The Seed’s Hemp and Recycled Wood home

Narara,
NSW
This home will be open for in-person tours on the 17th May 2026

About this home

Our house sits inside the Narara Ecovillage and I was lucky to learn about building with hemp from one of my future neighbours. Before we built the village, a group of us used to gather for potluck dinners and share dreams and information about natural build homes - straw, hemp, cob. We were a great support to each other.

Later, we helped each other raise the walls and feed the troups! I fell in love with hemp when I learned you could grow enough hemp to build your home in just 4 months, all the while giving back to the earth. I also loved that hemp absorbed sound, breathed and was fire resistant. The external walls are a mixture of Corten and Weathetex cladding and render on the hemp.

The architects did a great job on the passive solar design - the winter sun streams onto the thermal mass of the acid washed concrete floor and warms up our Mudtec mud brick interior wall. We only turned on our air conditioners twice last winter. I wanted large glazing on the east though, where our view is, so we put extra solar on the roof to power the air cons in summer. External shading got us the 9 stars still and we have lots of cross ventilation including some high windows. The windows are double glazed, wood on the inside and metal on the outside - I am so grateful for the low maintenance!

My husband had made a vege garden for a friend's uncle - he repaid us tenfold with all the recycled hardwood for the home from his local demolition business. I had an amazing builder who liked working with natural and recycled materials. He and the team helped pull out a beautiful wood kitchen from Sydney and we teamed it with some granite offcuts from a local kitchen supplier. It feels so lovely to be in a reused kitchen!

We had some fun too doing a hemp feature wall (unrendered) and building a walk in pantry that features our recycled hardwood all sanded back to its original glory. There's the rainwater tanks, hot water pumps, compost toilets, battery, EV etc so come along for a yarn

Q & A

What motivated you to build or retrofit sustainably?
Comfort, future-proofing, a lighter footprint, and because I fell in love with hemp and all its health giving properties
Including curves! - one round wall, one round window and curves around the window and door frames. It was an 'upgrade' because it is obviously cheaper to build square but the natural beauty the non-linear shapes give bring me joy everyday. Thanks to my building designer Will Eastlake of Integrated Biotecture who ensured his love of curves graced our home. Thanks to Shane and team from Hannah Build who shared his time and know-how on making hemp even more beautiful with the rounded edges like strawbale houses! Thanks to my building team at Moorhouse Constructions, who were amazing to work with and embraced the extra complexity of the curves with good cheer!and thanks to Ewa from ekodesign who was the artist behind our hemp feature wall! and made curvy waves on a straight wall :)
There are many small things - they aren't devastating but just nice to haves.1) Proper noise insulation - ie rubber to separate the floor and ceiling may have been worth it when you have an office under a bedroom! Normal insulation, even a high value doesn't really work.2) I wish i had slab edge insulation - not essential in my climate but the climate is changing!3) If you want the chance to lay thick tiles - eg terracotta maybe - ensure the step down in your bathroom and laundry is deep enough.4) Plumb tank water into your shower to avoid the chlorine water5) Anywhere you have lamps, you don't need to put dimmers on the lights. eg bedroom.6) I didn't make an outdoor covered space for a house battery so now I have to do a bit of an unsightly add on for it - which will be installed before May so you'll see itI did spend a LOT of time on the design so I can't think of too many things!
I'd love to install an outdoor sauna!
Back to 2026 Homes
Type: Ecovillage, Standalone house/townhouse
Project: New build
Architect: Will Eastlake of Integrated Biotecture
Designer: Ewa Kajkowska of ekodesign
Builder: Michael Lancaster of Moorhouse Constructions
Size: 140m2m²
Energy Rating: 9.1 Star NatHERS rating
Bedrooms: 3
Bathrooms: 2

Sustainability Features

Building Materials & Envelope

Draught-proofing/air sealing
High-performance insulation
Double or triple-glazed windows
Sustainable or low-impact materials
Recycled or reused materials

Heating, Cooling and Ventilation

Passive heating/cooling (north-facing glazing, cross ventilation, thermal mass, shading, etc.)
Ceiling fans
Heat pump (reverse-cycle) heating/cooling

Energy and Appliances

Rooftop solar PV
Battery storage
Dedicated wall-mounted EV charging
Efficient lighting (LED, daylighting, solar skylights)
Heat pump hot water
Electric cooktop - induction/ceramic

Water & Waste Systems

Water-efficient fixtures
Rainwater tanks
Composting toilet

Landscape & Biodiversity

Native garden
Permaculture garden
Edible garden

Climate Resilience

Bushfire
Heatwave

Accessible & Flexible Design Features

Design for flexible use
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