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Issue 64 - The 'Future' Issue

Issue 64

The 'Future' Issue

Habitus #64 Welcome to the HABITUS ‘Future’ and ‘Habitus House of the Year’ Issue. We are thrilled to have interior designer of excellence, Brahman Perera, as Guest Editor and to celebrate his Sri Lankan heritage through an interview with Palinda Kannangara and his extraordinary Ek Onkar project – divine! Thinking about the future, we look at the technology shaping our approach to sustainability and the ways traditional materials are enjoying a new-found place in the spotlight. Profiles on Yvonne Todd, Amy Lawrance, and Kallie Blauhorn are rounded out with projects from Studio ZAWA, SJB, Spirit Level, STUDIOLIVE, Park + Associates and a Lake House made in just 40 days by the wonderful Wutopia Lab, plus the short list for the Habitus House of the Year!

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One architect’s book on constructing your own home
ConversationsTimothy Alouani-Roby

One architect’s book on constructing your own home

Three Hat Buildings

‘Find Your Way Home’ by Alexander Hill provides a book-length guide to designing, renovating and building your own home in Australia based on the ‘Three Hat Approach.’


Melbourne-based architect Alexander Hill has released a Find Your Way Home, a new book published by his own Three Hat Buildings platform. The trio in question are the client/owner, architect and builder, with the book aiming to provide a methodology and framework for understanding these roles as integrated and complementary.

“The owner holds the dream, the land and the capital, without which nothing begins,” as Hill writes in Chapter 3 of the book. “The architect listens and interprets, shaping space from nothing. The builder makes the abstract real and tangible, coordinating trades and managing risk. Everyone brings something vital.”

In a world of hyper-specialisation, it’s a refreshing approach – a reminder that the built environment has always been collaborative and indeed might function better if the different players were brought into contact more often.

Find Your Way Home begins by addressing the confusion many homeowners face before starting a project, caught between volume building and high-end architectural services where design is often undervalued. It introduces the Three Hat Approach as a way to clarify roles, align expectations and establish a strong foundation through clear priorities, realistic budgets, thoughtful scale and careful team selection.

It then examines the broader building system, explaining how industry structures tend to prioritise speed and efficiency over individuality and long-term liveability. Rather than choosing between design and construction perspectives, the book argues for understanding the tension between them, showing how informed owners can navigate the system more effectively and keep human needs – not market logic – at the centre of decision-making.

The Three Hat Model is presented as a practical pathway that integrates – or at least aligns – owner, architect and builder roles while preserving their distinct responsibilities. By introducing structure, sequencing and clear communication, the framework addresses common causes of underperforming projects such as fragmented roles, poor timing of decisions and loss of design intent.

Related: A recent book with Álvaro Siza

Drawing on real-world experience, the book then explores why projects succeed or fail in practice, highlighting the importance of honest trade-offs, early alignment between design and cost, and the strength of collaborative relationships. Hill emphasises that risk is reduced when responsibilities are clear and when shared accountability replaces rigid control, recognising that outcomes are shaped as much by people and communication as by drawings and contracts.

Finally, the book looks beyond process to the enduring qualities of good homes, arguing that successful design supports changing life patterns rather than simply delivering a finished product. By prioritising thoughtful design, comfort, flexibility, sustainability, light and flow, the Three Hat Approach frames building as an ongoing act of care, where long-term value comes from decisions that allow a home to adapt and continue serving those who live within it.


About the Author

Timothy Alouani-Roby

Timothy Alouani-Roby is the Editor of Indesignlive and Habitus Living. Having worked in elite professional sport for over a decade, he retrained in architecture at the University of Sydney, adding to previous degrees in philosophy, politics and English literature. Timothy is based in Gadigal-Sydney, but spends much of his time among the moors of both Northern England and Marrakech.

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Issue 64 - The 'Future' Issue

Issue 64

The 'Future' Issue

Habitus #64 Welcome to the HABITUS ‘Future’ and ‘Habitus House of the Year’ Issue. We are thrilled to have interior designer of excellence, Brahman Perera, as Guest Editor and to celebrate his Sri Lankan heritage through an interview with Palinda Kannangara and his extraordinary Ek Onkar project – divine! Thinking about the future, we look at the technology shaping our approach to sustainability and the ways traditional materials are enjoying a new-found place in the spotlight. Profiles on Yvonne Todd, Amy Lawrance, and Kallie Blauhorn are rounded out with projects from Studio ZAWA, SJB, Spirit Level, STUDIOLIVE, Park + Associates and a Lake House made in just 40 days by the wonderful Wutopia Lab, plus the short list for the Habitus House of the Year!

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