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FOREGROUND
These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Suburbanism: for most of us, the ’burbs are home; it’s time to celebrate them. While urban professionals bemoan its “placelessness”, suburbia will be with us as long as populations grow. A reassessment of this much-maligned urban form is long overdue. Writer. Leon van Schaik, Nigel Bertram. LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Learning from the landscape: Linda Corkery. In the early 1980s, Linda Corkery was one of a number of North American landscape architects that migrated to Australia, transforming professional training and practice. Foreground speaks with the influential practitioner about her journey from the plains of Iowa to the University of New SouthWales.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM As Enrique Peñalosa, the pioneering urbanist and former mayor of Bogota once said, “children are an indicator species, if we can design successful cities for children we will have a successful city for everyone.”. Natalia Krysiak’s Churchill Fellowship report ‘Design Child-Friendly High Density Neighbourhoods’ explores arange of
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTSAUTHOR:FOREGROUND
These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Suburbanism: for most of us, the ’burbs are home; it’s time to celebrate them. While urban professionals bemoan its “placelessness”, suburbia will be with us as long as populations grow. A reassessment of this much-maligned urban form is long overdue. Writer. Leon van Schaik, Nigel Bertram. LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Learning from the landscape: Linda Corkery. In the early 1980s, Linda Corkery was one of a number of North American landscape architects that migrated to Australia, transforming professional training and practice. Foreground speaks with the influential practitioner about her journey from the plains of Iowa to the University of New SouthWales.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM As Enrique Peñalosa, the pioneering urbanist and former mayor of Bogota once said, “children are an indicator species, if we can design successful cities for children we will have a successful city for everyone.”. Natalia Krysiak’s Churchill Fellowship report ‘Design Child-Friendly High Density Neighbourhoods’ explores arange of
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
UNSOLICITED URBANISM: THE LEGACY OF CLOSED-DOOR PLANNING Part of the urban planning landscape. We’ve studied unsolicited proposals as part of our research into how planning systems have changed since the 1990s and the implications for public participation and social justice. We’ve been involved in several studies in Sydney’s Millers Point and Barangaroo since 2014.. This research has included interviewing key actors in local and state CHRIS GIBSON ARCHIVES News and analysis on cities, places and the people who make them delivered direct to your inbox A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated DALLAS ROGERS ARCHIVES News and analysis on cities, places and the people who make them delivered direct to your inbox HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. WRITING THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE Writing the Australian landscape. Australia’s landscape has always loomed large in the country’s literature. From Tim Winton to Georgia Blain, the island continent has made for great reading – and a recent poetry collection from the award-winning poet Mark Tredinnick continues in this fine tradition. From Banjo Patterson’s romantic WATER IN A DRY LAND: HOW PA YEOMANS UNCOVERED AUSTRALIA’S Water in a dry land: How PA Yeomans uncovered Australia’s hidden water systems. Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, and yet many of its farming practices see water routinely squandered. One visionary farmer’s insights, however, have had a global influence on water use in the landscape and might yet help avertagricultural
BIODIVERSITY LOSS: THE CANARY IN THE COALMINE Biodiversity loss: the canary in the coalmine. With 30 percent of Australia’s threatened species living in cities, there is an urgent need to plan, design and manage urban landscapes to conserve and enhance life. Foreground spoke with Claire Martin about the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects’ biodiversity loss emergencydeclaration.
LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Learning from the landscape: Linda Corkery. In the early 1980s, Linda Corkery was one of a number of North American landscape architects that migrated to Australia, transforming professional training and practice. Foreground speaks with the influential practitioner about her journey from the plains of Iowa to the University of New SouthWales.
CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can FOREGROUND - CITIES, PLACES AND THE PEOPLE WHO MAKE THEM Foreground - Cities, places and the people who make them. Culture. Object and spirituality: Building on Country. by Alison Page —May 21, 2021. Contemporary building practices in Australia typically impose international styles. But as author Alison Page explains, there is now a growing movement to understand and apply the principles that PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
AFTER THE RIBBON CUTTING: LESSONS LEARNT FROM MELBOURNE'S After the ribbon cutting: lessons learnt from Melbourne’s sky rail. A massive new elevated rail line in Melbourne, Australia, has brought dramatic transformation to the city’s south-eastern suburbs. But long-term challenges persist and it remains to be seen NOT PASSIVE VICTIMS: INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS RESPOND TO Not passive victims: multiple approaches to adapting to climate change. Despite these numerous challenges, Indigenous Australians in Australia have demonstrated an assertive agency toward meeting the challenges of climate change and have instituted a DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. FOREGROUND - CITIES, PLACES AND THE PEOPLE WHO MAKE THEM Foreground - Cities, places and the people who make them. Culture. Object and spirituality: Building on Country. by Alison Page —May 21, 2021. Contemporary building practices in Australia typically impose international styles. But as author Alison Page explains, there is now a growing movement to understand and apply the principles that PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
AFTER THE RIBBON CUTTING: LESSONS LEARNT FROM MELBOURNE'S After the ribbon cutting: lessons learnt from Melbourne’s sky rail. A massive new elevated rail line in Melbourne, Australia, has brought dramatic transformation to the city’s south-eastern suburbs. But long-term challenges persist and it remains to be seen NOT PASSIVE VICTIMS: INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS RESPOND TO Not passive victims: multiple approaches to adapting to climate change. Despite these numerous challenges, Indigenous Australians in Australia have demonstrated an assertive agency toward meeting the challenges of climate change and have instituted a DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Learning from the landscape: Linda Corkery. In the early 1980s, Linda Corkery was one of a number of North American landscape architects that migrated to Australia, transforming professional training and practice. Foreground speaks with the influential practitioner about her journey from the plains of Iowa to the University of New SouthWales.
WRITING THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE Writing the Australian landscape. Australia’s landscape has always loomed large in the country’s literature. From Tim Winton to Georgia Blain, the island continent has made for great reading – and a recent poetry collection from the award-winning poet Mark Tredinnick continues in this fine tradition. From Banjo Patterson’s romantic BEAUTIFUL UGLY. UGLY BEAUTIFUL: PAINTING THE AUSTRALIAN twitter. facebook. mail. Idris Murphy is a prominent Australian contemporary landscape painter, who has exhibited extensively since the late ’70s. His work is held in a number of Australian collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of NSW, and the State Library of Queensland. In 2014 he won the Gallipoli Art Prize. FORTY YEARS OF THE BURRA CHARTER AND AUSTRALIA'S HERITAGE Forty years of the Burra Charter and Australia’s heritage vision. As the Burra Charter turns 40, James Lesh looks back at the global influence of its innovative approach to heritage value and asks how it may need to evolve to meet the challenges of future conservation and changing sensibilities. Writer. Dr James Lesh. Imagery. DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. AGAINST EVERYTHING: THE CURIOUS CASE OF RUSHCUTTERS BAY Against everything: The curious case of Rushcutters Bay skate park. Contrary to popular belief, hordes of young skaters aren’t tearing up cities the world over. But a recent decision to forgo a skate park in Sydney’s affluent Rushcutters Bay highlights the tension between perception and reality. Writer. Alan Weedon. “GARDENS AREN’T JUST A RETREAT, BUT AN ACTIVE ADVANCE” Paraphrasing the late artist Ian Hamilton Finlay, Jencks says, “I love that gardens can be, not just a retreat, but an active advance.”. –. Tracey Clement is an artist and writer based in Sydney, Australia. This article is part of Foreground’s Transformative Landscapes themed series of essays. CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND It’s a grim irony that those who’ve least contributed to climate change will have the most to lose. A country such as Nicaragua, for example, contributes about 0.76 percent of global emissions per capita, yet it receive a disproportionate amount of climate change’s grave effects.As the second-poorest state in the Western hemisphere after Haiti, Nicaragua isn’t really best placed to THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTSAUTHOR:FOREGROUND
While there may be concerns over the increasing costs and accessibility of higher education for all, universities value their relationship with their city, its industries and communities, including local and foreign visitors. The ‘publicness’ of campus space and integration or even infiltration of the city into the campus, and campus into the city, is the happy aim of many urbancampuses.
LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Foreground: Your early life was not spent in Australia. For landscape architects the landscape itself often seems influential. Can you tell us a little about where you grew up? Linda Corkery: I was born in Iowa, so I’m a Midwestern girl and up to the age of twelve, my family lived in a small rural town. My backyard, beyond a lilac hedge, was basically a cornfield. ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN With a career spanning six decades, Gordon Ford was a grand master of the Australian natural garden. Briony Downes looks at the key elements of his practice and how a new exhibition sheds light on his enduringlegacy.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Such polemics conceal rich continuities. The poison is hidden in plain sight in the language of the Oxford Dictionary of Architecture (ODA, 1999).The definition of “suburb” begins benignly, if pleading a special case as the OED etymology shows: “1. Residential areas the style of which evolved from ‘C19’ ideals associated with the Arts and Crafts and Aesthetic Movements and with the DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM In Sydney, an estimated 28% of apartment dwellers are families with children, but while this demographic is increasing in many compact neighbourhoods throughout Australia, there is a persistent belief among some decision-makers that families neither belong in higher density developments, nor want to live there.At best, this discourages more families from choosing to live in compact WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND It’s a grim irony that those who’ve least contributed to climate change will have the most to lose. A country such as Nicaragua, for example, contributes about 0.76 percent of global emissions per capita, yet it receive a disproportionate amount of climate change’s grave effects.As the second-poorest state in the Western hemisphere after Haiti, Nicaragua isn’t really best placed to THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTSAUTHOR:FOREGROUND
While there may be concerns over the increasing costs and accessibility of higher education for all, universities value their relationship with their city, its industries and communities, including local and foreign visitors. The ‘publicness’ of campus space and integration or even infiltration of the city into the campus, and campus into the city, is the happy aim of many urbancampuses.
LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Foreground: Your early life was not spent in Australia. For landscape architects the landscape itself often seems influential. Can you tell us a little about where you grew up? Linda Corkery: I was born in Iowa, so I’m a Midwestern girl and up to the age of twelve, my family lived in a small rural town. My backyard, beyond a lilac hedge, was basically a cornfield. ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN With a career spanning six decades, Gordon Ford was a grand master of the Australian natural garden. Briony Downes looks at the key elements of his practice and how a new exhibition sheds light on his enduringlegacy.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Such polemics conceal rich continuities. The poison is hidden in plain sight in the language of the Oxford Dictionary of Architecture (ODA, 1999).The definition of “suburb” begins benignly, if pleading a special case as the OED etymology shows: “1. Residential areas the style of which evolved from ‘C19’ ideals associated with the Arts and Crafts and Aesthetic Movements and with the DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM In Sydney, an estimated 28% of apartment dwellers are families with children, but while this demographic is increasing in many compact neighbourhoods throughout Australia, there is a persistent belief among some decision-makers that families neither belong in higher density developments, nor want to live there.At best, this discourages more families from choosing to live in compact WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S With 85% of Perth’s water coming from groundwater and plans to expand its already unsustainable use, the aquifer could become terminally low or saline; this would lead to terrible results for both people and the environment. For this reason, it is vital that communities in the Wheatbelt become self-sufficient in all water needs, to ensure the long-term viability of both farms, the rural NOT PASSIVE VICTIMS: INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS RESPOND TO In the south of Australia, coastal sites are subject to sea level rise, and wind