Our Story

We need a new approach to single-family housing in existing neighbourhoods that contributes
positively to the health and vitality of living systems, human and non-human. Despite a climate and
biodiversity emergency, more time spent working from home, skyrocketing energy prices and a widespread shortage of construction materials, the way we design and build houses remains much the same. There are currently no regenerative requirements and very few sustainability requirements, for building or renovating a single-family house located on a standard lot in most municipalities in Australia. 

In 2022 we, Chris and Sun Buntine, purchased a 100-year old California Bungalow at 28 Margarita St in Hampton to be the site of our new family home. Rather than going down the conventional path of knocking down the existing dilapidated building, our intention is to make this a regenerative renovation which unlocks the potential of the existing building and site in ways that enable our family, our community and other living systems to all thrive and prosper. We want this to be a healthy, comfortable and inspiring home for our family. We also want this project to inspire a wider conversation within our community and the building industry on how we can build single-family housing that energy positive, carbon neutral, water resilient, zero waste, healthy and nature positive

Our guiding principle is called biophilic design which creates experiences which connect people to nature.

 It is our intention to achieve Living Building Challenge (LBC) Core and Energy Petal certification, a world-leading regenerative certification. We hope to demonstrate that by achieving certification we can make this framework and certification tool more achievable and accessible to others. We also hope to have Northrop as a project partner to provide shared learning opportunities that benefit our people and client projects.

Project Timeline