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← Older: Post-war Melbourne regional
After the Second World War, the international style put its stamp on cities throughout the western world. Sometimes it pushed regional architectural forms into the …
Newer: Late twentieth century stripped classical →
In the years following the end of the Second World War classical architecture did not enjoy widespread appeal. It lost credibility with the downfall of …
Late twentieth century Sydney regional
As the international style was making its impact in the CBDs of Australian capital cities, a new type of architecture began to appear in the Sydney region. The style, referred to as the Sydney School or ‘Sydney nuts and berries’, developed partly as a reaction to outside influences such as the international style and was influenced by organic architecture, brutalism and arts and crafts. It was also concerned with improving the quality of housing for average Australians.
Sydney School houses were often built on sloping bushland sites around Sydney Harbour’s sheltered upper reaches. The sites had a great influence on the architects, with the native landscape being fundamental. The houses typically followed the slope of the site through split level planning with roofs parallel to the slope, creating complex and interesting interior spaces. Natural materials were exploited, with dark tiles, clinker or painted bricks and stained timbers creating a feeling of warmth in the houses.
In the late 1960s the popularity of the Sydney style increased markedly, as project home companies like Pettit & Sevitt commissioned leading practitioners of the style such as Ken Woolley and Michael Dysart to design demonstration houses, which could be built on sites for clients. A number of examples were built in the developing Canberra bushland suburbs of the late 1960s and early 1970s such as Aranda, Cook, Hawker, Garran, Curtin, Lyons, Chapman and parts of Kambah. There are good examples of the style in Canberra by Allen, Jack and Cottier, Ian McKay and Michael Dysart. Another good Canberra example of the style is the RAIA Headquarters at 2a Mugga Way, Red Hill, designed by the firm Ancher, Mortlock, Murray and Woolley in 1967.
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