In the midst of the mapped surface is an area of well kept grass, a small swimming pool and a Phoenix canariensis (Phoenix Palm). This tree of life is a counterpart to the indigenous dead tree in the water. It is an emblem of the paradise that European's wanted to find in the New World and the paradise that Aborigines lost. It is also emblematic of the suburban paradise that dominates Australian popular culture. The Phoenix Palm stands in a small square yard of lawn that is cut by the `X' signature.
Facing the lawn is a `Dream Home', a large empty room. The Dream Home is not a literal copy of a typical Australian suburban home, rather it is one of the interior rooms such as the `Living Room' extruded. Thus the Dream Home doubles as a modernist box. Upon inspection it is a strange room, reminiscent of Magritte's interior scenes, with a moveable corner and an enormous door. From inside the room you can see nothing except the sky, so that the Euclidean space of the white cube frames the fractal space of the sky.

The 'Dream Home', a large empty room - a modernist box - with eight blue poles that recall Jackson Pollock's painting Blue Poles, a controversial icon of the post-modern Australian culture.

The view from the 'Dream Home'.