Saturday, 13 September 2025

THE MAKING OF A VERNACULAR


THE JAMES HARDIE HOUSES

Can James Hardie be seen as the new James Campbell with its Modern Homes Forecast 2025 site – a materials manufacturer/supplier offering house design options?: see – https://www.jameshardie.com.au/modern-homes-forecast2025. There seems to be something similar here; but one could also compare the Thames & Hudson The New Queensland House, (Cameron Bruhn and Katelin Butler, Thames and Hudson Australia, 2022), with this James Hardie promotion as there is a similar ambition driving both; yet one would never draw a parallel between the Thames & Hudson book and the James Campbell catalogue, although there is the suggestion in the title of this classy, ‘coffee table’ publication that there is a ‘Queenslander’ relationship. This ‘New Queensland House’ book seeks to promote the 'outdoor room' notion of habitation in a suave, stylish, architectural manner with a selection of well presented, bespoke projects and plans that aim to illustrate the implementation of ‘the new Queensland house’ theory and its variations in different contexts. The James Hardie site promotes its building products with a set of smart display houses and their plans that are promoted as being ‘the designs of the future,’ as if it might be the new digital version of the classic, architectural copy book.







This James Hardie package continues the sales strategy that has been used by the firm for years, adopting an approach that publishes house designs using its products, in much the same manner as James Campbell did for its ‘Queenslanders.’ The James Hardie materials are presented here, used in what is promoted as ‘the modern future;’ or should it be ‘the future modern’? The original product, ‘Fibrolite,’ also referred to as ‘AC,’ a product that once came with its own Swiss-published magazine with this title, is now the notorious, asbestos cement sheeting that was used for internal and external wall cladding and roofing throughout Australia. Many typical suburban ‘Fibro’ houses and coastal 'shacks' come directly from these early publications that, with our digital age, have now been transformed into more sophisticated online presentations, supplying not only the Modern Homes Forecast 2025 pdf download, but also an apparently helpful Discover Your Home Style quiz; a link to Order Your Free Sample of any James Hardie product desired; and another link to give directions to Find a Display Home, to allow the real building to be experienced. All of this on a site that can be browsed either by Lifestyle Theme or Home Style, whichever your preference might be; or both, with plans and details being provided for each style in a set of comprehensive Handbooks. The site is as engaging and addictive as any social media site, and those television programmes that seek out properties in the countryside.



AC Magazine.


James Campbell Redicut Handbook.



Modern Farmhouse.

This James Hardie site comes complete with its own overview and analysis, using a set of slick images in a graphic design that rivals that of the Thames & Hudson book. One does wonder if the design of the site might not have been inspired by the book, since the 'cover,' the first window of the James Hardie pdf download, could easily be seen by the casual eye as being the cover of the Thames & Hudson book; the feel is the same, as is the massing of the colours: the pale blue half-frame/half-cover of the sky; the lower frame/cover, soft beige massing of the building; and the associated patches of deep green, all bring the other two mind with the shrewdness and artifice seen in the Aldi copy branding.




This matching provides an intriguing parallel that highlights the difference in accessibility, where the digital information has been organised in a more easily approachable manner that embraces an array of choices, preferences, and lifestyle options, than that format offered by the book. The variance allows a comparison worth considering, because James Hardie seems to have touched 'vernacular' issues more closely than Thames & Hudson/the authors Cameron Bruhn and Katelin Butler, who approach its/their ambitions more ‘architecturally;’ intellectually; with an ‘ivory tower’ detachment, seemingly with that latent cliché concept held by the profession, of educating the masses; an austere notion that lies dormant in the idea that, p.205, architecture can elevate daily life, simply stated as if it might be true.


Mid-Century Modern.


The James Hardie offering appears to do everything the Thames & Hudson publication does, and more, in a confident, relaxed, and spirited way that remains ordinarily available, 'fun,' and informative; but with different, more ‘popular’ intents. If the project builder is seen as the architect's 'crass and ignorant' opposition, (see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/09/the-architects-lament.html), then one has to say that promotions like this reveal why they are winning the competition; and why our suburban areas are shaped by conglomerates of these types of buildings with less than a smattering of ‘architectural gems,’ in spite of the profession’s preaching, creating what is glumly describes as the, p.69, unassuming residential streets.


