Friday, April 20, 2012

Queenslander Tropical styles


The 'Queenslander' Tropical Federation housing types


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This page is largely extracted from the Queensland Museum:
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Evolution of the Queensland house

Queensland has more than one type of housing but a tradition of timber building is dominant.
  • This distinctive tradition originated with rough timber huts of early settlement and developed into the multi-gabled bungalows of the 1930s.
  • Buildings continued until, and were adapted after, the Second World War, leading to contemporary ‘Environmentally Sustainable Timber Houses’.
    A decorative Queenslander house in Annie Street, Torwood, built around 1890
    A decorative Queenslander house in Annie Street, Torwood, built around 1890

The most typical early twentieth century Queensland house is characterised by:
  • timber construction with corrugated-iron roof;
  • highset on timber stumps;
  • single-skin cladding for partitions and sometimes external walls;
  • verandahs front and/or back, and sometimes the sides;
  • decorative features to screen the sun or ventilate the interior; and
  • a garden setting with a picket fence, palm trees and tropical fruit trees.

'Queenslanders' are now valued as a key element of Queensland heritage
  • Conservation and renovation of Queenslanders is widespread.
  • "Many Brissos will also have renovated a Queenslander. What to other people might look like a humble box of a house, the Brisso can see as a potential “traditional Queenslander”.

  • The Brisso will talk about “lifting it up”, “pushing it back” on the block, “turning it around”, “building in underneath”, “opening up” verandas, putting on a deck, extending out the back, and so on.''

  • "This may end up costing more than the construction of a whole new house, but the wonderful thing is that the real estate market tends to reward such labours of love. There is nothing as reliable as the street appeal of a Queenslander."


- Living in a traditional Queenslander house

Queenslander architecture

- from Wikipedia
Queenslander architecture is a modern term for the vernacular type of architecture of Queensland, Australia.
  • Shares many traits with architecture in other states of Australia but is distinct and unique.
  • The type developed in the 1840s and is still constructed today, displaying an evolution of local style.
  • The term is primarily applied to residential construction

The Queenslander, a "type" not a "style", is defined primarily by architectural characteristics of climate-consideration.

Filigree Type

Queen Anne Type

external image 220px-Queenslander3.JPGA high-set Victorian era Queenslander with
large veranda in New Farm, Brisbane.
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A large Federation style suburban Queenslanderin New Farm, Brisbane.

Bungalow type

Porch & Gable -

Edwardian or Arts & Craft style

external image 220px-Queenslander2.JPG
An interwar Queenslander in New Farm, Brisbane.
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A single-storey Queenslander ca. 1935

Evolution of the Queensland house

There are differing styles of the famous 'Queenslander', but all (four federation) styles share distinct construction style, internal spaces, furnishing, and gardens.

These are the four Federation Residential Styles corresponding to the 'Queenslander' styles illustrated above and below:

Victorian to Edwardian Periods:
  • Federation Filigree (with wrap-around verandahs, symmetrical frontage, and square roof)
  • Queen Anne (Victorian Boom period, asymmetrical frontage, verandah roof discontinuous, window awnings)

Edwardian to Inter-War Periods:
  • Federation Bungalow style (verandah roof continues roof line forward)
  • Arts and Crafts style, with decorative gable(s) over porch(es}, no large verandahs

Postwar Period:
  • Federation Revival post war construction, built high on stumps, large verandah, can be two storied.
Victorian to Edwardian Periods


1870s - 1930s: (Filigree)
Colonial, Federation and Interwar Bungalow
Colonial, Federation and Interwar Bungalow

1870s - 1930s (Boom, Queen Anne)

Colonial, Federation and Interwar Asymmetrical Pyramid/Hip House
Colonial, Federation and Interwar Asymmetrical Pyramid/Hip House


Edwardian to Inter-War Periods

Postwar Period:

1900s to 1930s (Bungalow)
Federation and Interwar Asymmetrical Bungalow
Federation and Interwar Asymmetrical Bungalow

1910s - 1930s (Arts & Crafts)
The Interwar Porch and Gable House
The Interwar Porch and Gable House

Postwar - 1980s

Postwar Timber and Tin Housing Revival
Postwar Timber and Tin Housing Revival

The above information reprinted from:
--Evolution of the Queensland house
(Queensland Museum Illustrations)

The traditional Queenslander house

Illustration of the above four Federation styles from the blog: ART and ARCHITECTURE, mainly on The traditional Queenslander house
Typical Federation style Queenslander with filigree screens
Typical Federation style Queenslander with filigree screens

Ornate Boom style with gazebos echoing Queen Anne style
Ornate Boom style with gazebos echoing Queen Anne style

Bungalow with filigree screens
Bungalow with filigree screens
Arts and Craft style, with porch and decorative gables
Arts and Craft style, with porch and decorative gables


The Federation Queenslander

Big, bold and beautifully ornate, 1901 – 1914
  • The Federation style Queenslander, originally built between 1900 and start of World War I, has been commonly referred to as the Australian version of the English Edwardian house. You can appreciate that the time of Australia’s Federation filled many colonials with a sense of national pride and significant financial gain for a burgeoning class of traders, bureaucrats and professionals.

