Architecture, Building and Planning - Research Publications

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 625
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    Report on the place name: Moreland
    Lesh, J (Moreland City Council, 2022-04)
    Explores the links between the “Moreland” name and British Caribbean Slavery.
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    Beyond Capitalism? Organizing Architectural Education
    Burridge, F ; Dietz, A ; Lechene, V ; Cayer, A ; Fritz, JG ; Leonard, N ; Day, K ; Geraki, P ; Deamer, P ; Jacobs, D (Taylor and Francis Group, 2022)
    A power map of an electric toothbrush: an influencer; an architecture license. An organizational map linking the precarity of a construction worker to a window cleaner to an asset manager. A resource map of a public university: an architecture firm; a food co-op. These collaborative projects emerged during a free and virtual summer school named Architecture Beyond Capitalism (ABC), which launched in 2021 as an experiment in architectural education.
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    Four Melbourne Architects (1979): The Creation of Contemporary Perceptions for Australian Architecture
    Day, K ; Campbell, E ; Kroll, D ; Curry, J ; Nolan, M (SAHANZ, 2022)
    In 1979, Peter Corrigan conceived the idea for the ‘Four Melbourne Architects’ exhibition to be held at South Yarra’s Powell Street Gallery. Corrigan led the charge to draw a line between a new generation of architectural practitioners with a fresh design agenda and the conservative practices represented by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects (RAIA). This exhibition, along with the establishment of the Half Time Club and the launch of Transition Magazine, provided platforms for a lively and vigorous profession. The ‘Four Melbourne Architects’—Greg Burgess, Peter Crone, Norman Day and Edmond and Corrigan—were diverse in their approach to architectural design yet shared common concerns of the post-Whitlam generation. The research for this paper examines the documentation between the four architects as they prepared their exhibition, recording the projects exhibited, along with critical reviews of the exhibition. Interviews have been undertaken with the surviving architects involved and people who attended the exhibition. Four Melbourne Architects was the first of many exhibitions during that period, which became one of many vehicles for public engagement with early postmodernism and those creating it, where collaboration, inclusion, and connectivity informed designers. That process activated a search for a contemporary Australian identity leading to the development of the ‘Melbourne School’.
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    Reading and Rebuilding
    Day, K (Library Association of Australia, 2022)
    Located in Dili, the Xanana Gusmao Reading Room is East Timor’s only public library. It was founded 2000 with international help. Including from academics, architects and policy experts at the University of Melbourne. Twenty-one years on, Dr Kirsten Day revisits the library she and a small team helped establish.
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    Water sensitive outcomes for infill development: final report
    Sochacka, B ; Kenway, S ; Bertram, N ; London, G ; Renouf, M ; Sainsbury, O ; Surendran, S ; Moravej, M ; Nice, K ; Todorovic, T ; Tarakemehzadeh, N ; Martin, DJ (Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities, 2021)
    Australian cities have experienced significant growth recently, a trend that is expected to continue. One response from governments has been to promote ‘infill development’, which increases urban density, but also has significant adverse effects on urban water cycles, resource use efficiency, and the amenity and liveability of urban areas.
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    Usefulness of data analytics in Smart Villages development
    Doloi, H ; Doloi, H ; Bora, A (Smart Villages Lab, The University of Melbounre, 2022-12-20)
    With over 40% global population still live in rural with many under extreme poor conditions, effective management of resources for supporting the development is crucial. One of the key considerations in effective management is need-based and context specific intervention planning incorporating bottom-up information flow. Traditional top-down approaches in planning and development are considered not only wasteful but also irrelevant for transforming rural communities keeping the value, culture, heritage at the core of the development cycle. In the bottom up planning, empirical data at the grassroots level activities play a pivotal role. In this research, significance of the data-driven planning coupled with the strong data-analytics is demonstrated as one of the most critical elements supporting the planning and development of rural communities under the auspice of Smart Villages. Based on a case study conducted across 37 villages in the river island Majuli in Assam located in the north eastern part of India, the research highlights the functionalities and efficacies of a Smart Data Platform used for evaluating real-time data analytics and supporting context specific planning and development of a large area comprising 2300 plus households. The concept is further highlighted to signify the need for central data-centric Research and Development center for supporting policy making within the public governance.
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    Decision-making of municipal urban forest managers through the lens of governance
    Ordonez, C ; Threlfall, CG ; Livesley, SJ ; Kendal, D ; Fuller, RA ; Davern, M ; van der Ree, R ; Hochuli, DF (ELSEVIER SCI LTD, 2020-02)
    Awareness of the benefits of urban trees has led many cities to develop ambitious targets to increase tree numbers and canopy cover. Policy instruments that guide the planning of cities recognize the need for new governance arrangements to implement this agenda. Urban forests are greatly influenced by the decisions of municipal managers, but there is currently no clear understanding of how municipal managers find support to implement their decisions via new governance arrangements. To fill this knowledge gap, we collected empirical data through interviews with 23 urban forest municipal managers in 12 local governments in Greater Melbourne and regional Victoria, Australia, and analysed these data using qualitative interpretative methods through a governance lens. The goal of this was to understand the issues and challenges, stakeholders, resources, processes, and rules behind the decision-making of municipal managers. Municipal managers said that urban densification and expansion were making it difficult for them to implement their strategies to increase tree numbers and canopy cover. The coordination of stakeholders was more important for managers to find support to implement their decisions than having a bigger budget. The views of the public or wider community and a municipal government culture of risk aversion were also making it difficult for municipal managers to implement their strategies. Decision-making priorities and processes were not the same across urban centres. Lack of space to grow trees in new developments, excessive tree removal, and public consultation, were ideas more frequently raised in inner urban centres, while urban expansion, increased active use of greenspaces, and lack of data/information about tree assets were concerns for outer and regional centres. Nonetheless, inter-departmental coordination was a common theme shared among all cities. Strengthening coordination processes is an important way for local governments to overcome these barriers and effectively implement their urban forest strategies.
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    Indigenising Practice: Inclusive Indigenous Community Housing
    Robertson, H (Architecture Media Australia Pty Ltd, 2022)
    No more than a door: Culturally appropriate housing need not be more expensive, but some basic steps in the design process go a long way to ensuring resident's satisfaction and comfort.
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    Barbara van den Broek. Contributions to the Disciplines of Landscape Architecture, Town Planning and Architecture
    Saniga, A ; Wilson, A ; Kroll, D ; Curry, J ; Nolan, M (SAHANZ, 2022)
    Barbara van den Broek (1932-2001) trained as an architect in Auckland, New Zealand before moving to Brisbane with her husband and fellow architect Joop, where they established an architectural practice. van den Broek went on to run an office as a sole practitioner and took on architecture and landscape architecture projects. Over the course of her career she completed post-graduate diplomas in Town and Country Planning, Landscape Architecture and Education, and a Master of Science – Environmental Studies, and collaborated on a number of key projects in Queensland and Papua New Guinea (PNG). Our paper will build an account of her career. In assessing the significance of her contribution to landscape architecture, planning and architecture in Australasia, it will bring a number of other spheres into the frame: conservation and Australia’s environment movement; landscape design and the bush garden; and van den Broek’s personal development that included artistic expression, single parenthood, teaching, and the navigation of male-dominated professional environments to develop a practice that contributed to town planning projects in cities across Australia, and made significant contributions to landscape projects in Queensland and PNG.