The design and layout of the Jack House challenged the conventional style of 1950s Australia. Oriented away from the street, the house embraces the natural landscape and has been described as robust, modest and unfussy.
Russell Jack studied building construction and freehand drawing by correspondence during his years in the Royal Australian Air Force. He graduated from Sydney Technical College and in 1952 gained experience working for architectural practices overseas. The Jack House was designed and built as his family home, winning the prestigious Sulman Award in 1957. Interior design expert, Annalisa Capurro, purchased the house in 2009 and is only the second owner of the house. She was proactive in listing the Jack House on the NSW State Heritage Register.
This house is modest and functional, it is human and nurturing, and has provided warmth and shelter to Jack and his family for 50 years.
Karen McCartney, 50/60/70 Iconic Australian Houses: three decades of domestic architecture
Gallery of photos
Details from the house designed by Russell Jack. Photographs by Michael Wee for the publication 50/60/70 Iconic Australian Houses: three decades of domestic architecture, by Karen McCartney.
In December 2022, Phyllis Murphy AM generously donated to the Caroline Simpson Library more than 3,000 wallpaper samples. While the bulk of the donation consists of wallpaper rolls, lengths and sample books, it also includes two printing rollers
These specially produced photograph albums (some in published form and others consisting of photographs pasted into an album) comprise images of one or more domestic dwellings and depict exteriors, interiors and gardens in NSW mostly from the late 19th to the early 20th centuries
This portfolio contains 55 photo prints taken by architectural photographer Richard Stringer, dating from 1968 to 2003, documenting significant Australian domestic buildings
This collection consists of 232 photo negatives by architect and photographer Barry Wollaston of buildings in the Sydney region considered by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects in the early 1950s to be of architectural and historical value