The home that helped define ‘Goldie-style’.

Daydream House by Goldie Homes, showing the front courtyard, plunge pool and striped facade

The Daydream House brought wide attention to Goldie’s approach to architecture — one shaped by climate, lifestyle, individuality and connection to place.

Recognised through Grand Designs Australia, Daydream showed how a design-led home can be distinctive, highly livable and cost-efficient.

Interior detail of the Daydream House showing tiled kitchen island bench, rattan stools and warm natural light
Open-plan dining and living space at the Daydream House with timber ceiling, indoor-outdoor connection and passive design features

Why it matters today?

Daydream remains an important part of the Goldie story because it shows the design values behind the new project home model.

Burleigh Heads is a different kind of offering, but it is built on the same core idea as Daydream: better design improves the way people live.

Front exterior of the Daydream House by Goldie Homes, featured on Grand Designs Australia

From Daydream to Burleigh Heads

Burleigh Heads takes the spirit of Daydream — light, openness, lifestyle and character — and applies it in a more attainable format for modern family living.

It is not about repeating a one-off home. It is about bringing strong design thinking to more families without losing quality, identity or everyday livability.