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Design Concept
Why choose timber?
What makes this house special?
Why would you live in a timber house
of the future?
How it all goes together
Environmental features
Theoretical precedents
What are the implications for the future
of housing?
Could you buy one of these now?
About the Architects
Design Concept
Innovarchis concept for the timber house explores the single-family
dwelling and its relationship to the environment.
The architects, Stephanie Smith and Ken McBryde of Innovarchi, have
conceived of a surface that is metaphorically a piece of landscape.
Based on the idea of the Möbius Loop or Klein Bottle this surface,
or skin, is simultaneously roof, wall and floor. It undulates to
form internal and external spaces that blur the distinction between
the natural and the built environment.
The skin, which is made of a timber-fibre cladding, has several
purposes: it is acts as water catchment, shading mechanism and solar
collector. A red streak of solar cells cuts through the surface
of the building, generating renewable energy from the suns
energy as it strikes the building.
An integrated water management system, designed by Penny Allan and
Astrid Brokamp of GAO, incorporates an internal landscape in the
centre of the building, which is used to recycle captured water.
Whilst some typical timber products are represented, the house aims
to challenge traditional notions about how timber can be used and
what constitutes a timber product. It introduces advances in materials
technology using timber-fibre products that, with carefully managed
farming, can be an excellent renewable resource.

Why choose
timber?
Timber is a sustainable resource, with many species able to be grown
in softwood plantations or ecoselect managed natural Australian
hardwood forests.
It is affordable and easily worked by relatively unskilled labour.
The material is soft, warm and tactile.
Unlike clay or concrete, timber-framed structures have a relatively
low thermal capacity, so the design considerations are different.
Timber-framed structures can be easily insulated, and will have
a fast response to heat or cooling because you dont need to
heat or cool the entire material for it to perform thermally.
What makes
this house special?
The Timber House challenges:> the relationship between interior
and exterior space; and
the application of timber building materials and timber-based
products.
It also serves to demonstrate:
that pre-fabricated buildings do not have to be uninteresting
boxes but can be complex forms and spaces; and
timber is easy to construct, modify and move in large pre-fabricated
pieces.

Why would
you live in a timber house of the future?
Despite an incredibly complex geometry, the Timber House can be
designed with a large variety of configurations.
In fact, it is due to this complex geometry that such variety of
forms is possible. Using computers to generate the cutting patterns,
a house could be fabricated in the factory and trucked out to site
in a matter of weeks.
You can also choose from a wide assortment of internal and external
finishes. The fixing system for the Timber House allows occupants
to change the finishes according to season. So in winter you could
line the house with a warm, intimate colour and texture, whilst
in summer you could change to a cool, tranquil combination.
How it all goes
together:
The structure was pre-cut in Victoria and transported flat-packed
to NSW where the pieces were assembled in a workshop in Gosford.
The composite layers of the external cladding are fixed in place
with screws, 3M tape and Dual-lock repositionable mounting tape.
Hard wood strip timber flooring is laid directly onto the floor
framing and the eco-veneer ceiling and wall panels are attached
to the underside of the primary structure using 3M tape.
The built-in furniture is also fabricated using e-veneer.
Double glazed windows and the Solar Titania photovoltaic panels
are fitted on site.
The building is divided into three main pieces and transported to
site on low-loader trucks. The pieces are then joined together,
with removable cladding to seal each joint.

Environmental
features
The LVL (laminated veneer lumber) structure and plywood panels
are renewable plantation pine
The Australian hardwoods used are from eco-select sustainably
managed forests
The external cladding by Aust Panel is a wood-fibre and phenolic
resin product
E-veneer is made from wood fibre, rather than peeling logs
The cardboard foil composite insulation is fully recyclable
Solar Titania cells are an Australian invention, using dye-based
nanotechnology to generate electricity
Solar hot water heating using a unique solar tube is incorporated
into the roof design
Sensor taps, greywater toilet and AAAA-rated showerheads
conserve water
A wetland cell set into the deck recycles greywater,
and a bioretention garden treats rain water before storage and reuse
as hot water

Theoretical
precedents
Innovarchis concept for the Timber House is based on the Möbius
Loop and Klein Bottle. Like the deceptive drawings of MC Escher,
the timber cladding in this house is simultaneously floor, walls
and roof.
Fully prefabricated timber housing has been thoroughly explored
before. For example, the traditional timber houses of the tropics
are still moved around the country on the back of a truck, often
having been simply cut down the middle, and are rejoined on arrival
at the new location.
However it is only now, as computer technology infiltrates the building
industry, that we can create the complex geometries, intricate cutting
patterns, tight tolerances and environmentally sustainable features
that you can see in the Timber House.
What are the implications for the future of
housing?
Housing in the future should be quicker to build, more ecologically
sensitive, offer more choice in shape and form without affecting
price.
Using computers to generate cutting patterns and complex geometries,
excitingly creative houses can be fabricated in a factory and trucked
out to site in a matter of weeks, and can fully integrate many or
all of the environmental features shown here.

Could you
buy one of these now?
All the technology is available to build a Timber House of the Future
in almost any configuration.
About the
Architects - Innovarchi
Innovarchi is an award winning design and research based practice
directed by Stephanie Smith and Ken McBryde. With many years experience
in global architectural and urban design, including working with
Herman Hertzberger and Renzo Piano, the Innovarchi team aims to
generate exceptional architecture and memorable public places.
Innovarchi pursues ecologically sustainable design through the sensitive
use of materials, appropriate climatic solutions and integration
of built forms with landscape.
Innovarchi were the local representative architects for Renzo Piano
Building Workshop designing the new highly innovative office and
residential towers, Aurora Place in Sydney.

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