)Experiment Farm Cottage 119.jpg|Experiment Farm Cottage, Harris Park; completed 1795
File:(1)Old Government House 010.jpg|Old Government House, Parramatta; completed between 1799 and 1820
File:Brislington parramatta.jpg|Brislington, Parramatta; completed 1821
File:Hobart architecture.jpg|Ingle Hall, Hobart; completed 1814
File:St Matthews Anglican Church, Windsor, New South Wales 08.jpg|St Matthew's Anglican Church, Windsor; completed c.1822{{Cite web|title=HMS - ViewItem|url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=5045677|access-date=2021-10-21|website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Loder House Windsor-1.jpg|Loder House, Windsor. Completed 1834
File:Harrisford, 182 George Street Parramatta, New South Wales (2).jpg|Harrisford, Parramatta; completed 1820s
File:Joyce Farmhouse, Baulkham Hills.jpg|Joyce Farmhouse, Baulkham Hills; built 1794, rebuilt after fire in 1804
File:(1)Greenwich House.jpg|Greenwich House, Greenwich; completed 1836{{Cite web|title=HMS - ViewItem|url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=1920060|access-date=2021-09-29|website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Harper's Mansion front.jpg|Harper's Mansion, Berrima; built 1834-44
File:Oatlands Tasmania (31995607310).jpg|Oatlands Coach House, Oatlands
==Old Colonial Regency style==
File:Camden Park house.jpg|Camden Park House, Menangle; completed 1831; designed by John Verge.
File:Flickr - brewbooks - Panshanger (1).jpg|Panshanger, near Longford. Completed 1831.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 28
File:Aberglasslyn.JPG|Aberglasslyn House, Maitland. Completed between 1840 and 1842
File:(1)Rockwall in Potts Point.jpg|Rockwall House, designed by John Verge, in Potts Point. Completed 1837.
File:ElizabethBayHouse4.JPG|Elizabeth Bay House, Elizabeth Bay, also designed by John Verge. Completed 1838.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 31
File:Clarendon House Tasmania - front entrance.JPG|Clarendon House, Evandale; completed in 1838{{cite web |url=https://www.nationaltrust.org.au/places/clarendon/ |title=Clarendon |work=Explore: Places: Tasmania |publisher=National Trust of Australia |date=2020 |access-date=22 April 2020 }}
File:1 Horbury Terrace.JPG|Horbury Terrace, Sydney. Completed 1842.
==Old Colonial Grecian style==
{{main|Greek Revival architecture}}
In Georgian era Britain, Neoclassical architecture mainly drew its inspiration from Roman architecture until the rediscovery of Ancient Greek architecture beginning with James "Athenian" Stuart's 1758 trip to Greece.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 32–35{{Cite web|title=Greek Revival Architecture Explained|url=https://www.thespruce.com/greek-revival-architecture-4770079|access-date=2021-11-03|website=The Spruce|language=en}} By the 1830s the 'Greek Revival' was reaching the heights of its popularity, and had major influences on the development of the Regency style. Old Colonial Grecian buildings used Greek features such as the pedimented temple, porticoes, and Greek order columns such as the Doric and the Ionian.
File:Dalwoodh08 front wp.jpg|Dalwood House, Branxton; completed c.1833.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 33
File:Launceston House main image.JPG'Franklin House, Launceston; completed 1839.
==Old Colonial Gothic Picturesque==
{{main|Gothic Revival architecture}}
File:1 Lindesay1.jpg|Lindesay, Darling Point, c.1834.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 38
File:Government House, Sydney, Australia.jpg|Government House, Sydney Built between 1837 and 1843.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 36
File:(1)Carthona003a.jpg|Carthona, Darling Point. Built between c.1841-45.
= Victorian period c. 1840 – c. 1890 =
File:Government House, Sydney, Australia.jpg was the most sophisticated example of Gothic Revival architecture in the British colony.]]
During the Victorian era, the British Empire, including Australia, was yet heavily Anglican, and thus subject to the influence of the Oxford and Cambridge Movements, which favored the use of Gothic Revival architecture. Thus, while a local magnate may have built his home in a classical style, he would potentially fund a church in the Gothic style. Thus, during the 19th century, when Australia was expanding rapidly, two forms of architecture were very evident: Gothic and the Classical styles. Originally Gothic was for God, and the Classical for the man. Later a new "self-made" Australian began to emerge, unhindered by a classical British education dictating classical gentlemanly interests. This new self-made man (like his contemporaries in Britain) would often choose Gothic as the design for his home.
The great cathedrals of the Middle Ages during the Gothic period of ecclesiastical architecture formed the inspiration for this particular architectural style; not only in residential buildings, but in many commercial structures, churches and cathedrals built during this time. St. Paul's and St. Patrick's Cathedrals in Melbourne are excellent examples of the Gothic Revival period, often referred to as Victorian Gothic. Characteristics were: steeply pitched roofs often made of slate, narrow doors and windows resolving in a Gothic pointed arch at their height (known as lancet windows), diamond pane glazing to windows imitating a stained glass affect, and intricate parapets, often of a religious nature, with a cross. In non-terrace houses, the drawing room was often pulled forward, adding a bay window to the front of the dwelling.
File:Singapore Cottage, Collingwood.jpg still remain today.]]
The Victorian style in Australia can be divided into 3 periods: Early, Mid and Late. The period in its entirety stretches from 1837 to 1901 and was named after the then Queen, Queen Victoria. Early styles featured symmetrical layouts and façades, a centrally located front door and a hipped roof of corrugated iron, leading to a veranda on the façade. During the 1850s cast-iron lacework came to Australia, where it made its way on to Mid and Late Victorian Homes with much the same floor plan as the Colonial Style, a central hallway with a standard 4 rooms. Weatherboards were often used, although larger homes used red brick and blue stone. In the Mid Victorian Style, decoration began to gain popularity. The bullnosed veranda roof was introduced, sidelights were added either side of the front door, and terraced houses were springing up everywhere, containing parapets and detailed dividing walls between the property boundaries. Late Victorian Style homes had perhaps the most decorative features in all of the known architectural styles to date, which is often referred to as Boom Style. Towards the end of the Victorian era, timber fretwork was being used more and more, which led into the Edwardian/Federation Styles.
==Victorian Georgian==
{{main|Georgian architecture}}
An extension and continuation of the Old Colonial Georgian style into the Victorian era.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 42–45 Georgian style houses built before c.1840 are characterised as Old Colonial Georgian, while buildings between c.1840 and c.1890 are characterised as Victorian Georgian. Both styles are essentially the same, being characterised by symmetrical facades, simple rectangular and prismatic shapes, and orderliness. Six and eight paned windows were common. In the Inter-War period, architects such as William Hardy Wilson revived the Old Colonial Georgian style, leading to the Inter-War Georgian Revival.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 150–153
File:Newstead House-04 (2989554029).jpg|Newstead House, Brisbane. Built 1846.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 43
File:Wolston House, Wacol, Queensland 09.jpg|Wolston House, Wacol, Built 1852–53.
File:EscholParkNSWEPhouse.jpg|Eschol Park House, Campbelltown; completed 1858.{{Cite web|title=HMS - ViewItem|url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=1290023|access-date=2021-11-02|website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:(1)Georgian homes Denham Street Surry Hills.jpg|Terraces on Denham Street, Surry Hills. Completed 1858{{Cite web|title=HMS - ViewItem|url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=2420385|access-date=2021-09-29|website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Brough House on Church St in Maitland (1).jpg|alt=|Brough House, Maitland. Completed 1862
File:Grossmann House - A Photo Says It All Photography (c)-1.jpg|alt=|Grossmann House, Maitland. Completed 1862
File:Hurstmonceux 1874 Lewisham 1.png|Hurstmonceux, Lewisham, c. 1874.Sands Directory (1884), John Sands, Sydney
File:Burnie Club 20200826-001.jpg|Breckenborough, Burnie. Completed 1883.
== Victorian Regency ==
{{main|Regency architecture}}
As with Victorian Georgian architecture, the Victorian Regency style was a continuation of the Old Colonial Regency style into the Victorian era (c.1840 – c.1890).Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 46–49 The Regency style was a refinement of the Georgian style, with elaborations like a portico with columns at the front of the house.
File:Royal terrace carlton.jpg|Royal Terrace, Carlton. Completed 1857.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 47
File:SouthAustralia0003.jpg|Ayers House, North Terrace, Adelaide. Built c.1858-74.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 46
File:Victorian Terrace Houses, Melbourne, Australia.jpg|Cyprus Terrace, East Melbourne. Designed in 1868.[https://www.realestate.com.au/property-house-nsw-potts+point-137179986 Property House] realestate.com.au {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211102124711/https://www.realestate.com.au/property-house-nsw-potts+point-137179986 |date=2 November 2021 }}
File:(1)Jenner House Potts Point-2.jpg|Jenner House, Potts Point. Completed 1871.
