Fire-Proof & Forest-Focused: A Holiday Home That Embraces The Australian Bush

High in the canopy of a eucalyptus forest in New South Wales, a holiday home sits perched like an eagle’s nest, looking out over the landscape with quiet confidence. Amongst the Eucalypts, designed by Jason Gibney Design Workshop, reimagines what it means to live within fire-prone Australian bushland, creating a space that embraces nature while respecting its volatile temperament. The clients came to JGDW with a vision that might seem contradictory: they wanted both refuge and connection, a home that could evoke the immersive experience of camping in nature’s vastness while offering protection from its extremes. They sought a place where family and friends could gather communally yet still find moments of solitude within nature’s embrace.

The architectural response is a study in balance. Set high behind the tree line on a steeply sloped site, the house grounds itself along the hill’s natural contour. Its split form creates intimate, private moments while maintaining what the NSW Architecture Awards jury described as “a quiet dialogue between space and landscape beyond.” This isn’t a home that dominates its setting or shrinks from it. Instead, it unfolds to meet the upper realm of the forest, positioning itself as both observer and participant in the landscape.

Designer: Jason Gibney Design Workshop

Material choices reflect the reality of building in bushfire country. The palette is deliberately raw and robust: plywood, lightweight cladding, and metal sit comfortably within the remote setting, offering low maintenance and crucial protection from fire. These aren’t just practical selections. They’re materials that age gracefully in the elements, developing character rather than requiring constant intervention.

What sets this project apart is its embrace of impermanence. The operable facade allows the home to open and close to the elements, transforming its relationship with the outdoors. Outdoor washrooms and a loose-fit interior reinforce this camping-inspired approach, where the boundaries between inside and outside become negotiable rather than fixed. The architecture suggests a way of living that’s more adaptable, more responsive to seasonal changes and the rhythms of nature.

Built by Midcoast Construction on Worimi land, the home earned a Commendation for Residential Architecture at the 2025 NSW Architecture Awards and recognition in the Sustainable Architecture category at the National Architecture Awards Program. The jury commended the design team for creating a home that addresses the pressing question of how to build responsibly in fire-prone landscapes. Photography by Justin Alexander captures the home’s unique position, revealing how it sits suspended among the eucalypts, neither floating above nor buried within the forest but existing in comfortable coexistence with it.

As climate change intensifies fire seasons across Australia, projects like Amongst the Eucalypts offer more than aesthetic pleasure. They demonstrate that building in bushland doesn’t require choosing between connection to nature and protection from it. The home stands as evidence that thoughtful design can create spaces of genuine sanctuary and contemplation, places where engaging with the landscape occurs with the solace of protection from the extremes.

The post Fire-Proof & Forest-Focused: A Holiday Home That Embraces The Australian Bush first appeared on Yanko Design.

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