Architecture

An Architect’s Own Bushfire-Safe, Oceanfront House

Architect Matt Ross Goodman was working pro bono in Separation Creek following the 2015 bushfires when he discovered the ideal block of vacant land for a holiday house.

Drawing on the lessons he’d learned working in the Great Ocean Road town, he navigated the sloping block to design the most cost-efficient home possible.

Six years of research, design, and construction later, Matt and his family are living the dream!

Written
by
Amelia Barnes
|
Photography
by

Olive Street Cabin is the holiday house of architect-owner, Matt Ross Goodman.

Matt designed the new house on a relatively small 91-square-metre footprint to minimise both its visual impact and building costs.

Where the design breaks away from the area’s original shacks is through extensive use of glazing on the front facade to frame ocean views.

‘We really wanted to be as close and connected as possible to the expansive view,’ Matt says.

The internal palette is made up of cost-efficient fibre cement sheet, plasterboard, and laminate joinery with some feature timber pieces.

Fireplace from Oblica.

Timber joinery by Darcy James.

Blackbutt timber on the flooring and feature joinery softens what might otherwise be a relatively hard set of materials.

The timber island/table is the heart of the home, and the best place to sit and watch the view, ocean, weather, and wildlife.

The rectangular footprint was the most cost effective approach for the home.

The covered outdoor area off the living area.

The simple floor plan kept costs down, although Matt admits to being too heavy handed with the deletion of power points and lights. ‘In hindsight should have spent more!’

The house contains two bedroom to the rear of the plan.

The family bathroom.

The relationship between the house and the slope also references the structure of neighbouring dwellings.

Writer
Amelia Barnes
Photography
25th of July 2025
Landscape design
Timber joinery
Location

Separation Creek, VIC/ Eastern Maar Country

Architect Matt Ross Goodman loves the town of Separation Creek (located along the Great Ocean Road, about 150 kilometres south-west of Melbourne) so when the area was devastated by bushfires in 2015, he pitched in to help.

Offering his architectural services to permanent residents who lost their homes, Matt completed three pro bono projects, which in turn informed foundations of his then fledgling practice Matt Ross Goodman Architecture Office.

He explains, ‘We learnt so much over the four to five years working on these projects — all invaluable lessons for my career. All of the projects were on difficult steep sites, with high BAL ratings, and landslip risks.

‘These three projects — initiated through our desire to help — enabled me to develop my approach to design, whilst inadvertently developing my knowledge and experience in numerous complex areas that I may have never been exposed to had I not leant a hand.’

At the same time Matt was working in the area, he discovered a dream plot of vacant land for a holiday house to suit his growing family.

Matt designed the new house on a relatively small 91-square-metre footprint to minimise both its visual impact and building costs.

‘We wanted the project to sit comfortably within the surrounds and not visually dominate it like some of the newer larger homes,’ he says.

‘Our site is surrounded by some original fibro beach shacks that have a humble scale and simple use of materials, and we wanted to be a nice new neighbour to these old homes…

‘The rectangular footprint was the most cost effective approach.’

Where the design breaks away from the area’s original shacks is through extensive use of glazing on the front facade, and what Matt describes as the relatively fussy detailing to conceal the window frames from view.

‘There were many reasons for this, the main being that we really wanted to be as close and connected as possible to the expansive view,’ he says.

Externally, the house is clad in Colorbond Custom Orb sheets, mostly in the colour Windspray, to match to the basalt and riverstones that line nearby Separation Creek beach.

Sliding screens close down the rear of the house when not in use, creating an arrival ritual that builds anticipation of the magical view revealed upon each visit.

The remainder of the material palette is likewise cost efficient, comprising fibre cement sheet, plasterboard and laminate joinery. Blackbutt timber on the flooring and feature joinery softens what might otherwise be a relatively hard set of materials.

The house was built by Basebuild Constructions for $457,000, although Matt says that figure doesn’t account for many favours, and the rising cost of construction post-COVID lockdowns.

‘Based on a number of current projects which we have in the area, I believe the cost of our build would be double at best, likely between $800,000 and $900,000,’ he says.

‘This is due to numerous factors, yet the key factor being scarcity/availability of builders and trades who service the area, and the difficult working conditions which the town poses.’

Matt’s home is one of 14 he’s designed so far in the Separation Creek area following the 2015 bushfires. Now a part-time resident, his love of the town is stronger than ever.

‘It is truly the most amazing place on the Victorian coastline.’

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