erosion will affect significant rock art sites. In Preminghana, Tasmania, a significant Aboriginal rock art site on the west coast, situated on a section of very friable coastal geology, is under threat.In some cases, rock markings are now often submerged by high tides, protected only by seaweed. BIODIVERSITY LOSS: THE CANARY IN THE COALMINE Foreground: The Australian Institute for Landscape Architects (AILA) board, which you sit on, has declared a climate change emergency and also a biodiversity loss emergency.Why is it so important to raise awareness of biodiversity loss? Claire Martin: We made the declaration not just to raise awareness but because we wanted to drive change. Cities, councils and other organisations have WRITING THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE From Banjo Patterson’s romantic portraits of Australiana, to the evocative NSW hinterland of the late Georgia Blain, Australian landscapes have always loomed large in our stories.With this in mind, a recent collaboration between landscape architecture practice Taylor Cullity Lethlean (TCL) and the award-winning Australian poet Mark Treddinick represents a natural alignment of interests. WATER IN A DRY LAND: HOW PA YEOMANS UNCOVERED AUSTRALIA’S Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, and yet many of its farming practices see water routinely squandered. One visionary farmer’s insights, however, have had a global influence on water use in the landscape and might yet help avert agricultural, and ecological, collapse. LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Foreground: Your early life was not spent in Australia. For landscape architects the landscape itself often seems influential. Can you tell us a little about where you grew up? Linda Corkery: I was born in Iowa, so I’m a Midwestern girl and up to the age of twelve, my family lived in a small rural town. My backyard, beyond a lilac hedge, was basically a cornfield. DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Such polemics conceal rich continuities. The poison is hidden in plain sight in the language of the Oxford Dictionary of Architecture (ODA, 1999).The definition of “suburb” begins benignly, if pleading a special case as the OED etymology shows: “1. Residential areas the style of which evolved from ‘C19’ ideals associated with the Arts and Crafts and Aesthetic Movements and with the AGEING, ISOLATING AND UNEQUAL: MELBOURNE’S CHIEF FG: Melbourne’s resilience document talks about “stresses and shocks” that otherwise could be negated in the short-term, politically-speaking. What kinds of stresses and shocks need to be addressed in the current political cycle? TK: While we have been acutely alert to local and state politics – and the political cycle – we have also tried to develop a strategy that stands apart fromit.
PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTSAUTHOR:FOREGROUND
These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Suburbanism: for most of us, the ’burbs are home; it’s time to celebrate them. While urban professionals bemoan its “placelessness”, suburbia will be with us as long as populations grow. A reassessment of this much-maligned urban form is long overdue. Writer. Leon van Schaik, Nigel Bertram. DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM As Enrique Peñalosa, the pioneering urbanist and former mayor of Bogota once said, “children are an indicator species, if we can design successful cities for children we will have a successful city for everyone.”. Natalia Krysiak’s Churchill Fellowship report ‘Design Child-Friendly High Density Neighbourhoods’ explores arange of
PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTSAUTHOR:FOREGROUND
These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Suburbanism: for most of us, the ’burbs are home; it’s time to celebrate them. While urban professionals bemoan its “placelessness”, suburbia will be with us as long as populations grow. A reassessment of this much-maligned urban form is long overdue. Writer. Leon van Schaik, Nigel Bertram. DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
CHILDREN ARE AN 'INDICATOR SPECIES'; BUILD WELL FOR THEM As Enrique Peñalosa, the pioneering urbanist and former mayor of Bogota once said, “children are an indicator species, if we can design successful cities for children we will have a successful city for everyone.”. Natalia Krysiak’s Churchill Fellowship report ‘Design Child-Friendly High Density Neighbourhoods’ explores arange of
