Two recent references to glasshouses have been noticed: the Glasshouse apartments at Burleigh Heads, Queensland, and the Glasshouse Theatre at the Queensland Performing Arts Centre, a heritage-listed building that has just been renovated: see -
and
https://share.google/c8u3y4AiYBKoXfgxD.
For more on the renovation of the Queensland Performing Arts Centre heritage building, see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/02/robin-gibson-postscript.html.
The commentary on the apartment block can be seen in:
https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2026/02/the-queenslander-glasshouse.html.
What is it that now makes this naming so popular? Port Macquarie has had The Glasshouse Arts, Conference and Entertainment Centre for years. Why have Brisbane and Burleigh Heads suddenly, in 2026, shown an interest in this title which is really far better known as referring to Philip Johnson’s house in New Canaan, Connecticut – The Glass House built in 1949. Are these projects trying to gain some kudos?
Has glass technology improved? The Glasshouse Theatre has its fluid glazed elevation that we are told relates to/is inspired by the nearby Brisbane River. It is not clear if this reference is to the concept of the flow of water becoming a graphic flux of glazing, or whether the actual serpentine twisting of the Brisbane River across the topography of this city has been the stimulus for this sinuous planning profile. Does it matter? Maybe 'both' might be the safest response? Perhaps the story is merely an excuse to use smart, new curved glass, because the association described is more an analytical, intellectual association than an emotive 'river' experience?
The apartment block has used glass liberally too, and has also curved it. The architects describe the profiling as ‘fluting,’ as seen on the classical columns, stating that its purpose is functional – to refract light so that the privacy of the occupants is maintained. Just how effective this idea might be is unclear, especially at night, but the curtains that seek to block off the glazing’s transparency are clearly visible in Street View, even during the day.
The similarity of these projects to the classic Mies ‘Skyscraper’ model of 1922 is of interest, with the theatre being the closest match in plan with its curvilinear form, and the apartment being more like it in its vertical reading of glass and fine slab edges.



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