HugsHaus

Ngunnawal Country,
Hackett,
ACT
This home will be open for in-person tours on the 17th May 2026

About this home

Hugshaus (a warm embrace) is an on-going retrofit of a 1967 brick veneer home in Canberra for my family to enjoy a comfortable and healthy home. The home has been modelled using the Passive House Planning Package (PHPP) to accurately guide decision-making in which retrofit steps are most effective in achieving a healthy home and guiding where money is best spent at each stage of the retrofit.

Hugshaus aims to serve as a demonstration of what can be achieved in a retrofit of the typical Canberra existing housing stock leveraging the PHPP as a design tool to clearly demonstrate the effectiveness of any change
This energy model of the retrofit must then be used alongside knowledge of the heat and moisture risks associated with making changes to an old building.

The PHPP calculates the energy required to maintain the temperature of the entire home above 20oC in the winter and below 25oC in the summer (or any temperature range that you choose).

The cost to heat and cool the whole home to these temperatures is $4,775 for the existing home and $1,227 for the retrofitted home (based on use of a heat pump with a COP of 3 and $0.30/kWh of electricity).

At this time the walls have had insulation blown in to achieve a continuous insulation of R3.3 and has (existing) well-fitted R2.0 now cross-hatched with R2.5 ceiling insulation. The wall to ceiling insulation has been meticulously fitted with continuous insulation and membrane to manage this moisture and mould risky junction.

Underfloor now has R3.0 polyester insulation and soon a membrane.
Hugshaus is now all electric and has had the power supply upgraded to 3 phase for planned solar and EV charging capacity for our two cars.

The initial ventilation strategy (aside from opening windows as weather permits) is use of a continuous extraction fan in the bathroom. The plan is to upgrade to a mechanical heat recovery ventilation system as well as retrofitting beautiful timber aluclad windows.

This home does not have wheelchair access.

Q & A

What motivated you to build or retrofit sustainably?
Comfort and health for my family living in a 60 year old Canberra home.
Insulation added to the walls, floor and ceiling, ensuring it was as continuous as possible. Replacing the windows and doors with beautiful timber aluclad triple glazed will happen this year and we anticipate it will provide an even greater benefit. No more condensation, no more cold drafts, no more needing to close the blinds as soon as the sun is down, no more overheating of rooms in summer and much improved quiet from the outside world.
Not yet encountered, although I suspect it may be the change when the heat recovery ventilation system is installed. Clean, fresh air all year round without having to open the windows.
Retaining but reducing the existing home to two bedrooms, then adding a new Passive House secondary home to the block. Planned but may have to wait for a few years.
Back to 2026 Homes
Type: Passive House or EnerPHit
Project: Home retrofit
Designer: Tom Hughes
Builder: Tom Hughes
Size: 127m2m²
Energy Rating: PHPP EnerPHit modelling shows 105kWh/m2a heating and 9kWh/m2a cooling energy demand to maintain 20-25deg throughout the home.
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 1

Sustainability Features

Building Materials & Envelope

Draught-proofing/air sealing
High-performance insulation
Recycled or reused materials

Heating, Cooling and Ventilation

Heat pump (reverse-cycle) heating/cooling

Energy and Appliances

Electric cooktop - induction/ceramic

Water & Waste Systems

Water-efficient fixtures

Landscape & Biodiversity

Edible garden

Climate Resilience

Accessible & Flexible Design Features

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