A NEW GARDEN AT MELBOURNE’S HEIDE MUSEUM TURNS ‘SOCIAL A new garden at Melbourne’s Heide Museum turns ‘social distance’ to healing ends. Openwork’s design for Heide’s healing garden uses the study of ‘proxemics’ to define spaces that might help people reconnect with the world, post-pandemic. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many of us would have seen the idea of tightly regulated THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. WRITING THE AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE Writing the Australian landscape. Australia’s landscape has always loomed large in the country’s literature. From Tim Winton to Georgia Blain, the island continent has made for great reading – and a recent poetry collection from the award-winning poet Mark Tredinnick continues in this fine tradition. From Banjo Patterson’s romantic CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from SUBURBANISM: FOR MOST OF US, THE ’BURBS ARE HOME; IT’S Suburbanism: for most of us, the ’burbs are home; it’s time to celebrate them. While urban professionals bemoan its “placelessness”, suburbia will be with us as long as populations grow. A reassessment of this much-maligned urban form is long overdue. Writer. Leon van Schaik, Nigel Bertram. NOT PASSIVE VICTIMS: INDIGENOUS AUSTRALIANS RESPOND TO Not passive victims: multiple approaches to adapting to climate change. Despite these numerous challenges, Indigenous Australians in Australia have demonstrated an assertive agency toward meeting the challenges of climate change and have instituted a WATER IN A DRY LAND: HOW PA YEOMANS UNCOVERED AUSTRALIA’S Water in a dry land: How PA Yeomans uncovered Australia’s hidden water systems. Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth, and yet many of its farming practices see water routinely squandered. One visionary farmer’s insights, however, have had a global influence on water use in the landscape and might yet help avertagricultural
LEARNING FROM THE LANDSCAPE: LINDA CORKERY Learning from the landscape: Linda Corkery. In the early 1980s, Linda Corkery was one of a number of North American landscape architects that migrated to Australia, transforming professional training and practice. Foreground speaks with the influential practitioner about her journey from the plains of Iowa to the University of New SouthWales.
DETOXING THE RIVER: TOWARD A SWIMMABLE YARRA The conversation seems to be changing and we just might be witnessing a significant shift in our collective understanding. The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 legislates for a different way of thinking about the river. Written in English and Woiwurrung, the language of the Wurundjeri, the Act enshrines the voice of Traditional Custodians, their knowledge and culture. PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire canABOUT - FOREGROUND
Dr Jo Russell-Clarke is a registered landscape architect and Fellow of the AILA. She is Foreground’s Editor-at-Large and a senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide. Her research interests include histories of the suburbs, the changing faces of food production, consumption and tourism and their landscape impacts, and new concepts of the commons as public landscape infrastructure. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S With 85% of Perth’s water coming from groundwater and plans to expand its already unsustainable use, the aquifer could become terminally low or saline; this would lead to terrible results for both people and the environment. For this reason, it is vital that communities in the Wheatbelt become self-sufficient in all water needs, to ensure the long-term viability of both farms, the rural WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE: A CONVERSATION WITH CHARLES MASSY Water, water everywhere: A conversation with Charles Massy. As drought bites in Australia and politicians obfuscate the underlying issues, farmer and author Charles Massy reveals his vision for a resilient agriculture that not only acknowledges climate change, but PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
PAVED FOR THE PEOPLE: IN MELBOURNE, A PARKING LOT HAS Paved for the people: In Melbourne, a parking lot has become a public square. “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot,” sings Joni Mitchell. But at Prahran Square, almost the reverse took place. Lyons Architecture and Aspect Studios have transformed a carpark into an urban sanctuary of sorts, an island of open space and amenity in BEAUTIFUL UGLY. UGLY BEAUTIFUL: PAINTING THE AUSTRALIAN twitter. facebook. mail. Idris Murphy is a prominent Australian contemporary landscape painter, who has exhibited extensively since the late ’70s. His work is held in a number of Australian collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of NSW, and the State Library of Queensland. In 2014 he won the Gallipoli Art Prize. WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire canABOUT - FOREGROUND
