Projects

Work that speaks for itself

From a landmark exhibition centre to architect-designed family homes, our projects demonstrate what’s possible when capability matches ambition.

Featured project

Heritage Exhibition Centre – Mt Tomah

Blue Mountains Botanic Gardens

Architect: Eeles Trelease Architects

Built to showcase the Blue Mountains World Heritage listing, this 155m² exhibition centre presented challenges at every turn – from the complex building set-out to the post-tensioned concrete roof slab supporting a planted garden above.

Curved glass walls, copper-clad skylights and coordination with garden staff on the basalt stone features made this one of our most rewarding projects.

Blue Mountains projects

Selby Street

Architect: EcoDesign Architects (Nigel Bell)

A 3-bedroom cottage built to the highest bushfire rating – BAL Flame Zone. Timbercrete external walls provide fire resistance and thermal mass, while the hydronic-heated concrete slab keeps the home comfortable through cold mountain winters. A roof-mounted bushfire sprinkler system adds another layer of protection in this bushfire-prone landscape.

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Inconstant Street

Architect: Pearson Architecture

An ingenious response to a challenging site – a narrow block with road frontage on three boundaries. The linear design makes the most of the space with a double-layer insulated concrete slab, hydronic heating and double-glazed windows throughout. Galvanised steel privacy screens and trellises at front and rear frame views while providing separation from the street. Clad in silvertop ash, corrugated steel and fibre cement, the home sits comfortably in its bushland setting.

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Govetts Leap Bach

Architect: Anderson Architecture

A compact 2-bedroom home built to passive house standards and BAL FZ bushfire compliance – one of the most demanding combinations. The completely airtight envelope, heat-recovery ventilation, and Paarhammer double-glazed windows work together to maintain stable temperatures year-round with minimal energy use. Heka window hoods and Celestian metallic Colorbond cladding complete the exterior, while the curved external walls meeting raked rooflines required careful coordination at every junction.

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Let’s talk about your project

Whether you’re an architect with a challenging brief or a homeowner ready to build, we’d love to hear what you’re planning.