The visual relationship between the public street and the transparent master bedroom demonstrates the sensation of “being-on-display”. This tension urges the user to behave differently to how they normally would. Godsell stated in an ABC interview “…because this building forces one to confront oneself, then if you don’t really feel good about yourself, you probably don’t like the building. There is nowhere to hide in that sense.”[43] This quote by Godsell articulates the confronting, Panoptic nature of Kew House. These Panoptic effects were was also sensed by Godsell’s wife who mentioned that the transparent façade (see diagram 2) made her feel uncomfortable while getting dressed and her experience of the space forced her put her clothes on in the wardrobe[44].