Cohousing in Australia

Plus other low-cost, low-tedium options for secure habitation

September 25, 2021 — September 15, 2023

cooperation
culture
economics
extended self
housing
incentive mechanisms
institutions
insurgency
making things
policy
spatial
straya
wonk
Figure 1

Scruffy notes from my cohousing working group on our research into how to find some cheap, low-fuss, convivial cohousing in Australia. These notes were not written for public consumption, but they will do for now. There was enough interesting stuff that I thought it worth copy-pasting to the internet for others. If you want to get in touch about anything discussed here please do, or join one of the meetup groups/reddits mentioned.

UPDATE: Looks like I am moving to Melbourne. Currently barn raising a cooperative house, in the Ouroboros project.

Related: Community governance, housing in general, squads

1 Collective housing governance structures

Figure 2: Cohousing models

So, there are varied governance and ownership structures for collective housing, and I have no fixed opinions about which model is most awesome.

collaborativehousing.org.au collates a few different options. Also Renew Magazine did a pretty tops story on these recently. There is also a cooperative that supports housing cooperatives, Cohousing Australia. I’ve put myself on the mailing list for all these organisations. There is a book that everyone recommends too.

1.1 Housing cooperatives

Housing co-operatives are a classic. In NSW this seems to mean going through Common Equity. A major example to be aware of in practice is our local Alpha house.

Some fun resources on housing co-ops for folks to take a look at (Commentary by Mike McKenna).

These give us interesting maps. TL;DR THE INNER WEST IS IN A DANGER ZONE CHECK THE ELEVATION OF ANY PROPERTIES. ALTERNATIVELY: BUY IN THE INNER WEST NOW AND YOU WILL HAVE A BEACHFRONT PROPERTY IN A COUPLE OF DECADES.

Figure 3:

1.2 Pollution

In an urban context, we might be interested to see this map of the lead levels in Sydney soil by Macquarie University’s Vegesafe.

In a rural context, bushfire smog is a non-trivial risk to health, and is obviously also related to climate change. Does anyone have up-to-date statistics on this in the Australian context? There is an excellent list of resources and challenges for lung health from California.

1.3 Future epidemic risk

Future epidemics are considered likely and might seriously change the trade-offs of urban living. Or not.

For now, see this piece by Elizabeth Van Nostrand for some risk calibration.

2 Buyers’ agents

Buyers’ agents might be good for people with specialist housing purchase needs. Do any of us know how to choose amongst them? There are a few top-ranked results from Google:

I don’t have much understanding of the incentives facing these people.

3 Governance

Two parts:

3.1 Legal/financial

Structure of the entity which owns the development and determines the rules and procedures for who lives there and when.

3.2 Community/procedural

Figure 4

How does a group doing co-housing decide stuff? This is a classic Community governance question.

urbancoup’s members thought about this for WAY TOO LONG and tried many governance structures. I did learn about Sociocracy from them, which sounds like a low-lift governance model.

Sociocracy is a system of governance that seeks to create psychologically safe environments and productive organisations. It draws on the use of consent, rather than majority voting, in discussion and decision-making by people who have a shared goal or work process

4 Finances

5 Housing theory and policy

I am no expert. There are people who study housing policy in general; in Australia, specifically; and for cohousing in particular. There is LinkedIn activity about policy setting for co-housing, for example.

6 Questions to answer about goals

Here are some we came up with.

  • Multi-generational
  • Shared kitchen
  • Shared guest room
  • Shared workshop
  • Shared event space
  • Shared garden
  • City?/Country?/ Urban fringe?
  • NSW/Qld/Vic/Tas/NT?
  • Build from scratch?
  • Convert apartments?
  • own/rent?
  • co-op/strata/corporate title/other?
  • How much capital can you stump up now?
  • What do you want to do if someone needs to sell?
  • How much can you raise as a loan?
  • Price

7 Incoming

fractalnyc.com:

…is an unlikely assortment of writers, designers, musicians, clowns, entrepreneurs, artists, coders, and scientists slowly cultivating a flourishing neighbourhood within a neighbourhood in Bushwick, Brooklyn — one of NYC’s creative hubs.

Currently, our collective consists of 10 living rooms within a 5min walk of Morgan Ave L. Communes are cool, but we’re something else: a friend network that shares spaces, manages projects, and raises each other’s aspirations.

  • What Communes and Other Radical Experiments in Living Together Reveal

    “Today’s future-positive writers critique our economies while largely seeming to ignore that anything might be amiss in our private lives,” writes Kristen Ghodsee. Even our most ambitious visions of utopia tend to focus on outcomes that can be achieved through public policy — things like abundant clean energy or liberation from employment — while ignoring many of the aspects of our lives that matter to us the most: how we live, raise our children, and tend to our most meaningful relationships.

    Ghodsee’s new book, “Everyday Utopia: What 2,000 Years of Wild Experiments Can Teach Us About the Good Life,” (Ghodsee 2023) is an attempt to change that. The book is a tour of radical social experiments from communes and ecovillages to “platonic parenting” and intentional communities. But, on a deeper level, it’s a critique of the way existing structures of family and community life have left so many of us devoid of care and connection, and a vision of what it could mean to organise our lives differently.

8 References

Brooks. 2020. The Nuclear Family Was a Mistake.” The Atlantic.
Ghodsee. 2023. Everyday Utopia: What 2,000 Years of Wild Experiments Can Teach Us about the Good Life.
Weinersmith, Weinersmith, Abramitzky, et al. 2023. To Each According to Their Space-Need: Communes in Outer Space.” Space Policy.