Dr Jo Russell-Clarke is a registered landscape architect and Fellow of the AILA. She is Foreground’s Editor-at-Large and a senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide. Her research interests include histories of the suburbs, the changing faces of food production, consumption and tourism and their landscape impacts, and new concepts of the commons as public landscape infrastructure. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S With 85% of Perth’s water coming from groundwater and plans to expand its already unsustainable use, the aquifer could become terminally low or saline; this would lead to terrible results for both people and the environment. For this reason, it is vital that communities in the Wheatbelt become self-sufficient in all water needs, to ensure the long-term viability of both farms, the rural WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE: A CONVERSATION WITH CHARLES MASSY Water, water everywhere: A conversation with Charles Massy. As drought bites in Australia and politicians obfuscate the underlying issues, farmer and author Charles Massy reveals his vision for a resilient agriculture that not only acknowledges climate change, but PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
PAVED FOR THE PEOPLE: IN MELBOURNE, A PARKING LOT HAS Paved for the people: In Melbourne, a parking lot has become a public square. “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot,” sings Joni Mitchell. But at Prahran Square, almost the reverse took place. Lyons Architecture and Aspect Studios have transformed a carpark into an urban sanctuary of sorts, an island of open space and amenity in BEAUTIFUL UGLY. UGLY BEAUTIFUL: PAINTING THE AUSTRALIAN twitter. facebook. mail. Idris Murphy is a prominent Australian contemporary landscape painter, who has exhibited extensively since the late ’70s. His work is held in a number of Australian collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of NSW, and the State Library of Queensland. In 2014 he won the Gallipoli Art Prize. WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire canABOUT - FOREGROUND
Dr Jo Russell-Clarke is a registered landscape architect and Fellow of the AILA. She is Foreground’s Editor-at-Large and a senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide. Her research interests include histories of the suburbs, the changing faces of food production, consumption and tourism and their landscape impacts, and new concepts of the commons as public landscape infrastructure. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S With 85% of Perth’s water coming from groundwater and plans to expand its already unsustainable use, the aquifer could become terminally low or saline; this would lead to terrible results for both people and the environment. For this reason, it is vital that communities in the Wheatbelt become self-sufficient in all water needs, to ensure the long-term viability of both farms, the rural WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE: A CONVERSATION WITH CHARLES MASSY Water, water everywhere: A conversation with Charles Massy. As drought bites in Australia and politicians obfuscate the underlying issues, farmer and author Charles Massy reveals his vision for a resilient agriculture that not only acknowledges climate change, but PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
PAVED FOR THE PEOPLE: IN MELBOURNE, A PARKING LOT HAS Paved for the people: In Melbourne, a parking lot has become a public square. “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot,” sings Joni Mitchell. But at Prahran Square, almost the reverse took place. Lyons Architecture and Aspect Studios have transformed a carpark into an urban sanctuary of sorts, an island of open space and amenity in BEAUTIFUL UGLY. UGLY BEAUTIFUL: PAINTING THE AUSTRALIAN twitter. facebook. mail. Idris Murphy is a prominent Australian contemporary landscape painter, who has exhibited extensively since the late ’70s. His work is held in a number of Australian collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of NSW, and the State Library of Queensland. In 2014 he won the Gallipoli Art Prize. WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire can PERMACULTURE KEY TO PRESERVING FOOD SECURITY FOR ALLAUTHOR: FOREGROUND Permaculture key to preserving food security for all. Those with the most to lose from climate change remain some of the world’s poorest – especially for subsistence-based farmers. But, a recent landscape project in Nicaragua shows how permaculture farms could be the key to food security in an unstable world. Writer. Foreground. HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’SAUTHOR:CHRISTIE STEWART