Modern Heritage.


Modern Coastal.

There is a ghostly parallel here where the building illustrated on the Thames & Hudson cover can be seen to have some characteristics presented in the James Hardie site as the style: 08 Modern Classical; Elegant, warm & whimsical; Curves, soft textures and greenery feature both inside and outside with the biophilic elements connecting the architecture with the surrounding landscape.


Modern Classical.


 Mmm: La Scala? No, ‘Modern Classical.’


La Scala, Bowen Hills, Qld.

Mid-Century Modern

This category is just one of eight modern home styles to peruse and ponder: have a browse of both the site and the book, and discover which is the more potent stimulant, the dream-maker, (again, see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/09/the-architects-lament.html), and understand how the size and mass of a publication can interfere in the experience of reading no matter how good the visuals might be for table display. One can sense how page turning and the 'clever' positioning of page numbers can create awkward contortions aggravated by the weight of a clumsy bulk. These inconveniences need to be compared to the ease of finger tapping, one-hand-held, pocket-sized, responsive style that is all class and colour, that is not referring one to a place that has been demolished, or to those mysterious locations that come with no street address.



Box Modern.

The James Hardie site gives full details of the locations of the homes it chooses to display, and the hours they can be visited. The stylish, architectural ‘New Queensland House’ designs choose to be boastfully published for grand, international exhibition, while seeking to maintain anonymity under clever titles like C House, Aperture House, and Shutter House in named locations that one hopes might be correct.


Barn.


This secrecy drives a wedge into credibility and transparency, heightening a standoff that stimulates distrust, and reverberates throughout the population as perceived professional elitism; saying silently that ‘architecture’ is not for the people; a position that reinforces a notion that has almost become an adage: that one only goes to an architect if one wants something different, (not a project or a ‘Hardies’ home: c.f. https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/09/the-architects-lament.html), and expensive; that one could have a swimming pool for the money spent on architectural fees. These words remain the unspoken mantras ignored by the profession that flounders on in its own self-interested, cerebral delights.



Modern Coastal.

The differences between the book and the site are as intriguing as the similarities: both do nothing for community, promoting singular style, private ambitions, and personal experiences and preferences under a series of various categories in spite of everything else. The James Hardie style, class, and design are presented as ordinary affairs, available to all – ‘This could be yours’ c.f. the architectural ‘This is mine’ - linked to international societal assessments that claim to define the future, (they must be real!), not the creative whims of assumed genius, special talent, or bespoke exemplars. There is less private ‘exhibitionism’ in the James Hardie material, although it seems to allow for this possibility. Little wonder that the project home remains so potently successful, and so irksome to the architectural profession that chooses to remain aloof from the everyday. The James Hardie site is accessible to, and is addressing everyone, Everyman, using similar techniques to those adopted by the profession that struggles to engage the general population with pricey, custom-made projects and cleverly-phrased proclamations with references that puzzle and exclude.


Modern Classical.



Japandi.

Yes, one can be critical of the James Hardie houses and their possibilities in many ways, but the profession has nothing to replace this gap between a grand, intellectual style for sensitive aesthetes, and everyone, Everyday, leaving the vernacular to inevitably find itself, which it does; such is its nature, in spite of architectural preferences. Meanwhile the suburb, town, and city are left to grow as an accretion, a muddle of whimsical bits and pieces defined digitally – site by site; display home by display home; ‘my place’ with ‘my place,’ without giving a thought to the whole or what it might be.


Modern Farmhouse.


Modern Heritage.

Who is going to look after our streets, suburbs, towns, and cities? What are we doing? If architects are unwilling or unable to do anything about this, what can a vernacular do? History shows that it can attend to these issues, but there needs to be a community, a desire to come together, to share, in order to manage these ambitions and achieve good outcomes, rather than continue to stimulate the drive for individualism that is promoted by Modernism, as seen in both the James Hardie site and the Thames and Hudson publication.



And there is more – an ‘Inspiration Gallery’:

https://www.jameshardie.com.au/inspirationGallery




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