File:Lower Fort Street (57-61), Millers Point.jpg|57-61 Lower Fort Street, Millers Point.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 48
File:(1) Admiralty House2.jpg|Admiralty House, Kirribilli
== Victorian Free Classical ==
{{see also|Neoclassical architecture}}In the Old Colonial era, buildings of the Old Colonial Grecian style attempted to emulate the refined elegance of ancient Greece. However, in the Victorian era, Australia's booming migrant society sought an architectural language to flaunt its newfound prosperity, and found it in an exaggerated Classical style that took inspiration from the "extroverted pomp of imperial Rome and the grandeur of the fully developed European Renaissance."Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 52 The Classical style embodied solidity, permanency, reason and rationality. There were two main sub-divisions of this style. The Victorian Academic Classical style involved strict and faithful interpretation of historical examples, and most examples of this style are non-residential, being often used for town halls, banks, and other public buildings. Buildings the Academic style were symmetrical in plan and massing, and involved correct application of one of the five architectural orders to determine proportions.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 52–55 However the restrictions of this style did not suit the ebullient attitudes of the era, and many buildings were built in the Victorian Free Classical style; which employed classical elements with little care shown towards the proper rules of the Academic style. Buildings in the Free style were often asymmetrical and combined elements of the classical language idiosyncratically, sometimes in combination with other styles.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 56–59
File:Werribee Mansion (4760501956).jpg|Werribee Park, Werribee; completed in 1877{{cite VHD|1207|Werribee Park|hr=1613|ho=2}}
File:Eildon Mansion, Grey Street, Melbourne - 2.jpeg|Eildon Mansion, St Kilda. Completed 1877.
File:Three storey terraces in drummond street carlton.jpg|Drummond Terrace, Carlton. Completed 1891.Drummond Terrace (9/10/2021), Victorian Heritage Database, Heritage Victoria
File:Earlsbrae1899.jpg|Earlsbrae Hall, Essendon
File:Caulfied grammar malvern.jpg|Valentine's Mansion, Malvern
File:Biltmore albert park.jpg|Biltmore apartments, Albert Park
File:(1)Randwick Lodge 032 (cropped).jpg|Corana and Hygeia Terraces, Randwick
File:Marsfield Curzon Hall 1.JPG|Curzon Hall, Marsfield
File:(1)Ilfracombe and Clovelly Avoca Street.jpg|IIfracombe and Clovelly Terraces, Randwick
File:(1)Verona.jpg|Verona, Randwick
File:KingsCross-Potts-Point.jpg|Terraces in Potts Point
== Victorian Mannerist ==
{{main|Mannerist architecture}}
{{Blockquote|text=In Australia, the Victorian Mannerist style takes is place between Victorian Academic Classical and Victorian Free Classical style, combining the scholarly rigour of the former with the permissiveness of the latter. |author=Richard Apperly, Robert Irving, & Peter Reynolds |source=(1989)|title=A Pictorial Guide to Identifying Australian Architecture; Styles and Terms from 1788 to the Present}}
A classical style that referenced the Italian Mannerist movement. Buildings in this style used classical elements in inventive and imaginative ways. Columns, pilasters, arches, and pediments were crammed into deep and richly modelled stucco facades.
File:Lalor house richmond victoria.jpg|Lalor House, Richmond. Circa 1888.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 66
File:Medley hall.jpg|Benvenuta, Parkville. Completed 1893.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 65
== Victorian Italianate ==
{{main|Italianate architecture}}
File:House, North Terrace in Adelaide circa 1907.jpg residence of Adelaide businessman and politician John Bagot in Adelaide, circa 1907]]
The Italianate style developed as a result of French painters who idealised the Italian landscape and turned it into their version of Arcadia. Their influence was long-lasting and eventually led to the Italianate architectural style of the 19th century. The style featured asymmetry and often, on grander residences, a tower of varying size. In Australia, the addition of a verandah, sometimes arcaded but later decorated with filigree cast iron, gave a regional flavour to the style.
File:Bishopscourt east melbourne.jpg|Bishopscourt, East Melbourne; completed 1853
File:Government_House_seen_from_street,_Brisbane,_Queensland,_2019,_01.jpg|Government House, Brisbane; completed 1865{{cite QHR|15050|Government House|600275|access-date=1 August 2014}}
File:Rippon Lea Estate, Victoria.jpg|Rippon Lea, Elsternwick, Victoria. Designed 1868 by Reed & Barnes. A Lombardic Romanesque version of the style in polychromatic brick.{{Cite web|date=2014-05-13|title=Newcastle Next: Jesmond House witness to history - photos|url=https://www.newcastleherald.com.au/story/2279593/newcastle-next-jesmond-house-witness-to-history-photos/|access-date=2021-11-04|website=Newcastle Herald|language=en-AU}}
File:Heritage Kamesburgh Gardens in Brighton.jpg|Kamesburgh, North Road, {{VICcity|Brighton}}, Victoria. Completed 1874.
File:Government House, Melbourne (8416384610) (2).jpg|Government House, Melbourne; completed in 1876.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 71
File:287 - Priory and Grounds - The Priory and Grounds (5045324b3).jpg|The Priory, Burwood. Completed 1877
File:Eynesbury 002.jpg|Eynesbury House, Kingswood; completed in 1881{{cite web |author=Iwanicki, Iris; Register Historian |url=https://data.environment.sa.gov.au/Content/Publications/11526_Research.pdf |title=Eynesbury House |work=Register of State Heritage Items: Item Evaluation Sheet |publisher=Department for Environment & Water|date=8 June 1982 |access-date=22 April 2020 }}
File:(1)St Josephs Village Auburn 043.jpg|Duncraggan Hall, Auburn. Built c.1884.{{Cite web|title=HMS - ViewItem|url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=1030005|access-date=2021-12-13|website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:(1)Glentworth House-1a.jpg|Glentworth, Ashfield. Built c.1886.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 72
File:(1)Mount Royal (Australian Catholic University) Strathfield-2.jpg|Mount Royal "Villa, Strathfield. Completed 1887
File:(1)Windsor Gardens-3.jpg|Windsor Gardens, Chatswood (1888){{cite NSW SHR|5045391|Windsor Gardens|hr=00571|fn=S90/02779 & NHC 860492|access-date=2 June 2018}}
File:(1)Italianate home The Avenue Randwick-2.jpg|Tayar, Randwick. Completed in the 1890s
File:(1)Italianate home Dutruc Street Randwick-1.jpg|Earlswood, Randwick, 'Boom Style' Italianate completed in 1891.
File:Myrnong Hall Acland Street St Kilda.jpg|Myrnong Hall, Acland Street, {{VICcity|St Kilda}}. Built c.1890.
File:(1)Italianate home Lang Rd.jpg|Walshome, Centennial Park
File:(1)Italianate mansion Strathfield-2.jpg|House in Strathfield
File:Epworth repatriation mansion richmond victoria.jpg|Epworth, {{VICcity|Richmond}}
== Victorian Second Empire ==
{{main|Second Empire architecture}}
Second Empire was preferred for grander mansions. For the rich, particularly in the wealthier parts of the larger metropolitan areas, the style evoked images of French aristocracy. Although rare, examples can be found in the bigger cities. Distinctive features include towers, quoining, mansard and slate roofs, square domes dormer windows, iron cresting and rich classical details. In the Australian setting, domestic interpretations of the style often combined filigree elements such as cast iron verandahs.
File:Labassa.jpg|Labassa, Manor Grove, Caulfield North
File:Marion terrace.jpg|Marion Terrace, Burnett Street, St Kilda
File:Goodrest corner leopold and domain road south yarra.jpg|Goodrest, Cnr Leopold and Toorak Roads, South Yarra
File:Stonnington mansion.jpg|Stonington, Glenferrie Road, Malvern
File:Mansion on anderson street south yarra.JPG|House, Pasley Street, South Yarra
File:Coffee Palaces in Queenscliff.jpg|Seaside apartments, Queenscliff
File:Adelaide-WaterhouseHouse-Aug08.jpg|Waterhouse House, Adelaide.
== Victorian Filigree ==
{{Main|Victorian Filigree}}
As housing developed in Australia, verandas became important as a way of shading the house. From the mid-19th century in particular, as people became more affluent, they built more elaborate homes, and one of the favoured elaborations was the filigree, or screen, of cast iron or wrought iron, or timber fretwork. This developed to the point where it has become one of the major features of Australian architecture. Many homes with this feature are also considered Italianate architecture, the filigree element being the cast iron balcony.
File:Melbournia terrace drummond street carlton.jpg|Melbournia Terrace, Carlton. Completed in 1877.
File:Tasma Terrace East Melbourne.jpg|Tasma Terrace, East Melbourne. Victorian Free Classical terrace with filigree verandahs; completed 1879. The headquarters of the National Trust (Victoria).Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 62
File:Holcombe Terrace drummond street carlton.jpg|Holcombe Terrace, Carlton; completed 1884. One of Australia's best examples of the residential filigree style executed in polychrome brick.{{Cite web|title=Holcombe Terrace {{!}} Melbourne Buildings {{!}} Adam Dimech|url=https://www.adonline.id.au/buildings/holcombe-terrace/|access-date=2021-11-10|website=www.adonline.id.au}}
File:Palma Rosa.jpg|Palma Rosa, Hamilton, Queensland. Andrea Stombuco, architect; completed 1887.
File:"Wardlow", Parkville, Victoria Australia (4596152014).jpg|Wardlow, Parkville, Melbourne; built 1888. Italianate mansion with canted verandah screens.
File:Kirkston at Windsor, Queensland.jpg|Kirkston, Windsor; completed 1889.
File:Cintra House 2009.jpg|Cintra House, Bowen Hills (1863 remodelled 1890){{cite QHR|14829|Cintra House|600054|access-date=1 August 2014}}
File:(1)Avonmore in Randwick.jpg|Avonmore Terrace, Randwick. Completed 1891.
