You'll Be Able to Explore a House-Within-a-House Labyrinth When the NGV's 2024 Architecture Commission Pops Up
First, you'll step inside the frame of an average Australian home — and then, drawing attention to alternative modes of housing, you'll enter a smaller-scale abode.
In the space that an average-sized Australian home sprawls across, how many smaller houses could fit instead? This question won't just be a topic of conversation outside the National Gallery of Victoria from November 2024. Each year at the venue's Melbourne grounds on St Kilda Road, the institution unveils its annual Architecture Commission, a site-specific pop-up construction that experiments with design concepts while pondering subjects of public importance. This year's pick is a tiny house — which might sound standard, except that it's a pint-sized abode within the frame of the standard Aussie home, and the contrast between the two is obvious.
Created by Melbourne-based architecture and design studio Breathe, Home Truth continues the firm's focus on sustainable architecture that'll endure and has a purpose — and, from Wednesday, November 13, it'll get NGV visitors wandering through a house-within-a-house labyrinth. First, you'll step inside the larger abode, which represents the average 236-square-metre Australian residence. Then, drawing attention to alternative modes of housing, you'll enter the smaller-scale nestled within it.
To get from one to the other, you'll enter via the larger house's garage door, then mosey through rooms and hallways. When you reach the tinier home, you'll feel like you've hit the centre of a maze. Attendees will notice two different materials distinguishing each abode, too, with the bigger spot constructed from framing pine and the smaller house from the waste-made saveboard — offering up a comment on how homes are currently built in Australia as well.
"Through its clever play on scale and materials, this thought-provoking work of architecture sparks a fascinating conversation about housing and sustainability in this country," explained NGV Director Tony Ellwood, announcing the 2024 Architecture Commission.
"Home Truth speculates that overconsumption of space and materials translates into ecological and social consequences — for both us and the planet. But importantly, it offers a provocative vision of a new way of thinking about building — seeing the value of living in spaces that are of smaller scale — a vision that prioritises people and planet," added Ewan McEoin, NGV's Senior Curator, Contemporary Art, Design and Architecture.
Home Truth follows 2023's stunning pick (This is) Air, a giant inflatable sphere that breathed, as created by Australian architect Nic Brunsdon with Sky Castle, Airship Orchestra, Cupid's Koi Garden and Lost Dogs' Disco' ENESS. The 14-metre-high piece did indeed expand with air, then release it — so, yes, it inhaled and exhaled all day — to get everyone thinking about humanity's need for and relationship to air, how essential it is, how dependent we all are upon the element, how finite it is and how its quality is being impacted.
In the past, NGV's Architecture Commission has also seen a colourful mini Parthenon, a bright pink pool to wade through, a bamboo garden with its own deck and an unforgettable pink carwash pop up, all as part of an initiative that started in 2015.
'Home Truth' by Breathe will be on display at NGV International, St Kilda Road, Melbourne from Wednesday, November 13–April 2024 — head to the NGV website for further details.
Image: Render of NGV Architecture Commission 2024 'Home Truth' by Breathe. Image courtesy of Breathe.