What Makes a Good Home

A Good Home supports the Rhythms of life

Communities are made of people. And thriving communities have people with rhythms of Stillness, Reflection, Connection, and Giving.

Stillness

Irrespective of any religious or non-religious attitudes, meditative practices are beneficial for everyone.

A quiet space in our homes, or neighbourhood public spaces encourages us to practice.

Reflection

Increasing self-awareness through personal reflection is arguably the key to creating a diverse community by deconstructing our inherent biases, prejudices and negative habits and patterns of thought.

Proximity buys time that we can spend being, rather than doing.

Connection

Food is an anchor for fostering connection with each other.

Our kitchen tables, breakfast bars, bump spaces and front-yard BBQs bring us together.

Giving

Giving is good for us. For all of us. Maimonides postulated a hierarchy of charity. He theorised that the highest level of giving is where the gift ultimately enables the recipient to become self-sufficient, no longer in need of charity.

Hospitality is a simple gift that requires nothing of the recipient other than their presence, and can be given regardless of the financial position of the giver. Indeed, some of the most significant spaces of hospitality can be found in the homes of those with the lease significant wealth. 

Picking products for a Good Home

When designing a home, there are an almost insufferable number of decisions to make before you even start to consider what is 'good'.

What is a 'good' construction product?

On the list of things to consider are:

  • Life-cycle energy costs
  • Transportation carbon footprint
  • Ethical procurement
  • Impact on operational energy use
  • Material sustainability
  • End-of-life uses

You can spend a lot of time thinking.

The issue is that the true cost of the products aren't necessarily reflected in the price. When we buy a product with a massive carbon footprint, we don't have to pay the price to off-set the impact on climate if the supply chain doesn't have to pay it.

If we buy a product manufactured under oppressive labour laws that don't adequately value human life, and human capital, we don't pay the price of the negative social impacts of low-wages.

It would be much easier for the average consumer, and the general market, if product pricing reflected the true costs.