File:Townhouses at Grange 2.jpg|Marine Terraces, Grange Beach (1884). A key example of the Adelaide-style, with three storeys of setback filigree verandahs.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 61
File:Old Terraces in Melbourne (6760448705).jpg|Terrace pair, South Yarra (1890–91) with specially cast "opera-box" balconies.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1994), pg 60
File:Ardmore residential gnangarra-1.jpg|Ardmore Terraces, Fremantle built c.1898.
File:Alpha Terrace, Launceston (late-1880s), Pic 1.jpg|alt=|Alpha Terrace, Launceston (late-1880s).
== Queenslander style ==
{{main|Queenslander (architecture)}}
The Queenslander style house is characterized by an all timber painted exterior, a timber stud frame. They are raised high on piles for flood protection, stylistic reasons and to create a multipurpose sheltered area under the house. The elevation can sometimes provide a cooling effect in hot climates. They have wide verandahs (often the length of the house and enclosed by shutters), and roofs are gabled and corrugated iron. The street facing view is often symmetrical. The NSW Queenslander is often smaller than the original classic Queenslander and is less decorative probably due to limited supply of delicate timber detail and trades-people to build them. It is sometimes combined with the Ranch style house.
From the 1840s, a specific style of building emerged in Queensland. The Queenslander style of houses are identifiable by large verandahs and large double doors which open onto these verandahs, stilts rising the house above ground level (particularly in older houses), metal roofs typically of corrugated design and the houses are always constructed of mostly wood.
Queenslander1.JPG|Federation-style Queenslander
Queenslander2.JPG|Inter-war Queenslander
Queenslander.jpg|Victorian era Queenslander
Queenslander House Brisbane1.jpg|A typical 'Queenslander' style house in Brisbane
Kilcoy Old Queenslander-01+ (374769341).jpg|An old Queenslander in Kilcoy
== Victorian Free Gothic ==
{{main|Gothic Revival architecture}}
The Gothic style gained favour from the early days of Queen Victoria's reign. Free Gothic became a popular choice for architects and their clients because it was not concerned with historical correctness and therefore gave them greater freedom in their designs. The style was much in vogue for religious buildings but was sometimes used in residential architecture as well.
File:(1)Gladswood House-A.jpg|Gladswood House, Double Bay. Sydney Built 1862–1864.
File:Abbey 2.jpg|The Abbey, Annandale.The Heritage of Australia, Macmillan Company, 1981, p.2/35 Completed 1882.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 83
File:Cloncorrick.JPG|Cloncorrick, Darling Point. 1884.
File:AshfieldNSWAmbleside.jpg|Ambleside, Ashfield. Built 1886–88.
File:Kenilworth1.JPG|Kenilworth, Annandale; completed 1889. Free Gothic with Romanesque influences.{{Cite web|date=2008-09-19|title=Annandale – the houses of John Young|url=https://localnotes.wordpress.com/2008/09/19/the-houses-of-john-young/|access-date=2021-11-04|website=Local Notes|language=en}}
File:51 - Tulloona - Front elevation of Tulloona. (5045319b1).jpg|Tulloona, Goonellabah. Completed 1896
== Victorian Rustic Gothic ==
{{see also|Gothic Revival architecture}}
The Rustic Gothic style developed out of a "cult of the picturesque" which largely focused on rural images and especially the picturesque rustic house, which became known as the cottage orne. In Australia, this style had a great appeal to British settlers who still carried with them a hankering for things English.
File:The Grange, Campbell Town, Tasmania.jpg|The Grange, Campbell Town. Completed 1847.
File:(1)Greycliffe House-Sydney.jpg|Greycliffe House, Vaucluse. Completed {{Circa|1852}}.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 90
File:Shafston_House.jpg|Shafston House, Kangaroo Point. 1852. Robin Dods{{cite QHR|15016|Shafston House|600241|access-date=1 August 2014}}
File:(1)Kirribilli House Kirribilli.jpg|Kirribilli House, Kirribilli; built 1855.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 91
File:13 James Street Richmond.jpg|13 & 15 James Street, Richmond. Completed 1857.
File:Glenfern east st kilda.jpg|Glenfern, St Kilda East. Completed 1857.{{Cite web|last=john|date=2015-06-23|title=About Glenfern|url=https://writersvictoria.org.au/about-glenfern|access-date=2021-11-14|website=writersvictoria.org.au|language=en}}
File:157 Hotham Street East Melbourne.jpg|157 Hotham Street, East Melbourne. Completed 1861.
File:Ruessdale, c.1868, Sydney.jpg|Reussdale, Glebe. Completed 1868
File:StMarksRectory.JPG|St Mark's Church, Darling Point. Designed by Edmund Blacket. 1873.
File:(1)The Hermitage Vaucluse Sydney.jpg|The Hermitage, Vaucluse. Built 1870–78.
File:GarthowenLaunceston.jpg|Garthowen, Launceston. Built 1879–82.
File:Invercoe (1883), Battery Point 01.jpg|alt=Invercoe, Battery Point, Tasmania. Built 1883.[54]|Invercoe, Battery Point. Built 1883.{{Cite book |last=Andrews |first=Brian |title=Australian Gothic |publisher=Melbourne University Press |year=2001 |isbn=0522849318 |pages=21}}
File:View-from-rona 02.png|Rona, Bellevue Hill. Built 1883.
File:(1)Restored home Oxford Street Woollahra.jpg|House in Woollahra
== Victorian Tudor ==
{{main|Jacobethan}}
The Tudor style grew out of a nostalgia for older English concepts, particularly focused on the days of Queen Elizabeth I and Henry VIII. Its role in Australia began when the English architect Edward Blore designed Government House in Sydney in 1834. The style spread all over Australia and also influenced later styles like Federation Queen Anne and Inter-War Old English.
File:Abercrombie House, Bathurst (cropped).jpg|Abercrombie House, Bathurst. Completed 1878.
File:Swifts Side View.jpg|Swifts, Darling Point. Designed in 1882, this house later became the official residence of the Catholic Archbishop of Sydney.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 86
File:Toorak_House_(2009).jpg|Toorak House, Brisbane, remodelled 1891{{cite QHR|14991|Toorak House|600216|access-date=1 August 2014}}
= Federation period c. 1890 – c. 1915 =
{{main|Federation architecture}}
The Edwardian style was named after King Edward (1901–1910) at the time, and was the predominant style in the United Kingdom and its colonies. The style draws on elements of the Victorian era and the earlier Queen Anne style of the early 18th century. The Edwardian style coincided with the Federation of Australia. Thus, the Federation style was, broadly speaking, the Australian version of the Edwardian, but differed from the Edwardian in the use of Australian motifs, like kangaroos, the rising sun (of Federation), and emus, Australian flora and geometric designs. Some of the most recognisable Federation/Edwardian features include red brick exteriors with embellished wood detail known as fretwork. Cream painted decorative timber features, tall chimneys were all common. Stained glass windows towards the front of the home became increasingly popular during this period. Internally, Victorian-era features were still evident, including plaster ceiling roses and cornices and timber skirting and architraves. Federation style depicted a Tudor type look, especially on gables, and Edwardian gave a simpler cottage look. Terracotta tiles or galvanised iron are generally used for roofing, which is designed with a steep pitch. The gable ends and roof eaves often feature ornate timber brackets, and timber detailing and fretwork are a common inclusion on verandahs.{{cite news |url=https://www.domain.com.au/advice/edwardian-architecture-in-australia/ |title=Edwardian architecture in Australia |author=Thompson, Jacqui |work=domain.com.au |access-date=29 September 2017}}
Some{{who|date=September 2017}} consider that this style was the Federation version of the Queen Anne style. Other styles during this period were Federation Academic Classical, Federation Free Classical, Federation Filligree, Federation Anglo-Dutch, Federation Romanesque, Federation Gothic, Federation Carpenter Gothic, Federation Warehouse, Federation Free Style, Federation Arts and Crafts and Federation Bungalow. The names all indicated very similar styles with features so minute separating them. Out of the twelve Federation styles, however, only the following four were normally used{{according to whom|date=September 2017}} in residential architecture:
==Federation Queen Anne==
{{main|Queen Anne Style architecture}}
File:(1)Caerleon.jpg|Caerleon, Bellevue Hill, the first Queen Anne home in Australia. Built c.1885.
File:(1)Amesbury 033.jpg|Amesbury, Ashfield; an early elaborate example of the Queen Anne style. Built c.1888.
File:West Maling 2021 - 1.png|West Maling, Penshurst. Built c.1889.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 132
File:Hillcrest, 29 High St, East Launceston.JPG|Hillcrest, Launceston; built c.1900.
File:Federation style mansion in domain street south yarra.jpg|The Tilba, South Yarra. Completed in 1907.
File:Mount Wilga House 07.jpg|Mount Wilga House, Hornsby. Completed in 1914
File:Carlotta, (1909), Marrickville.jpg|Carlotta, Marrickville.{{Cite book|last=Davies|first=Paul|title=HCA 29 South Dulwich Hill Heritage Conservation Area (Dulwich Hill/Marrickville)|publisher=Marrickville City Council|year=2009|pages=7}} Completed 1909.{{Cite book |title=Sands Sydney, Suburban and Country Commercial Directory |publisher=John Sands |year=1858–1928 |location=Sydney}}
File:Landmark edwardian home on canterbury road middle park.jpg|Edwardian home in Albert Park
File:Burwood Appian Way 3.JPG|Alba Longa in the Appian Way, Burwood
File:'Olevanus' 6 Appian Way.jpg|Olevanus in Burwood
File:7 Thomas Street Coogee NSW.jpg|Residence in Coogee
File:36 Lyttleton Street East Launceston.JPG|alt=|House, Launceston. A combination of Queen Anne and Art Nouveau motifs.