Key features of Federation style Queenslanders include:
  • detailed fretwork in the roof gables
    Queenslander house on Brisbane hill-top
    Queenslander house on Brisbane hill-top
  • high ceilings – often 14 foot
  • ornate lead lighting in the front windows, featuring geometric and curvilinear shapes and sometimes native plants or birds
  • bull-nosed weatherboards
  • Houses were generally on timber stumps
  • the main roof often swept down in one unbroken across the verandah
    bay windows were increasing common
  • Joinery such as windows, doors, architraves and skirtings featured increasing use of Queensland pine due to unavailability of Australian Cedar

The Ashgrovian Queenslander

Grand Gables, sheltered verandahs and ‘sleep-outs’, c 1920 – c 1930
  • Ashgrovian is the term coined for ‘grand gabled’ Queenslanders built between the late 1920s and World War II, originating from the Brisbane suburb of Ashgrove.
  • The Ashgrovian can be described as a distinctly Queensland take on the Californian bungalow – which was very popular in and around Sydney at the same time.
  • Taking elements of the bungalow’s gabled roof and front porch, local Queensland builders developed homes that presented grand gable roof, often surrounded by secondary smaller gables behind. The smaller gables usually sheltered verandahs and sleep-outs.

Key features of Ashgrovian style Queenslanders include:external image TQ-advert-logo.gif
  • Grand gable roof
  • Large, sheltered verandah
  • bay windows

"Federation Style Reproductions"

Garth Chapman established Garth Chapman Queenslanders in 1988 after recognising a need in the market for a quality builder of authentic new Queenslander homes.



from the Queensland Museum:

Development of the Queensland house

Picture of Ermabrae House in Brunswick Street, New Farm, built in 1902
Picture of Ermabrae House in Brunswick Street, New Farm, built in 1902

A tall double storied Queenslander in Boundary Street
A tall double storied Queenslander in Boundary Street
A domestic postcard, Queensland 1910s
A domestic postcard, Queensland 1910s
Key factors in the development of the Queensland house were the:
  • availability of affordable, easy to use building materials;
  • the Queensland climate

Building Materials

  • Timber and iron are the characteristic materials used to construct Queensland houses.
  • Sawmilling was established in Queensland in the 1850s, and timber became readily available for construction. Iron could be transported long distances throughout the Queensland colony, and was more durable in tropical storms than tiles.
  • These readily available and affordable materials were also easy to use and so contributed to the popularity of the Queensland house.

Queensland Climate
Basic Queenslander, largely symmetrical
Basic Queenslander, largely symmetrical

  • The materials also directly affected their form. Timber was a light, inexpensive material, but it was vulnerable to attack from termites. Houses were constructed on stumps to raise them off the ground, and the stumps were capped with plates to prevent white ants from getting to the wooden superstructures. The greater height also allowed easier surveillance of termite activity.
  • The warm Queensland climate further contributed to the form and popularity of Queenslanders. The high heat conductivity of tin iron roofing and the poor insulation offered by timber meant that ventilation was critical.
  • Queensland houses were usually constructed to face the street, irrespective of the direction of sun and wind. Houses belonging to affluent members of society were more likely to be situated in higher locations and constructed with more windows to take greater advantage of prevailing breezes.
  • Nevertheless the raised structures provided natural ventilation beneath and around the house, and airflow was enhanced by numerous windows, louvers and fretwork fanlights. Verandahs proved popular in providing additional living space that was outdoors yet protected.

The Federation Queenslander  Big, bold and beautifully ornate, 1901 – 1914
The Federation Queenslander Big, bold and beautifully ornate, 1901 – 1914



Informal spaces

  • The raising of houses on stumps created valuable space beneath the house that was used for many varied purposes including drying the washing, accommodating animals and even housing an extended family.
  • The retreat from hot internal rooms to the verandah further reflects a less formal Queensland domestic lifestyle. A comfortable verandah allowed residents to spurn formal living rooms and upholstered chairs that enveloped hot bodies. However, in the postwar years, the verandah was enclosed to create more room.

Formal spaces

  • By the 1890s, Queensland houses exhibited many of the features of Victorian domestic ideals.
  • The drawing room was the most important room, where visitors gained an impression of the standing of the owner. During the 1880s, drawing rooms became more decorative and splendid.
  • By contrast, the desired impression in the dining room was of formal dignity and even grandeur. This was the domain of the husband as host and man of the house.

Private and Utilitarian Spaces

  • The main bedroom was a private, predominantly feminine space, decorated in delicate pastels, with an emphasis on comfort and prettiness.
  • Service rooms, on the other hand, were severely practical in their presentation.
    Picture of Drawing room suites from the F. Tritton Furniture Catalogue, Brisbane, circa 1906 (Queensland Museum)
    Picture of Drawing room suites from the F. Tritton Furniture Catalogue, Brisbane, circa 1906 (Queensland Museum)
  • The kitchen was usually a simple undecorated room, while the bathroom was often no more than a built-in corner of the back verandah or beneath the house.

Federation furnishings

  • The furnishings of the main rooms of Queenslander houses changed with the transition from the Colonial/Victorian era to Federation.
  • Red cedar disappeared from fashion – just in time to save it from extinction – to be replaced by silky oak, Queensland maple, white cedar and stained pine. The timbers were often fumed with ammonia to enrich their colour to a warm brown.
  • The new fully-upholstered lounging armchair made its appearance. In the bedroom, the dressing table was a chest of drawers with a mirror attached, and a box ottoman replaced the old trunk for clothes storage.
  • There was a real acknowledgment of our climate in the design and use of furniture. Cane, willow, bamboo and linen grass furniture entered the scene.

1 comment:

  1. Fab Houses.It's such a good news for Queensland living people. They can buy a new home for their family in Queensland at affordable prices. Now a days, There are many Home Builders Queensland in Australia, who provide house raising, house extensions, Home Renovations and more services for both commercial and residential property.

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