The Wheatbelt’s water challenges are linked to those being faced in Perth, for while its broadacre agriculture relies on natural rainfall rather than irrigation, its drinking water is piped from Perth. This water is pumped from the same aquifer that provides both Perth’s drinking water and surface water for the city’s horticulture. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
THESE FIVE CAMPUS DESIGNS ARE CHANGING THE WAY STUDENTS These five campus designs are changing the way students value university. The university campus is evolving, along with its relationship to the culture and economy of the city around it. The Victorian chapter of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects (AILA) has recognised the ambitions of five campus designs from fouruniversities in
CULTURAL MOVEMENT: WHAT CAN DANCE TELL US ABOUT PLACE? Cultural movement: what can dance tell us about place? Choreographer and dancer Amrita Hepi and landscape architect Claire Winsor explore what dance and movement can teach us about place, memory and communication in a new commission from WHEN IT COMES TO URBAN DEVELOPMENT, AUSTRALIA’S FEDERAL The Australian version of the City Deals model does not entertain similar notions of devolution. Quite the contrary, Australia is seeing increasing centralisation of intergovernmental roles and responsibilities. In the urban realm this is apparent in the 2016 Smart Cities Plan and its Australian Infrastructure Plan: ‘Commonwealth seeks to “rethink the way our cities are planned,built and
ATLAS OF MEMORY: GORDON FORD’S NATURAL AUSTRALIAN GARDEN Atlas of Memory: (re)visualizing Gordon Ford’s Natural Australian Garden is on show at McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, 29 July – 11 November 2018. Briony Downes is an arts and design writer based in Hobart. She has worked in the arts industry for over 20 years as a writer, actor, gallery assistant, art theory tutor and fine artframer.
WHY DOES AUSTRALIAN LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAVE A GENDER Evidence points to significant pay disparities between women and men in landscape architecture. To better understand the issue, the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects is launching a new gender equity study in collaboration with Parlour and Monash University’s XYX Lab. In honour of International Women’s Day, a sizeable portionof
WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire canABOUT - FOREGROUND
Dr Jo Russell-Clarke is a registered landscape architect and Fellow of the AILA. She is Foreground’s Editor-at-Large and a senior lecturer at the University of Adelaide. Her research interests include histories of the suburbs, the changing faces of food production, consumption and tourism and their landscape impacts, and new concepts of the commons as public landscape infrastructure. THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE'S PARKLETS To be sure, the use of public space for alfresco dining and drinking has a public benefit that parking does not. Parklets contribute to the atmosphere, vitality and sense of place of the street. Increased social activity also makes the area safer. Yet street parking is apublic amenity too.
HIGH WATER: HOW DESIGN MIGHT HELP FIX THE WHEATBELT’S With 85% of Perth’s water coming from groundwater and plans to expand its already unsustainable use, the aquifer could become terminally low or saline; this would lead to terrible results for both people and the environment. For this reason, it is vital that communities in the Wheatbelt become self-sufficient in all water needs, to ensure the long-term viability of both farms, the rural WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE: A CONVERSATION WITH CHARLES MASSY Water, water everywhere: A conversation with Charles Massy. As drought bites in Australia and politicians obfuscate the underlying issues, farmer and author Charles Massy reveals his vision for a resilient agriculture that not only acknowledges climate change, but PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION Paradise lost: The forgotten landscape legacy of Marion Mahony Griffin. An exhibition of Marion Mahony Griffin’s design highlights how our obsession with the singular object and heroic author has worked to obscure the transformative impacts of ecological and cultural skills and knowledge. Legacies are unstable, even at the bestof times.