File:Edwardian style house in Heidelberg, Victoria.jpg|Edwardian house, Heidelberg
File:(1) The Annery1.jpg|The Annery, Darling Point
File:Queens Bess.jpg|Queen Bess Row in East Melbourne, the largest Queen Anne-styled terrace in Melbourne
File:Edwardian terraces in park street south yarra.jpg|Federation Queen Anne terraces in Park Street, South Yarra
File:Queen Anne style house in Ivanhoe, Victoria.jpg|A Queen Anne residence in Ivanhoe
File:(1)Muston Street house.jpg|House in Mosman
==Federation Arts and Crafts==
{{main|Arts and Crafts architecture}}
The Arts and Crafts style came out of a movement to get away from mass-production and rediscover the human touch and the hand-made. The architectural style was characterised by rough-cast walls, shingles, faceted bay windows, stone bases, tall chimneys, high-pitched roofs and overhanging eaves. It was widely used in Australia during the Federation period.
File:Pibrac.JPG|alt=Pibrac, Warrawee; built 1888; architect, John Horbury Hunt.[59]|Pibrac, Warrawee; built 1888; architect, John Horbury Hunt.{{Citation |last=Freeland |first=J. M. |title=Hunt, John Horbury (1838–1904) |url=https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/hunt-john-horbury-3822 |work=Australian Dictionary of Biography |access-date=2023-06-09 |place=Canberra |publisher=National Centre of Biography, Australian National University |language=en}}
File:'Erica' 21 Appian Way-wide.jpg|alt=|Erica, Appian Way, Burwood, built 1908. William Richards, builder and designer.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 143
File:(1)Wahroonga house 107.jpg|Residence in Wahroonga
File:(1)The Crossways 056.jpg|alt=The Crossways, Centennial Park; completed 1908; architect, B. J. Waterhouse.[63]|The Crossways, Centennial Park; completed 1908; architect, B. J. Waterhouse.{{Cite web |title=$15m sale of historic Crossways smashes Centennial Park record - realestate.com.au |url=https://www.realestate.com.au/news/15m-sale-of-historic-crossways-smashes-centennial-park-record/ |access-date=2023-06-09 |website=www.realestate.com.au |language=en}}
File:Kama Llandilo Avenue Strathfield.jpg|alt=Kama, Strathfield; built 1911–1913; architect, Thomas Pollard Sampson.[64]|Kama, Strathfield; built 1911–1913; architect, Thomas Pollard Sampson.{{Cite web |date=2020-09-13 |title='Kama' 16 Llandilo Ave Strathfield |url=https://strathfieldheritage.com/streetnames/llandilo-ave-strathfield/kama-16-llandilo-ave-strathfield/ |access-date=2023-06-09 |website=Strathfield Heritage |language=en}}
File:Hornsby house 001a.jpg|Residence in Hornsby
File:Burwood Appian Way 10.JPG|St Ellero, Appian Way, Burwood, built c.1912-15. William Richards, builder and designer.{{Cite web |last=Ruwolt |first=Jon |title=Appian Way Burwood |url=https://www.federation-house.com/appian-way-burwood |access-date=2023-03-02 |website=federation-house |language=en}}
File:(1)house Shellcove Rd1.jpg|St Ange, Neutral Bay, 1918. B.J. Waterhouse, architect.{{Cite web |title=HMS - ViewItem |url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=2181213 |access-date=2023-03-02 |website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:(1)Keynsham at Neutral Bay.jpg|alt=Keynsham, Neutral Bay; built 1921; Frank Buckle, architect.[67]|Keynsham, Neutral Bay; built 1921; Frank Buckle, architect.{{Cite web |last=tooltwist |title=29 Shellcove Road Kurraba Point NSW 2089 Sold Prices and Statistics |url=https://www.propertyvalue.com.au/property/29-shellcove-road-kurraba-point-nsw-2089/16589807 |access-date=2023-06-19 |website=propertyvalue.com.au |language=en}}
File:Kulahea, May 2021 02.jpg|alt=Kulahea, Cottesloe; built 1922; architect, George Thomas Temple-Poole.[68]|Kulahea, Cottesloe; built 1922; architect, George Thomas Temple-Poole.{{Cite web |last=Ruwolt |first=Jon |title=Arts and Crafts Houses Regions |url=https://www.federation-house.com/arts-and-crafts-houses-australia |access-date=2023-06-09 |website=federation-house |language=en}}
File:Devon-4.jpg|alt=Devon, Centennial Park; built; Arthur Leslie Bayley, architect.[69]|Devon, Centennial Park; built {{Circa|1924}}; Arthur Leslie Bayley, architect.{{Cite web |title=HMS - ViewItem |url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=2420231 |access-date=2023-06-19 |website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:23 Waimea Road, Lindfield, New South Wales (2011-04-28).jpg|Waimea Road, {{NSWcity|Lindfield}}
File:Warrawee house 002.jpg|House in Warrawee
File:Craignairn.JPG|Craignairn, Wahroonga
File:15 Arnold Street, Killara, New South Wales (2010-12-04).jpg|Home, Arnold Street, Killara
==Federation Bungalow==
{{main|Bungalow}}
The bungalow style was usually a single-storey house with a prominent veranda, especially with the roof covering the veranda. It is seen as a transition phase between the Federation period and the California bungalow.
File:(1)Federation home Waverton-5.jpg|Federation Bungalow house in Waverton
File:(1)house Daisy Street Chatswood.jpg|Cottage on Daisy Street, Chatswood
File:(1)Federation cottage Kensington 002a.jpg|Cottage in Kensington
File:(1)Springfield-1.jpg|Springfield, Strathfield
File:7 Gerald Avenue, Roseville, New South Wales (2011-07-17).jpg|House in Roseville
File:'Capua' 8 Appian Way'- Federation Bungalow.jpg|Capua, Appian Way, Burwood
File:JoselandHouse.JPG|House in Wahroonga
File:'Amalfi' 2 Appian Way Burwood (Western wing).jpg|Amalfi, Appian Way, Burwood
File:(1)Federation cottage Strathfield-871.jpg|Residence in Strathfield
==Federation Filigree==
{{Main article|Federation Filigree}}
The filigree style was characterised by the creation of a screen as a prominent style at the front of the house. In the Victorian period, the screen was made of wrought iron, but in the Federation period it was made of wooden fretwork, which could be quite elaborate. It was widely used in Queensland as a way of providing shade and circulation of air for a home.
File:Woodlands, Killara, New South Wales 03.jpg|Woodlands, Killara. Completed 1884; verandah added in renovations beginning in c.1895.
File:Dilhorn House.jpg|alt=|Dilhorn House, Perth; completed 1897. Designed by Joseph John Talbot Hobbs.{{Cite web |title=Heritage Council of WA - Places Database |url=http://inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au/Public/Inventory/PrintSingleRecord/e6f62f5d-cadf-4437-bb09-6ca29fc521a3 |access-date=2022-07-24 |website=State Register of Heritage Places}}
File:237 Beaufort St, Perth2.jpg|alt=A row of Federation Queen Anne-Filigree grand-terraces, Perth (c.1897).[66]|A row of Federation Queen Anne-Filigree grand-terraces, Perth (c.1897).{{Cite web |title=Heritage Council of WA - Places Database |url=http://inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au/Public/Inventory/PrintSingleRecord/b358d778-950e-4273-8083-1dfd98458b5a |access-date=2023-05-10 |website=inherit.stateheritage.wa.gov.au}}
File:SydneyHome29.JPG|Edna, Favo, & Gaza; Glebe (c. 1899–1900), eclectic, red-brick terrace row.
File:(1)Federation Home Woollahra Sydney.jpg|Elvo, Woollahra, (c.1900). A Queen Anne style house with strong Federation Filigree elements.
