Mount Coot-tha Home “Birdwood” Wins Robin Dods Award at 2026 Queensland Architecture Awards

A Mount Coot-tha home that throws out the Queenslander rulebook has claimed the Robin Dods Award for Residential Architecture – Houses (New) at the 2026 Queensland Architecture Awards, announced on 26 June by the Australian Institute of Architects.



The house, named “Birdwood” and sitting on a street along a Mount Coot-tha spur roughly six kilometres west of Brisbane’s CBD, was designed by Sydney-based architect Peter Besley. It’s the kind of project that makes you look twice — no wide eaves, no verandah, no floor-to-ceiling windows. What you get instead is a self-shading brickwork facade, a ziggurat-shaped skylight, and a cylindrical pool three metres deep that acts more like a cool plunge shaft than a backyard lap pool.

Photo Credit: Peter Besley

The jury, chaired by Professor Michael Keniger, praised the home for upending what most Queenslanders would consider the non-negotiables of local residential design. According to the jury, virtually every convention associated with the traditional Queenslander — the shading strategies, the passive ventilation approach, the familiar forms — has been challenged and reworked in “Birdwood”. They described it as an adventurous house that opens up genuinely different ways of responding to Queensland’s demanding climate.

Photo Credit: Peter Besley

That rethinking of climate response has direct roots in Besley’s years working in Iraq on United Nations projects. Baghdad summers run hotter than Brisbane’s, and the architecture there takes a counterintuitive approach: rather than opening up buildings during the day to catch breezes, the strategy is to trap cool overnight air and hold it through the heat of the day with heavy floors, walls and ceilings that carry what Besley calls thermal inertia. That logic has been applied directly to “Birdwood.”

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The project also has an unusual material origin story. Besley planned the house around pallets of brick salvaged from the closure of the Claypave brickworks in Ipswich, and used precast concrete slabs that require significantly less concrete than conventional poured methods. When COVID-era construction costs surged, Besley took on an active negotiating role between the owner and builder, completing around 600 revisions to the drawings to ensure the build remained achievable with the trades available at the time.

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Photo Credit: Peter Besley

One of the standout interior features is a “hanging” library designed to hold 3,000 history books, built to be constructed by the on-site carpenter from standard joinery. The ziggurat skylight above filters light to protect the collection. Despite its ambition, the build reportedly came in at roughly a third of what comparable projects typically cost.

The Robin Dods Award is named in honour of Francis Drummond Greville Dods, a pioneering Brisbane architect whose work in the early twentieth century helped shape Queensland’s domestic architectural identity — making the choice of this particular award for a home that so deliberately challenges that tradition an especially pointed one.

For those who live or spend time near Mount Coot-tha, “Birdwood” is now part of the neighbourhood’s architectural story — a quiet experiment in what Brisbane houses might become.

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The 2026 Queensland Architecture Awards were announced on 26 June. Full results are published by the Australian Institute of Architects at architecture.com.au.

Published 26-June-2026

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