DECOLONISING AGRICULTURE: BRUCE PASCOE’S ‘DARK EMU’ Decolonising agriculture: Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’. Australia’s colonial history has characterised indigenous people almost exclusively as nomadic hunters. This exclusive extract from Bruce Pascoe’s ‘Dark Emu’, reveals a long history of indigenous agriculture, a history that predates the pyramids, but which wasomitted from the
PAVED FOR THE PEOPLE: IN MELBOURNE, A PARKING LOT HAS Paved for the people: In Melbourne, a parking lot has become a public square. “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot,” sings Joni Mitchell. But at Prahran Square, almost the reverse took place. Lyons Architecture and Aspect Studios have transformed a carpark into an urban sanctuary of sorts, an island of open space and amenity in BEAUTIFUL UGLY. UGLY BEAUTIFUL: PAINTING THE AUSTRALIAN twitter. facebook. mail. Idris Murphy is a prominent Australian contemporary landscape painter, who has exhibited extensively since the late ’70s. His work is held in a number of Australian collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of NSW, and the State Library of Queensland. In 2014 he won the Gallipoli Art Prize. WHY CAN’T YOU GROW FOOD WHEREVER YOU WANT? Why have land-use zones? Modern town planning originated in the 19th century out of the need and ability to separate unhealthy, polluting uses from the places where people lived. This was a direct response to the Industrial Revolution, which brought with it both an upscaling of the noisy, smelly and dirty uses to be avoided, and the emergence of new ways to travel relatively long distances CULTURAL BURNING CAN BE A VITAL FIRE MANAGEMENT TOOL Cultural burning can be a vital fire management tool. Fuel reduction burns have long been practiced by Indigenous custodians in Australia to manage and exploit fire. The Firesticks Alliance is working to establish greater understanding of how fire canOpen Menu
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OBJECT AND SPIRITUALITY: BUILDING ON COUNTRY_by _Alison Page
—May 21,
2021
Contemporary building practices in Australia typically impose international styles. But as author Alison Page explains, there is now a growing movement to understand and apply the principles that Australia’s First Peoples developed over millennia to shape and carefor Country.
Culture
MAKING CITIES FOR PEOPLE WITH JAN GEHL _by _Alexander Maxwell-Anderson—May
15, 2021
Planning & policy
THE FUTURE OF MELBOURNE’S PARKLETS_by _Kim Dovey
, Merrick
Morley ,
Quentin Stevens
—May 8,
2021
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* Object and spirituality: Building on Country * A matter of time: Design in the age of sea level rise * Not passive victims: Indigenous Australians respond to climatechange
Transport
LEARNING TO LIVE WITH AGGRESSIONLESS CARS_by _Simon Sellars
—April
15, 2021
Culture
(RE)BUILDING CITIES FROM THE NEIGHBOURHOOD UP_by _Chris ten Dam
, Edwin
Buitelaar
, Maarten
Hajer ,
Martijn van den Hurk,
Peter Pelzer
—April 9,
2021
Planning & policy
URBAN WILDNESS: HEALING THE HUMAN-NATURE DIVIDE IN THE CITY_by _Wendy Steele
—March 22,
2021
Planning & policy
ABANDONING INDONESIA’S SINKING MEGA CITY_by _Etienne Turpin
, Nashin
Mahtani
—March
15, 2021
Planning & policy
WATER INJUSTICE RUNS DEEP IN AUSTRALIA: FIXING IT MEANS HANDING CONTROL TO FIRST NATIONS _by _Francis Markham, Fred
Hooper ,
Grant Rigney
, Lana D.
Hartwig ,
Rene Woods ,
Sue Jackson
—March 3,
2021
Parks & places
PICTURING PARADISE: MARION MAHONY GRIFFIN AND CASTLECRAG_by _Dr Anne Watson
—February
8, 2021
Planning & policy
THE LURKING TRAP OF THE ‘SNAP BACK’ CITY_by _Dan Hill
—February 5,
2021
Culture
FOREGROUND’S MOST-READ STORIES OF 2020February 4, 2021
Agriculture & environment RE-DESIGNING FARMING_by _Cameron Muir
—February
4, 2021
Planning & policy
MELBOURNE, IT’S TIME TO GO BIG ON A CAR-FREE RECOVERY_by _Vaughn Allan
—December
2, 2020
Parks & places
MONKEY BUSINESS
_by _Jo Russell-Clarke—November
30, 2020
Culture
PARADISE LOST: THE FORGOTTEN LANDSCAPE LEGACY OF MARION MAHONY GRIFFIN_by _Ella Mudie
—November
27, 2020
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