File:(1)Wychwood Ku-Ring-Gai Avenue.jpg|alt=Glensloy, Turramurra (1901).[66]|Glensloy, Turramurra (1901).{{Cite web |title=HMS - ViewItem |url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=1880262 |access-date=2023-04-25 |website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Lamb_House_from_below.jpg|Lamb House, Kangaroo Point (1902-1908){{cite QHR|15017|Home|600242|access-date=1 August 2014}}
File:Wolverton, 2005.jpg|alt=Wolverton, Townsville. Built .[68]|Wolverton, Townsville. Built {{Circa|1903}}.{{Cite web |website=Department of Environment & Science|date=2015-06-09 |title=Wolverton {{!}} Environment, land and water |url=https://apps.des.qld.gov.au/heritage-register/detail/?id=600927 |access-date=2023-05-10 |language=en-AU}}
File:Cremorne,_Hamilton.jpg|Cremorne, Hamilton (1905-1906){{cite QHR|14993|Cremorne|600218|access-date=1 August 2014}}
File:(1)Hillview guesthouse Turramurra-2.jpg|alt=Hillview, Turramurra (1913)[67]|Hillview, Turramurra (1913){{Cite web |title=HMS - ViewItem |url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=1880260 |access-date=2023-04-25 |website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Queenslander house in Roderick Street, Ipswich, Queensland 01.jpg|alt=House, Ipswich, Queensland. Federation Filigree-style Queenslander with double access stairs.|Kameruka, Ipswich (1917). Federation Filigree-style Queenslander with double access stairs.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 110{{Cite web |title=Kameruka, 24 Roderick Street, Ipswich, 1964 |url=https://www.pictureipswich.com.au/nodes/view/3233 |access-date=2023-03-02 |website=Picture Ipswich}}
File:Federation Filigree house on Davey Street, Hobart.jpg|alt=|House, Davey Street, Hobart, with prominent fretworked verandah.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 109
File:Timber terraces in madden street albert park.jpg|Timber fretwork terraces. Madden Street, Albert Park
File:QueenslandBuilding0013.jpg|Home, Rockhampton
File:QueenslandBuilding0015.jpg|Building, Rockhampton
File:QueenslandBuilding0017.jpg|Home, Rockhampton
=Inter-war period c. 1915 – c. 1940=
Styles which existed during the 1915–40 period include Edwardian, Georgian Revival, Academic Classical, Free Classical, Bungalow, Mediterranean, Spanish Mission, Art-Deco, Skyscraper Gothic, Romanesque, Gothic and Old English.
==Inter-war Californian Bungalow==
{{Further|California bungalow}}
1915–1940
This style can almost instantly be recognised by the columns holding up a front veranda area. The name is almost self-explanatory: bungalow, a rugged type of home. This led to the belief that picket fences looked appropriate at the front fence, although originally they were not used. Darker colours were originally used but, as the years went by, new brighter paint served as a welcoming change to open up the spaces and brighten up the homes. Stone, brick and timber, earthy materials were used. A gable roof faced either the front or side always.
File:California Bungalow Kensington 002.jpg|Residence in Kensington
File:(1)Belvedere in Cranbrook Ave-g.jpg|alt=Belvedere, Cremorne; built 1919; Alexander Stewart Jolly, architect.[78]|Belvedere, Cremorne; built 1919; Alexander Stewart Jolly, architect.{{Cite web |title=Belvedere {{!}} Heritage NSW |url=https://apps.environment.nsw.gov.au/dpcheritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=5045243 |access-date=2023-06-19 |website=Office of Environment & Heritage}}
File:(1)California Bungalow Edward Avenue Kingsford.jpg|House in Kingsford
File:(1)California Bungalow Sydney-4.jpg|House in Kensington
File:Californian Bungalow style house in Preston, Victoria.jpg|Californian Bungalow, Preston
File:Belmont flats st kilda.jpg|Belmont Flats. Alma Road, St Kilda; completed 1923. Rare example of the bungalow style applied to an apartment building
File:(1)California Bungalow Sydney-3.jpg|House in Kensington
File:Neatly trimmed bungalow, Adelaide.jpg|Home in Glandore
File:11 Rogers Avenue Haberfield 094.jpg|House in Haberfield
File:Classic Adelaide bungalow.jpg|Bungalow with the characteristic verandah in Pennington
== Inter-war Old English ==
{{main|Tudorbethan architecture}}
The Old English style involved a certain nostalgia for English ways, and tended to draw on Tudor and such-like English styles harking back vaguely to the days of Henry VIII. It had a certain appeal for what was a predominantly Anglo-Saxon population at the time.
File:Bonnington.JPG|Bonnington, Bellevue Hill. Completed {{Circa|1935}}.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 204
File:Old English style Mosman 001.jpg|Old English style home in Mosman
File:(1)Tudor Revival home Turramurra.jpg|House, Pacific Highway, Turramurra.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 202
File:(1)Old English house Warrawee.jpg|Home in Warrawee
File:(1)Killara house 023.jpg|Home in Killara
File:SydneyBuilding0150.jpg|Home, Bexley Road, Bexley
File:Tudor Revival house, Adelaide (03).jpg|House, Unley Park
File:Gleniffer Brae Manor House Wollongong.JPG|Gleniffer Brae, Keiraville
==Inter-war Spanish Mission==
{{main|Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture|Mission Revival Style architecture}}
Distinctly recognised by twisted pylons to a porch area covering the front door, usually windows grouped in threes to the side of the front door area on simpler homes. The style was influenced by the American Spanish inhabitant influenced American Architectural styles. Walls were brick in accordance with council regulations at the time, with white or cream yellowish cream stucco finish and Spanish terra cotta tiles.
File:Boomerang113.JPG|alt=Boomerang, Elizabeth Bay; built from 1926 to 1928. Neville Hampson, architect; gardens and grounds by Max Shelley (possibly in conjunction with Hampson and A. J. Doust).[79]|Boomerang, Elizabeth Bay; built from 1926 to 1928. Neville Hampson, architect; gardens and grounds by Max Shelley (possibly in conjunction with Hampson and A. J. Doust).Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1994), pg 176
File:Belvedere flats St Kilda.jpg|alt=Belvedere Flats, St Kilda; completed in 1929. William H. Merritt, architect; J.R & E. Secull, builders.[80]|Belvedere Flats, St Kilda; completed in 1929. William H. Merritt, architect; J.R & E. Secull, builders.{{Cite web |title=The Esplanade (formerly Belvedere) |url=http://skhs.org.au/SKHSbuildings/10.htm |access-date=2023-06-17 |website=skhs.org.au}}
File:Marne court - 40-42 marne street south yarra.jpg|alt=Marne Court, South Yarra; built .[81]|Marne Court, South Yarra; built {{Circa|1929}}.{{Cite web |title=4/40-42 Marne Street, South Yarra VIC 3141 - Buxton 2022 |url=https://buxton.com.au/property/147723/440-42-marne-street-south-yarra-vic-3141/ |access-date=2023-06-17 |website=Buxton}}
File:Santa Barbara (2008).jpg|alt=Santa Barbara, New Farm; built from 1929 to 1930; Eric Percival Trewern, architect; D.F Roberts, builder.[82]|Santa Barbara, New Farm; built from 1929 to 1930; Eric Percival Trewern, architect; D.F Roberts, builder.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1994), pg 178
File:(1)Point Piper house 162.jpg|alt=Herewai, Point Piper; completed in 1930; Ross & Rowe, architects, most likely by H.E. Ross.[83]|Herewai, Point Piper; completed in 1930; Ross & Rowe, architects, most likely by H.E. Ross.{{Cite web |title=HMS - ViewItem |url=https://www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au/App/Item/ViewItem?itemId=2711582 |access-date=2023-06-17 |website=www.hms.heritage.nsw.gov.au}}
File:SydneyBuilding0101.jpg|alt=Santiago, Kingsford; architect and date unknown, completed before 1938[84]|Santiago, Kingsford; architect and date unknown, completed before 1938{{cite news |date=21 August 1938 |title=HOTEL SYDNEY RAID. |page=30 |newspaper=Truth |issue=2537 |location=New South Wales, Australia |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article169088450 |access-date=17 June 2023 |via=National Library of Australia}}
File:Beverley_Hill_apartments_South_Yarra_2.jpg|Beverley Hills Apartment Blocks, South Yarra (1930s) Howard Ratcliff Lawson
File:Siroccoroseville.jpg|alt=Siroccoro, Roseville; built 1938; Stanley Rickard, architect; Garetti & Son, builders.[85]|Siroccoro, Roseville; built 1938; Stanley Rickard, architect; Garetti & Son, builders.Ku-ring-gai Historical Society Inc. Newsletter (Jan-Feb, 2011), pg 7
File:Spanish Mission style house in Heidelberg, Victoria.jpg|Spanish Mission home in Heidelberg
File:Mission Revival style house, Bellevue Hill.jpg|Home, Bellevue Hill
File:Art deco apartment on alexandra parade south yarra.jpg|Apartment complex, Alexandra Parade, South Yarra
File:Las Palmas flats St Kilda.JPG|Las Palmas, St Kilda
File:Bourne place windsor.jpg|Bourne Place, Remodelled Terraces, Windsor
File:Santa Barbara 001.jpg|Santa Barbara, Pymble, Stanley Rickard, architect
==Inter-war Georgian Revival==
A revival of Old Colonial Georgian and Old Colonial Regency architecture. Largely spearheaded by William Hardy Wilson, and inspired by the Georgian revival architecture of the United States and Britain.
File:BurnsRoad70a.jpg|Georgian Revival house in Wahroonga
File:(1)Purulia(Fox Valley Rd)-2.jpg|alt=Purulia, Wahroonga; constructed 1912–13; architect, William Hardy Wilson.[79]|Purulia, Wahroonga; constructed 1912–13; architect, William Hardy Wilson.{{Cite web |title=Purulia {{!}} Heritage NSW |url=https://apps.environment.nsw.gov.au/dpcheritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=5045364 |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=apps.environment.nsw.gov.au}}
File:Eryldene2.JPG|Eryldene, Gordon. Completed 1914. Designed by William Hardy Wilson.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 150
File:Australian Prime Minister's Lodge.jpg|The Lodge, Canberra, completed 1927. Residence of the Prime Minister of Australia.
