Resources

This page has resources that will help you realise your cohousing dream. It also has policy and advocacy resources for decision-makers or for cohousing communities who may be approaching their local council or member of parliament.

We want to continuously improve these resources and so value your feedback. Also, if you have resources that you want to share email us at research@cohousing.org.au and we will be in touch about how best they can be used and shared with others.

Unlocking the doors: legal and financial pathways to resident-led housing

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A guide produced for CoHousing Australia through a Knowledge Exchange Grant from the City of Sydney. Ms Caitlin McGee from the Institute of Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology and Dr Matt Daly from the Sustainable Building Research Centre at the University of Wollongong interviewed cohousing groups, property developers, and finance sector representatives about how to make cohousing a reality in Australia.

This guide is for people wanting to set up collaborative housing in Australia. It is based on research and consultation with resident groups and experts in the field.

We hope the guide becomes used by groups like a workbook that you use and test thoroughly.

We want it to be a circular guide where your experience of using it is fed back for us to update and improve on so that all cohousing and collaborative housing groups can benefit.

For now, please email feedback to research@cohousing.org.au with the subject line: Cohousing guide feedback. In future, we hope to make the guide available on a platform in which collaborative housing groups can provide feedback and share resources and useful experience.

The guide was launched on Friday 25 August 2023 at the ResHub (Research Hub) at UTS.

How Feasible is a New Generation of Housing Co-operatives in Australia?

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In this study we investigate whether it is feasible today for a non-subsidised co-operative model of housing to deliver affordable and secure tenure housing for moderate income workers. A segment of our society who are increasingly priced out of ownership throughout great swathes of urban and regional Australia.

With a particular focus on “missing middle” income cohorts who are not able to access social and affordable housing, or afford premium Build To Rent, we look at how “limited equity” housing co-operatives, which work successfully throughout Europe in cities like Zurich, and Vienna, as well as North America in cities like Toronto and New York, could be adopted as an affordable housing solution in an Australian context.

We also explore the cost of including cohousing features such as common rooms for collaborative activities. This helps explore the question of the dollar value we place on community spaces in an inner city urban environment and who should foot the bill?

We hope the findings and questions posed through this work spark a conversation about how we can practically create a new housing solution (a “third way” or “middle ground” between ownership and rental) for this critical and increasingly financially stressed segment of Australian society.

This report was made possible by the Business Council of Co-operatives & Mutuals (BCCM) via a Bunya Fund grant.