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Southern Highlands Custom Homes: Cool Climate Design Considerations

February 11, 2025 9 min read By Anna Mitchell, Building Designer

The Southern Highlands attracts buyers from Sydney who want the rural character and cooler climate, but plenty of those buyers commission city-builders who design like they are still on a Box Hill block. The Highlands is a different climate, different vegetation, different soil, and increasingly different bushfire risk profile. Building well here means designing for those specifics.

The climate reality

Bowral, Mittagong, Moss Vale and surrounding villages sit at 670 to 770 metres above sea level. Winter overnight lows hit -5 degrees on cold mornings. Frost is normal from May to September. Summer maximums rarely exceed 30 degrees. The climate is closer to inland Victoria than coastal NSW.

This means heating, not cooling, is the primary energy load. Insulation, glazing and air sealing matter far more than they do in Sydney. Aspect and solar gain become critical: south-facing rooms in the Highlands stay cold and damp without significant heating energy.

Site orientation principles

  • Long axis east-west: Same as Sydney, but for different reasons. In Sydney, you orient for summer shade. In the Highlands, you orient to maximise winter solar gain to north-facing rooms.
  • Main living rooms on the north: Floor-to-ceiling glazing facing north captures the low winter sun.
  • Wet areas and garages on the south: Buffer the colder side of the house with rooms you do not occupy for long.
  • Eaves sized for solstice angles: Deep eaves still useful for blocking summer sun, but should not over-shade in winter. Around 600mm on north-facing windows works for Highlands latitude.
  • Wind exposure: Many Highlands blocks are on ridges with strong westerly winds in winter. Site placement to minimise wind exposure (using natural windbreaks like trees) saves heating energy.

Materials and construction details that differ

Standard Western Sydney project home spec does not directly translate. Key differences:

  • Brick veneer with cavity insulation: Cavity insulation (typically 40 to 60mm rigid foam) is much more common than in Sydney. It dramatically improves wall R-value.
  • Suspended timber floors common: Many Highlands blocks are on rock or sloping ground where slab-on-ground is expensive. Suspended floors need underfloor insulation (R2.5 minimum).
  • Roof colour: Light coloured Colorbond standard in Sydney to reduce summer heat. In the Highlands, darker colours can help winter heat retention, though BASIX may still require lighter colours depending on insulation specification.
  • Slab edge insulation: Critical for slab-on-ground in cool climate. 40mm rigid foam to the slab edge prevents thermal bridging through the perimeter.
  • Mechanical ventilation: Highlands homes are designed for tighter air sealing to retain heat. This means natural ventilation is reduced and mechanical heat recovery ventilation (HRV) systems become valuable for indoor air quality.

Bushfire compliance

The Southern Highlands sits in the middle of significant bushland: Morton National Park to the south, Wollondilly catchment to the west, Wingecarribee state forests throughout. Most blocks are within bushfire-prone land. BAL ratings range from BAL Low (rare) to BAL FZ (Flame Zone, in the worst exposed sites).

Build cost adders for BAL 19 and above:

  • BAL 19: $3,000 to $8,000 (ember-proof vents, screens, treated decking timber)
  • BAL 29: $12,000 to $25,000 (fire-rated windows, enclosed eaves, non-combustible cladding)
  • BAL 40: $30,000 to $60,000 (specialty fire-rated windows, full non-combustible exterior, water spray systems sometimes required)
  • BAL FZ: $80,000 to $150,000+ (specialty construction, sometimes a refuge room)

You cannot tell the BAL rating from a real estate listing. A bushfire assessment by an accredited consultant is essential before signing on a block.

Heating selection

The big choice for a Highlands home is the heating system. Options ranked by typical operating cost (best to worst) for a 4-bedroom home:

  • Hydronic underfloor heating with heat pump source: most efficient, $35,000 to $60,000 capital cost.
  • Ducted reverse cycle air conditioning with COP 5+ heat pump: very efficient, $18,000 to $28,000.
  • Slow combustion wood heater (single zone): cheap to run if you have wood access, but doesn’t heat whole house unless designed with open plan in mind. $5,000 to $12,000 including flue.
  • Hydronic with gas boiler: efficient but gas is being phased out for new connections under BASIX 2025 settings.
  • Electric resistance heating (panel heaters etc): cheapest capital, most expensive to run. Avoid except in low-use rooms.

Soil and slab

Highlands soils vary enormously over short distances. Rock close to surface, reactive shale, basaltic clay, and peat in low-lying areas are all common. Soil testing (and often piering allowance) is more important than in Western Sydney where soils are more predictable.

Expect to budget $15,000 to $35,000 in piering and possibly drop edge beam if your block sits on reactive or filled ground.

Local builders versus city builders

Some of the most expensive mistakes we see in the Highlands are city builders applying Sydney spec without adjusting for climate. Slabs without edge insulation, single glazing, R2.5 ceiling insulation, dark roof on a north-facing block. The homes look fine on the photos but cost the owner $3,000 to $5,000 a year more in heating than they should.

If you are using a builder from outside the Southern Highlands, insist on:

  • Double glazing with low-e coating, thermally broken frames.
  • R5.0 ceiling and R2.5 wall insulation minimum.
  • Cavity insulation in brick veneer.
  • Slab edge insulation if slab-on-ground.
  • Air sealing details around windows, doors, penetrations.
  • Roof colour selected based on BASIX outcome, not aesthetic preference alone.

Building in the Southern Highlands?

We do site assessments across Bowral, Mittagong, Moss Vale, Robertson, Berrima and surrounds. We will visit your block, check BAL, soil and orientation, and design to the climate you actually have.

Book a Highlands site visit

Final word

The Southern Highlands rewards designs that respect the climate. Get the orientation, insulation and glazing right, and your home costs almost nothing to heat through winter. Get them wrong and you fight the climate for the next 40 years.

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick Answers

The NSW Southern Highlands sits across NATHERS climate zones 7 (Bowral, Mittagong) and 8 (higher altitudes around Bundanoon and Robertson). Both are classified as cool temperate to cool, with frost in winter and mild summers. This is significantly cooler than Western Sydney (Zone 6) and demands different design priorities.
Yes. R5.0 to R6.0 ceiling insulation and R2.5 to R3.0 wall insulation is typical for the Southern Highlands, compared to R3.5 ceiling / R2.0 wall for Western Sydney. Underfloor insulation also becomes important on suspended floors, where it is rarely specified in Sydney.
Yes for properties bordering bushland (which is much of the Highlands). BAL ratings from 12.5 up to FZ (Flame Zone) are common. BAL 19, 29 and 40 require specific construction details: enclosed eaves, fire-rated windows, ember-proof vents and non-combustible cladding. Budget significantly more if your block is bushfire prone.
It is one of the most efficient options for the climate, but capital cost is high ($35,000 to $60,000 for a typical 3 to 4 bedroom home). Heat pumps and reverse cycle ducted air conditioning with high-COP units perform well at a fraction of the upfront cost. Hydronic is most popular in premium custom builds where running cost over decades matters more than capital outlay.
Almost always double-glazed, often with low-e coating and thermally broken aluminium frames. Single glazing simply does not perform thermally in this climate and will fail BASIX in most orientations. Expect $12,000 to $25,000 extra over a comparable Sydney home for window specification alone.
Disclaimer: This article reflects 13 Homes' general experience as a residential builder in NSW. Costs, timelines, council rules and regulations change over time and depend on the specifics of your site, finance situation and selections. Information here should not be treated as legal, financial or engineering advice. Always seek site-specific advice from a qualified builder, certifier and engineer before making a decision on your build.

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