File:(1)Merrivale-1.jpg|Merrivale, Pymble. Completed 1930.{{Cite web|title=Pymble {{!}} The Dictionary of Sydney|url=https://dictionaryofsydney.org/entry/pymble|access-date=2021-11-03|website=dictionaryofsydney.org}}
File:House in Kirribilli Avenue, Kirribilli, Sydney, New South Wales 19.jpg|Hanover Court flats, Kirribilli.
File:Audley 004a.jpg|Audley, Warrawee. Completed 1935{{Cite web |title=Audley {{!}} The Dictionary of Sydney |url=https://dictionaryofsydney.org/building/audley |access-date=2022-03-17 |website=dictionaryofsydney.org}}
==Inter-war Functionalist==
{{see also|Functionalism (architecture)}}
A very modern looking style at the time, inspired by a German movement known as Bauhaus, representing functional and clinical architecture. Red or cream brick walls and concrete was also first seen. Steel-framed casement sashes, with larger panes of glass and terra cotta tiled roofs with a moderate pitch. The only featured part of the house included matching decorative front fences, and a featured roof affect. Buildings in this style sometimes were influenced by the Streamline Moderne style, itself a late branch of Art Deco architecture. Inspired by aerodynamic design, the style emphasised curving forms, long horizontal lines, and sometimes nautical elements, such as railings and porthole windows.
File:BurnhamBeeches1947.jpg|alt=Burnham Beeches, Dandenong Ranges; completed 1933; Harry Norris, architect[83].|Burnham Beeches, Dandenong Ranges; completed 1933; Harry Norris, architect.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1994), pg 184
File:Cairo housing.jpg|alt=Cairo Flats, Fitzroy. Completed in 1936; Best Overend, architect. Each apartment was designed to "provide maximum amenity in minimum space for minimum rent".[84][85][86]|Cairo Flats, Fitzroy. Completed in 1936; Best Overend, architect. Each apartment was designed to "provide maximum amenity in minimum space for minimum rent".{{Cite web |title=VHD |url=https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/2093 |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au}}{{Cite web |last=Sosnowski |first=Marika |date=2013-10-23 |title=The Cairo building, Fitzroy |url=https://overland.org.au/2013/10/the-cairo-building-fitzroy/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=Overland literary journal |language=en-US}}Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1994), pg 185
File:Woy Woy, Elwood in 1982.jpg|Woy Woy Flats, Elwood; built 1936. Mewton & Grounds, attributed to Geoffrey Harley Mewton.{{Cite web|url=https://storage.googleapis.com/wzukusers/user-23452835/documents/5a6808e5529ffPrHfNpF/St%20Kilda%20Ch%2042%20Woy%20VG%20comments%20080117.pdf|title=A Place of Sensuous Resort, Chapter 42, Woy Woy|last=Peterson|first=Richard|date=2009|website=Richard Peterson}}
File:Bellaire Flats St Kilda West.jpg|Bellaire Flats, St Kilda, built 1936. Mewton & Grounds, attributed to Geoffrey Harley Mewton. Blocky bands of two-tone brick soften the severe massing of these flats.
File:Masel Residence,Stanthorpe, 2015 03.JPG|alt=Masel Residence, Stanthorpe. Built from 1937 to 1938; Charles William Thomas Fulton, architect, Kell & Rigby, builders.[87]|Masel Residence, Stanthorpe. Built from 1937 to 1938; Charles William Thomas Fulton, architect, Kell & Rigby, builders.{{Cite web |last=Communications |first=c=AU; o=The State of Queensland; ou=Department of Environment and Science; ou=Corporate |date=2015-06-09 |title=Masel Residence (former) {{!}} Environment, land and water |url=https://apps.des.qld.gov.au/heritage-register/detail/?id=601552 |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=apps.des.qld.gov.au |language=en-AU}}
File:(1)Sutherland Road 001.jpg|alt=House, Cheltenham; built for the Barmby family.[98]|House, Cheltenham; built {{Circa|1938}} for the Barmby family.{{Cite web |last=heather |date=2021-11-03 |title=Houses by Street - Sutherland Rd Cheltenham |url=https://bchg.org.au/2021/11/03/sutherland-road-cheltenham/ |access-date=2023-06-19 |website=Beecroft Cheltenham History Group |language=en-AU}}
File:Chateau Nous.jpg|Chateau Nous, Ascot. Built {{Circa|1938}}. Architect, Douglas Francis Woodcraft Roberts.
File:One of the Forrest Fire Station residences.jpg|alt=Fire Station Residence, Forest; designed by Government architects E. H. Henderson and Cuthbert Whitley in 1939. Seven residences were attached to the station, each with their own garage[88]|Fire Station Residence, Forest; designed by Government architects E. H. Henderson and Cuthbert Whitley in 1939. Seven residences were attached to the station, each with their own garage{{Cite web |title=Canberra house {{!}} Forrest Fire Station precinct (1939) |url=http://www.canberrahouse.com.au/houses/forrest-fire-station.html |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.canberrahouse.com.au}}
File:Newburn Flats 2019.jpg|Newburn Flats, Melbourne. Completed in 1941; designed by Frederick Romberg and Mary Turner Shaw in 1939.
File:Glenunga Flats's front view.jpg|alt=Glenunga Flats, Armadale. Completed in 1941; Frederick Romberg and Mary Turner Shaw, architects. A hybrid of Functionalist components with folksy, 'European Chalet Style’ materials.[89]|Glenunga Flats, Armadale. Completed in 1941; Frederick Romberg and Mary Turner Shaw, architects. A hybrid of Functionalist components with folksy, 'European Chalet Style’ materials.{{Cite web |date=2022-09-07 |title=Around Armadale {{!}} Kay & Burton |url=https://www.kayburton.com.au/around-armadale/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.kayburton.com.au |language=en-US}}
==Inter-war Ashgrovian==
{{main|Ashgrovian}}
Originally specific to Queensland, the Ashgrovian style developed from the hipped bungalow style and was characterised by a frontage with a grand gable roof, often surrounded by secondary smaller gables behind, the smaller gables usually sheltering verandahs and sleep-outs. A staircase almost always dominated the front yard leading to the verandah.
= Post-War Period c. 1940 – 1960 =
== Austere ==
{{see also|Austerity}}
File:SAHT semi-detached cottages.JPG late 1940s semi-detached cottages, showing little exterior modification of the original design]]
The Austere style reflected the lack of availability of building materials and labour in the years following World War II.
=Waterfall (Art Deco) 1940–1950=
Fashionable modern houses of the thirties in the Streamline Moderne style were sometimes described as being like ocean liners, with walls, windows and balconies all sweeping around corners. By the 1940s these details were entrenched into suburban designs. The 'Waterfall' or 'Waterfall Front' style came to be known as such from the use of descending curves in chimneys, fence pillars and other vertical elements. Robin Boyd, the Australian architect and writer, noted that three was 'the key to decorative smartness'; three steps usually being used for the waterfall effect and featured parallel lines were often in threes.
Defining features of houses from this period are curved corner windows, including Venetian blinds, some rare examples of which are curved. With a slightly steeper pitched roof than the Early Modern Style, this style was generally of brick veneer cream brick but also could have dark brown glazed feature brickwork incorporated into the external walls, and under windowsills. Chimneys were either stepped or plain, and together with the round windows perhaps gave meaning to the "Waterfall" name.
Ecclesiastical, International, Melbourne Regional, Brisbane Regional and American Colonial were also styles which existed in the period 1940–1960.
Waterfall (Art Deco) style house in Eaglemont, Victoria.jpg|The Waterfall style and Art Deco combined, Heidelberg
204 Monaro Crescent Red Hill ACT.jpg|House in Red Hill, designed by Robin Boyd. Typical of the post-war Melbourne regional style: long unbroken roof line, wide eaves, extensive windows.
==International style==
{{main|International style (architecture)}}
The Rose Seidler House built by Harry Seidler for his parents between 1948 and 1950 in Sydney incorporated Modernist features of open planning, a minimal colour scheme, and labour saving devices that were new to Australia at the time. The house won the Sir John Sulman Medal in 1951 and is today preserved as a museum as a very influential house.{{cite NSW SHR|5045033|Rose Seidler House|hr=00261|fn=S90/05313; S96/00465 [S170]|access-date=1 June 2018}}
After World War II, architects in Australia were influenced by the development of the International style of architecture. Some regional variations developed. In Melbourne, Robin Boyd and Roy Grounds articulated a Melbourne interpretation of the modern style. Boyd's book Victorian Modern (1947) traced the history of architecture in the state of Victoria and described a style of architecture that he hoped would be a response to local surroundings as well as the popular international style. In particular he nominated the work of Roy Grounds and in some outer suburban bush houses of the 1930s as being the early stages of such a style. Grounds and Boyd later worked in partnership.
The houses were typically narrow, linear, and single storey with a low pitched gable roof. They had exposed rafters and wide eaves. Walls were generally bagged or painted brick and windows were large areas of glass with regularly spaced timber mullions.{{cite web | first=Martin | last=Miles | year=2006 | url=http://www.canberrahouse.com.au/pwmelbourne.html | title=The post-war Melbourne regional style | work=Modernist residential architecture in Canberra | publisher=canberrahouse.com | access-date=2006-02-06 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060225055330/http://canberrahouse.com.au/pwmelbourne.html |archive-date = 2006-02-25}}
File:RoseSeidlerHouseSulmanPrize.jpg|Rose Seidler House in the northern Sydney suburb of Wahroonga. Completed 1950.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 214
File:Roy Grounds House.jpg|Roy Grounds House, Toorak; built {{Circa|1953}}.
