
Where the family can gather all year round.
At Armstrong Street, the question wasn’t just about how the space would look. It was whether it would still work in ten years. Through frost, wind, and wet Ballarat winters. We were designing for -5°C mornings, reactive clay, and exposure from every direction. The brief stayed simple. Create a family space that works year round and keeps working.
So we started by reading the site.
Reading Ballarat Before Design
We weren’t looking at plants first. We were reading soil, wind, fall, and light.
Ballarat clay holds water through winter, then bakes hard in summer. Frost settles low. Wind funnels between neighbouring roofs. Ignore that, and the garden might hold for a year or two. Then it starts to fail.
The brief called for long lunches, fire pit evenings, and space for kids to move freely. But underneath that sat a harder question. How do you create something warm and sculptural that survives regional conditions without becoming a maintenance burden?
That thinking shaped everything. Materials, drainage, planting, and structure all working together.
Shaping Shelter and Social Space
The fire pit zone anchors the design.
Curved seating wraps the space instead of lining it. It softens wind, draws people inward, and creates a protected pocket. The corten steel form isn’t just visual. It controls airflow and reinforces enclosure without closing the space off.
At the centre, a wide iron fire bowl holds real heat. Built for use, not decoration. Around it, the feature wall adds depth and warmth, catching light and strengthening that sense of shelter on cold nights. The custom blackbutt table follows the curve precisely. Proportion matters here. Too small feels awkward. Too large breaks connection. Blackbutt handles frost well and moves predictably with seasonal change.
Everything is built to be used. And to last.
Performance That Disappears Into the Background
Before any structure went in, we addressed water. Permeable layers allow winter rain to move through rather than sit on clay. Subtle grading redirects runoff. Deck edges prevent pooling. You don’t notice it. That’s the point.
Planting follows the same logic. Silver Birch provide structure and seasonal change. Tough mid-layer species handle wet and dry cycles without constant input. Groundcovers and turf carry foot traffic and recover quickly. Lighting extends the space into winter evenings. Low, warm, and controlled.
Built for the Long Term
We design expecting to see the garden in ten years. Every decision ties back to performance. Materials that age well. Planting that carries its own weight. Structure that holds through seasonal movement.
The result is an outdoor room that works year round. Not just visually, but practically. Built for Ballarat conditions, and for the way people actually live.























