Australian Passivhaus Project Register

Search

Location:
NSW 
VIC
SA
WA
ACT
QLD
TAS
NT

Sector:
Residential: Single Dwelling
Residential: Multi-Unit
Residential: Public & Social
Retail
Sports & Leisure
Arts, Culture & Entertainment
Build to Rent
Education
Health
Hotel & Hospitality
Commercial Office
Mixed Use
Industrial
Justice & Defence

We are now accepting Project Submissions for the New Register

Our newly-designed, comprehensive project register is designed so you to only have to fill it out once.

Have questions about the submission process? Here’s a step by step walkthrough of what you need to do, along with our terms and FAQs.

Supported by

PurePassiv

PurePassiv is a pure expression of high-performance design. A street-to-north orientation will see the front yard dominated by food producing raised garden beds in front of an optimised façade that captures just enough solar heat for winter warmth. Located in the Northern Sydney suburb of Asquith, the design approach follows the simplicity of the Passivhaus Standard with simple geometry and optimised window openings yet also challenges the conventions of window placement.

Read More

PassivCourtyard

This home breaks all the passivhaus rules; poor orientation, sprawling form, complex roofs, too much volume; yet it works like a charm! It is a demonstration of the Passivhaus Standard at its best, performance driven design showing that, in the right hands, it is a flexible, adaptable standard that can deliver healthy, comfortable buildings on ‘imperfect’ sites.

Read More

Torrens Passive House

Torrens Early Learning Centre is a daycare and kindergarten facility in Canberra ACT and is the only privately-owned High-performance building educational facility in the world. The client’s goal was to build the healthiest and most sustainable childcare centre in Australia.

Read More

Vanquish

Large home in an inner city suburb with a good northerly aspect. Extensive glass to the north and south meant triple glazed windows and doors. Great home for entertaining with large operable expanses of glass onto a northern courtyard. Achieving the PH requirements were made more challenging by the decision to pursue certification after the planning was completed and 80% documented.

Read More