File:Julian Rose House (c.1954) in Wahroonga NSW, Australia.jpg|Julian Rose House, Wahroonga. Built c.1954, architect Harry Seidler.
File:House at Caulfield.JPG|alt=Lind House, Caulfield; constructed 1954–55; architect, Anatol Kagan.[86]|House at Caulfield; constructed 1954–55; architect, Anatol Kagan.{{Cite web |title=About Lind house |url=https://www.lind.house/new-page-1 |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=LIND HOUSE |language=en-US}}
File:McCraith House Dromana 2012.JPG|alt=McCraith House, Dromana; constructed in 1955, architects, Chancellor and Patrick.[87]|McCraith House, Dromana; constructed in 1955, architects, Chancellor and Patrick.{{Cite web |title=VHD |url=https://vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au/places/4654 |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=vhd.heritagecouncil.vic.gov.au}}
File:Designed by Robyn Boyd (10215628384).jpg|alt=Walkley House, North Adelaide; completed 1956; architect, Robin Boyd.[88]|Walkley House, North Adelaide; completed 1956; architect, Robin Boyd.{{Cite web |title=Dwelling ('Walkley House') designed by Robin Boyd in the International Style - 26 Palmer Place NORTH ADELAIDE {{!}} Heritage Places |url=http://www.experienceadelaide.com.au/heritage-places/dwelling-walkley-house-26-palmer-place-north-adelaide/ |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=Experience Adelaide |language=en-AU}}
File:Schmidt-Lademann House northeast view 1959.jpg|alt=|Schmidt-Lademann House, Floreat; completed 1958; architect, Iwan Iwanoff.{{Cite web |title=Schmidt-Lademann House |url=http://www.schmidt-lademann.de/perth_lifford22/ |access-date=2022-07-25 |website=www.schmidt-lademann.de}}
File:OIC perth cbd council house.jpg|Council House, Perth; from 1959.Apperly, Irving, & Reynolds (1989), pg 215
File:1800 - Simpson-Lee House I - Rear Elevation (5052085b3).jpg|alt=Simpson-Lee House I, Wahroonga; constructed from 1958 to 1962; architect, Arthur Baldwinson; builder, George M. Koch.[91]|Simpson-Lee House I, Wahroonga; constructed from 1958 to 1962; architect, Arthur Baldwinson; builder, George M. Koch.{{Cite web |title=Simpson-Lee House I {{!}} Heritage NSW |url=https://apps.environment.nsw.gov.au/dpcheritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=5052085 |access-date=2023-06-12 |website=apps.environment.nsw.gov.au}}
==L-shape 1945–1955==
This style represented a change in the overall floor plan, the plan resembling a large "L" Shape. Usually with gabled ends to the L, with terra cotta tiles still being used, as concrete tiles didn't appear until the late 1960s. Timber or steel framed windows were used, and front-facing fences resembled the house, much the same as had been seen since the Early Modern Period.
== Dutch Colonial ==
{{main|Dutch Colonial Revival architecture}}
1967 Adelaide Dutch Colonial House.jpg|Dutch Colonial home in Adelaide (1950s)
Dutch_Colonial_Revival_house_in_Adelaide.jpg|Dutch Colonial house in Mitcham
==Timber and fibro fisherman's cottage==
The original fisherman's cottage was built in many coastal towns between the 1930s and 1950s. It was originally a simple timber-framed structure of one or two rooms and a verandah which was clad with asbestos sheeting. The floors were generally raised on piles. The verandah sometimes had handsome wooden balustrade that was sometimes enclosed to make an additional room or sleep-out. Timber detail around windows and gables were often painted- cheery red being one of the most popular traditional colours.
The original cottages, being relatively cheap to purchase, are now popular for renovation. Construction is easy and owner-building is common. The older buildings require insulation in the ceiling and walls. Timber and fiber cement sheeting now replaces the original asbestos and often the interior is completed gutted to create a modern open plan style of living. Timber strap-work can be used and windows frames painted for effect.
RenovatedFishermansCottage.jpg|Renovated fisherman's cottage
==Triple front (cream brick) 1950 – 1960s==
Distinctly recognisable by their front-facing walls have 3 and sometimes even 4 front-facing walls. This led to the front entrance sometimes brought round to the side within one of the alcoves created by the multiple fronts. Roofs were medium pitched and hipped with concrete tiles being used towards the end of the style in the late 60s. Front fences had a castellated top and feature piers raised above the top of the rest of the brick fence. Decorative iron was used very minimally, in gates to driveways, and balustrades to entrances.
The architectural style was mainly built by Anglo-Celtic Australians to deal with housing shortages that arose after World War II.
Triple Front (With 4 Fronts) style house in Heidelberg, Victoria.jpg|Triple Front (With 4 Fronts), Heidelberg.
=Late 20th century=
Styles of the late 20th century have largely been derived from the current world architectural trends, or have been imitative of previous Australian styles. These styles include Stripped Classical, Ecclesiastical, International, Organic, Sydney Regional, Perth Regional, Adelaide Regional, Tropical, Brutalist, Structural, Late Modern, Post Modern, Australian Nostalgic and Immigrants' Nostalgic. In the 1980s and 1990s, most parts of Australia had a building boom which strained building supplies, so many buildings from this era are characterised by cheap and low quality materials.
A good cross section of Australian residential architectural styles from this period, although not necessarily falling into one of the categories above, follows. Almost all of the houses shown in this section were built after 1960 and photographed just north of Sydney on the Central Coast of NSW.
Each of these styles has a different emphasis to practicality (physical needs, layout, and views), land and environmental considerations (structural requirements for foundations, design for weather protection) and aesthetic considerations (planar, volumetric, and sculptural form, emotional and spiritual qualities.) All of these requirements and qualities should be considered when designing a house.
==Migrant House==
In the 1950s and 1960s, large influxes of migrants from eastern and southern Europe arrived to Australia and settled in cities, mainly in Melbourne and Sydney. The need to house the non-English speaking migrants became a high priority and the migrant house developed as an architectural type in neighbourhoods of the inner-city, later spreading to outer suburbs. Over time the suburban dwellings built by migrants became known as the migrant house. The architectural style of housing has also been referred to as "Late-Twentieth-century Immigrants’ Nostalgic". Certain decoration and construction features identify the migrant house.{{harvnb|Lozanovska|Lopez|Levin|Johnston|Beynon|2020|p=266.}} They are a (dark) brick-veneer, concrete balustrades atop a staircase going toward a terrace, arches, expanses of concreted areas that replace the front yard lawn, trees such as olive or citrus (often lemon), decorative fences made from iron,{{cite journal|last1=Lozanovska|first1=Mirjana|last2=Lopez|first2=Sarah|last3=Levin|first3=Iris|last4=Johnston|first4=Chris|last5=Beynon|first5=David|title=Aesthetic Immigrant Environments|url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10331867.2020.1763064?journalCode=rfab20|journal=Fabrications|volume=30|issue=2|year=2020|pages=266–267|doi=10.1080/10331867.2020.1763064|s2cid=221064788}} and stone lions.Weedon, Alan. [https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-09/post-war-australian-housing-future-urbanism-southern-europe/11924116 Retrofitting Australia's post-war suburbia] ABC News. 9 February 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
==Regional gabled cottage==
This popular style has emerged from the triple fronted brick veneer. While the house footprint and floor plan may be quite similar, the gabled cottage has a very different feel. In this style the distinctive gabled roof is a dominant design element, and a practical means of providing shade and entertaining space. Constructions can be entirely of brick (often painted), entirely timber, or a combination of brick on the lower part of the house and timber on the upper. Some houses of brick construction have featured verandahs and porticos. Roofs are usually galvanized iron and windows metal framed.
While it is well suited to sloping blocks, this style can also be built on a slab. The use of timber cladding greatly reduces weight and construction costs.
TimberGabledRegional.jpg|Timber regional gabled style architecture
==Ranch–style==
The ranch-style became popular in the nineties. With conception in the United States, it originated in suburban Adelaide and subsequently became popular in regional and coastal New South Wales. The floor plan is simple and footprint (of at least the street-facing section) is often rectangular. Walls are usually brick, or brick and timber, and windows are often colonial style floor-to-ceiling. Roofs usually tiled with extended eaves. The garage was often integrated into the house. Some ranch style houses were boomerang shaped, others were L-shaped for corner allotments.
Ranch style houses can be readily combined with the Murcutt/Drew style (timber and galvanized iron). These smaller ranch style houses often have balconies the width of the house.
==Murcutt/Drew steel and corrugated iron house==
A number of styles have emerged from the influence of architects Phillip Drew and Glenn Murcutt. The geometric play of angles is often a signature, likewise the (sometimes exposed) steel framing and corrugated iron cladding which is available in a variety of colours. Fiber cement and timber cladding is often used with the iron to create a sympathetic blend of textures.
Being of light weight construction, the steel and corrugated iron approach is relatively cheap and suitable for both flat and steeply inclined land. Interior cladding is most often gyprock but can be timber or even plywood. Butterfly roofs can also be employed quite successfully in this design. This style of house is suited for steel framed pole houses on steep slopes.
