In her keynote speech at the Building Designers Association of Australia's National Design festival last year, Jane highlighted the immensity of the environmental crisis and the collective responsibility of the building and design sector to make some urgent systemic changes. “In Australia, on average, we are using 3.5 times the amount of stuff the planet can safely support each year… [but] the striving for more is not our fault. Currently we live in a system that thrives on us wanting more. Capitalism conditions us to believe and behave as if we will never have enough to be satisfied, to be happy.” She faced a room full of her design industry peers and proposed enoughness as an antidote to the excess that is hurting our planet and our people.
Back in her garden, Jane sighs. “We still have a huge problem. I am a big advocate for energy efficient homes, but something isn't sitting right with me. People say — ‘Well this is a carbon neutral home’ – but it's still four bedrooms and two bathrooms. It's 21 degrees all year round and the whole thing is mechanically ventilated. You're basically living in an esky.
“You're missing the point. We need to be building smaller homes that are fit for purpose — for how people are living now and for what people can afford. Our industry has to change. We need to get over ourselves and provide practical options that are responding to what people need, and what the world needs. That’s why I set Homeful up a couple of years back.”
Homeful — which makes affordable, pre-designed small home templates — is Designful’s little sister, created to democratise design. To provide a solution for all the people who don’t have many options, who want to build a robust and environmentally responsible home but can’t afford the increasingly hefty price tag of a custom designed house.
“Homeful was living in my mind for a very long time. The reason that it didn't happen until recently was because I had all these architects and friends in my ear who were like. ‘Oh, no, no, you can't do that. That’s not architectural design. It's so cookie cutter.’ And I was like, ‘Yeah, okay. But I think it would help people.’”
For Jane Hilliard, a small home means a full life and the spaces outside are as much a design consideration as those within. “We are part of nature and it's not always comfortable. We have seasons, so maybe we should just put on a jumper. If we start to connect ourselves back to that, we're all going to feel a lot happier. Smaller homes force us to go outside and do cool things. They make our human connections stronger, and if we do need our own space, we can always go for a walk. We might see some great birds!
“At the end of the day, enoughness is about sharing. It’s about community. Some of us need to consider how much is enough and based on that, we need to use a lot less, but the reality is there's a whole lot of people in the world who don't have anywhere near enough. If we scale things back, there’ll be a lot more left for other people.”
Visit Homeful and Designful to experience more of Jane’s work.