MurcuttDrewStyle.jpg|Murcutt Drew style architecture
== Federation revival ==
During the early-1990s, many of the design elements that characterised the Federation architecture of old were popularised in mainstream architecture. This Federation revival form is also known as "mock Federation" or "faux Federation". The style was widespread within the realm of residential housing (especially in new development suburbs) and for apartment buildings; however, smaller shopping centres and other public buildings also made use of the revival style that retained widespread popularity until the early 2000s. Suburbs of Sydney that developed in the 1990s—such as Cherrybrook, Wetherill Park, Green Valley, Cecil Hills, Edensor Park, Castle Hill, and Menai—are notable in the sense that large tracts of these developments contain almost exclusively Federation revival homes.
The construction of Federation revival architecture varied little from that of other basic styles, with the Federation elements merely forming the facade and decorating elements of the building. For example, the typical brick and roof tile construction, hexagonal turrets, ornate gable work, finials, prominent verandah, steep pitched roofs, and faceted bay windows served to parallel the traditional Federation architecture.
File:(1)Field Place house.jpg|Federation revival home in Wahroonga
File:60 Clanville Road, Roseville, New South Wales (2011-07-17).jpg|Federation revival home in Roseville (1994)
File:(1)Federation Revival house Pretoria Parade.jpg|Federation Revival house in Hornsby
File:45 Tryon Road, Lindfield, New South Wales (2011-04-28) 02.jpg|Lindfield
File:(1)house Kingsford Sydney-3.jpg|Federation revival house in Kingsford
File:15 Dudley Avenue, Roseville, New South Wales (2011-07-17).jpg|Bungalow style Federation Revival home in Roseville
File:(1)house High Street Glenbrook.jpg|Glenbrook
File:Apartments, 8-10 Russell Avenue, Lindfield, New South Wales (2011-07-17).jpg|Federation revival apartments in Lindfield (1996)
File:Apartments, Kingsway, Miranda, New South Wales (2010-07-25) 02.jpg|Federation revival apartments in Miranda (c. 1993)
==Pavilion style==
The Pavilion style house is characterized by a simple rectangular, box shaped volumetric style, open plan interior with glass replacing much of the wall space. Windows are often also steel framed. The transparency of the walls makes it well suited for blocks with privacy and/or views. Open patios are an integral part of living area, and like the rooms, they are orientated according to the aspect. Roofs are often low pitched roof and skillion.
The style was a favorite of architect Harry Seidler who favoured walls of rendered brick however it is also well suited to a steel, fiber cement, and corrugated iron treatment. This approach often requires the thinness of steel framing to create the desired look.
File:(1)Mosman house-3.jpg|Contemporary pavilion style house with an angled facade in Mosman
File:(1)Contemporary home Coogee.jpg|House in Coogee
File:11-13 Elvina Street, Dover Heights, New South Wales (2011-01-12).jpg|Cement rendered pavilion style semi-detached houses in Dover Heights
== Australian Nostalgic ==
File:House on James Street.jpg|Victorian Filigree Revivalist house, Templestowe. Lacework and polychrome brick pay homage to Victorian era architecture.
== Painted and rendered triple-fronted brick veneer ==
This style of house has a brick facade (exterior) with timber frames supporting interior walls, usually of gyprock. Roofs are always hipped or gabled and tiled. As mentioned previously in this article, this style, without the painted and rendered brick facade, dominated suburban architecture in the 1950s – 1960s.
Due to its familiar and cheap construction, it still is the dominant style in housing estates and many consider the style the scourge of Australian domestic architecture. The basic style has been made more interesting by rendering and painting, adding more angles, variations in roofing, porticos, verandahs, and bay windows. Large homes, two-story homes of this style have often been described as McMansions.
File:Minimalist Modern Residential Architecture in Flemington, New South Wales.jpg|Typical modern suburban home in Flemington
File:Townhouses in Victoria Australia.jpg|Modern Townhouses in Victoria
File:Modern house in Sydney.jpg|McMansion style house
== Brutalist ==
Evolving from the modernist style in postwar Europe,{{Cite web|date=2019-02-27|title=The rise of British brutalism|url=https://www.fourwalls-group.com/the-rise-of-british-brutalism/|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Fourwalls Group|language=en-US}} Brutalist architecture emphasises bare building materials and function over form. Buildings of this style commonly feature exposed, unpainted concrete; solid, geometric forms; exaggerated slabs; massive forbidding walls; and a predominantly monochrome palette.{{Cite web|title=Brutalist Architecture: What is Brutalism?|url=https://www.architectureanddesign.com.au/features/list/a-look-at-brutalist-architecture|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Architecture & Design|language=en}}
File:(1)Seidler house Kalang Avenue-1.jpg|Harry and Penelope Seidler House, Killara{{Cite web|title=Brutalist Architecture in Sydney|url=https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/brutalist-architecture-in-sydney-20170929-gyrd2l.html|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Sydney Morning Herald|date=29 September 2017 |language=en}} Completed 1967.
File:Sirius Apartments 135 BLG ScreenRes.jpg|Sirius Building, The Rocks{{Cite web|title=The Rocks World Heritage Under Threat|url=https://www.nationaltrust.org.au/initiatives/sirius-building/|access-date=2021-08-17|website=National Trust|language=en-US}} Designed by Tao Gofers and completed in 1980{{Cite web|last=Gofers|first=Tao|date=2021-06-22|title=I designed the Sirius building but I wish the government had knocked it down|url=https://www.smh.com.au/politics/nsw/i-designed-the-sirius-building-but-i-wish-the-government-had-knocked-it-down-20210620-p582n2.html|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Sydney Morning Herald|language=en}}
File:Gottlieb House entrance.jpg|Gottlieb House, late Brutalist,{{Cite web|date=2018-07-12|title=10 Iconic Australian Homes|url=https://www.ecooutdoor.com.au/design-projects/10-iconic-australian-homes/|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Eco Outdoor|language=en}} completed in 1990–94. Caulfield.{{Cite web|last=veronicak|date=2014-09-01|title=The Gottlieb House|url=https://sydneylivingmuseums.com.au/stories/gottlieb-house|access-date=2021-08-17|website=Sydney Living Museums|language=en}}
== Highrises ==
Highrise residential buildings became popular in Australia in the late 20th century, due to the trend towards increasing density in cities. New construction technology allowed modernist styles to be adapted to taller buildings with larger footprints, with Harry Seidler a key proponent of the style in Australia. Around the turn of the 21st century, highrise residential architecture became largely indistinguishable from commercial skyscraper styles.
File:Blues Point Tower.jpg|Blues Point Tower (1962), McMahons Point. Designed by Harry Seidler.
File:HorizonApartments-Sydney-01.jpg|Horizon Apartments (1990–1998), Darlinghurst. Also designed by Harry Seidler.
File:Seidler skyscraper CBD.jpg|Meriton Tower (2001–2006), Sydney.
File:Eureka Tower, Melbourne - Nov 2008.jpg|Eureka Tower (2002–2006), Southbank.
File:Infinity Tower, seen from William Jolly Bridge, Brisbane 02.jpg|Infinity Tower (2014)
Contemporary styles
Contemporary styles from 2000 onwards are often eclectic, incorporating a variety of influences such as classical revival, post modernism, modernism and pop architecture, without holding rigidly to the prescriptions of any one style.
File:Pamela anderson house st kilda.jpg|Newman House in St Kilda; completed 2000. An example of contemporary Post modern pop architecture
File:Modern house Bronte.jpg|A house in Bronte with modernist influences
File:(1)Cheltenham house-4.jpg|A contemporary classical revival house with strong Regency influences, Cheltenham
File:Beecroft house 004.jpg|House in Beecroft with a more eclectic mix of various revival styles
File:(1)Sans Souci house 071.jpg|A modern adaptation of French provincial style, Sans Souci
File:Weatherboard house in Lockleys, South Australia.jpg|Contemporary weatherboard house in Lockleys
=Adaptive=
{{main|Adaptive reuse}}
With widespread gentrification and urban renewal in the late 20th and early 21st century, conversions of disused industrial and commercial buildings to residential has become widespread. This includes adaptive reuse conversions which retain to some extent the form of the existing building.
File:Cairns memorial presbyterian church east melbourne.jpg|Former Cairns Memorial Church (1895) turned apartments (1988)
File:Bay_View_from_Port_Melbourne.jpg|Sandridge Bay Towers, Port Melbourne (left) 1891 brick sugar factories and warehouses turned fashionable apartments (1996)
File:Malthouse richmond.jpg|The Malthouse, Richmond an innovative conversion of 1920s silos by Fender Katsalidis (1997)
File:Colgate-Palmolive Building, Balmain.jpg|Former Colgate-Palmolive factory in Balmain, after residential conversion (1998)
File:Love and lewis building.jpg|Love & Lewis building Prahran, a 1913 department store converted to apartments (2004)
File:Teneriffe_Woolstore_Teneriffe_Village.JPG|One of many old woolstores converted as part of the Urban renewal in Woolstore Precinct, Teneriffe (2004-2010)
See also
References
{{reflist}}
Bibliography
- Murcutt, Glenn (1995). "Works and Projects", Thames and Hudson.
- Drew, Phillip (1996). "Leaves of Iron",Angus & Robertson
- Picket, Charles (1997). "Fibro Frontier", Powerhouse.
- Irving, Robert (1985). "The History and Design of the Australian House", Oxford University Press
- Perse, JN (1981). "House Style in Adelaide – A Pictorial History", Stock Journal Publishers.
External links
{{Architecture of Sydney |state=autocollapse}}