Week 7 Urban Design and Planning: ATS2547: Cities and Sustainability
Week 7 Urban Design and Planning: ATS2547: Cities and Sustainability
Week 7 Urban Design and Planning: ATS2547: Cities and Sustainability
Melbourne
Dr. Erin Castellas, RmW814
Recap last week
Questions?
Field trip
Please fill out consent forms emailed to you:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSe-
LeEBs2He2uBX65y02mewKiGcrlukiHZMUoUTIVek3onkWQ/viewform?c=0&w=1
Tuesday 2 May
Itinerary on Moodle—depending on your group, you will meet your
group leader at a specific time
Fitzroy walking group
Docklands tours—MUST BRING PHOTO I.D.
Ceres
Own transport
Sensible shoes, lunch and/or money for lunch if you think you’ll get
hungry, water bottle, hat, sunscreen, jacket (if weather inclement)
Fitzroy
Inner suburb to the northeast of the
CBD, about 3km outside the city
centre
City of Yarra
One of Melbourne’s smallest and
most densely populated suburbs
100 ha
We’ll observe and research the fairly
recent history of urban renewal and
gentrification as we walk around the Background reading:
streets and stop to do some self- •http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-
directed research and note taking 10/photos-capture-fitzroy-in-melbourne-
before-trendification/6502218
•https://www.domain.com.au/news/an-
upandcoming-suburb-can-do-your-head-
in-20140215-32sw1/
Docklands
200 ha waterfront urban renewal
development for 20,000 residents
and 60,000 workers, began in 1997
and due for completion in 2025 Background reading
•http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/can-
Criticised for a range of planning docklands-be-put-back-together-again-
20120302-1u82a.html
problems and some have labelled
•http://www.propertyobserver.com.au/finding
the precinct as “soulless” /location/vic/26766-oct-11-news-
docklands.html
Also hosts some of Melbourne’s most •http://www.victoriaharbour.com.au/news-
and-events/news-and-events/news-
green buildings and more recent docklands-library-to-be-melbournes-most-
developments have prioritised social sustainable-civic-landmark
cohesion and community building •https://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/Commun
(e.g. Library at the Dock). ityServices/CommunityFacilities/LibraryAtTheD
ock/Documents/Library_at_The_Dock_sustain
ability_fact_sheet.pdf
•http://www.environmentdesignguide.com.au
/pages/content/cas--case-studies/cas-48-
water-sensitive-urban-design-in-the-
melbourne-docklands--wetlands-storage-and-
reuse-system.php
CERES
CERES – Centre for Education and
Research in Environmental Strategies, is a
not-for-profit, sustainability centre
located on 4.5 hectares on the Merri
Creek in East Brunswick.
Social enterprises
Fieldtrip (15% assessment)
Choose one of the sites and write about the sustainability issues you
observed at that site. What sustainability principles are ‘at stake’ at
your chosen site and how did you observe those to be important?
What sustainability tensions or paradoxes does this site represent?
What trade-offs are being made on this site in sustainability terms?
Marking criteria:
Ability to connect real-world examples to concepts of sustainability
Ability to discuss tensions and paradoxes of sustainability in relation
to a real-world context
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fKnAJCSGSdk
Industrial Revolution
(mid 1700s to mid 1800s)
City Beautiful
(late 1800s to early 1900s)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FUwwP2un
TQ
City Beautiful
(late 1800s to early 1900s)
Urban landscapes and architecture that are magnificent, orderly and
clean to nurture the mind and soul of society
Montgomery, C. (2013) Happy City: Transforming our lives through urban design Penguin Books Ltd. pp.
23-24.
Howard, E. (1902) Garden cities of tomorrow. 2nd Edition, S. Sonnenschein & Co. Ltd., London.
Garden City
(1900s to 1920s)
Town Country
Closing out of nature. Social opportunity. Lack of society. Beauty of nature.
Isolation of crowds. Places of amusement. Hands out of work. Land lying idle.
Distance from work. High money wages. Trespassers beware. Wood, meadow,
High rents & prices. Chances of forest.
employment. Long hours, low wages. Fresh air. Low
Excessive hours. Army of unemployed. rents.
Fogs and droughts. Costly drainage. Lack of drainage. Abundance of water.
Foul air. Murky sky. Well-lit streets. Lack of amusement. Bright sunshine.
Slums & gin palaces. Palatial edifices. No public spirit. Need for reform.
Crowded dwellings. Deserted villages.
THE PEOPLE
Ebenezer Howard’s vision Where will they go?
of cities free of slums
Town-Country
where the benefits of both Beauty of nature. Social opportunity.
town and country can be Fields and parks of easy access.
enjoyed. He sought to Low rents, high wages.
Low rates, plenty to do.
balance individual and Low prices, no sweating.
community needs in the Field for enterprise, flow of capital.
context of a capitalist Pure air and water, good drainage.
Bright homes & gardens, no smoke, no slums.
economic system. Freedom. Co-operation
Garden City
(1900s to 1920s)
A utopian model of open
spaces, public parks, radial
boulevards, self-sufficiency,
community ownership.
Howard, E. (1902) Garden cities of tomorrow. 2nd Edition, S. Sonnenschein & Co. Ltd., London.
Modern City
(1920s to 1970s)
Inspired by technological advances and mass-
production techniques modernists (such as
Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier)
imagined that “cities could be fixed by
rebuilding them in the image of highly efficient
assembly lines. ‘We claim, in the name of the
steamship, the airplane and the automobile,
the right to health, logic, daring, harmony,
perfection’”.
“The modern city is probably the most “They had to change the idea of what a street is
unlovely and artificial site this planet affords. for, and that required a mental revolution, which
The ultimate solution is to abandon it … We had to take place before any physical changes
shall solve the City Problem by leaving the to the street,’ Norton told me. ‘In the space of a
city.” few years, auto interests did put together that
Ford, Henry (1922) Henry Ford, the Modern City: A cultural revolution. It was comprehensive.”
Pestiferous Growth, in Ford Ideals: Being a Selection Quotes in Montgomery, C. (2013) Happy City:
from Mr. Ford’s Page in the Dearborn Independent. Transforming our lives through urban design Penguin
MT: Kessinger, (Whitefish, 2003, 154– 7) Books Ltd, p.71
Quotes in Montgomery, C. (2013) Happy City: Transforming our lives through urban design Penguin Books Ltd.
Post-Industrial City
(Late 1990s to 2000s)
“The most dynamic economies of “The right to the city cannot be conceived of
the twentieth century produced as a simple visiting right or as a return to
the most miserable cities of all” traditional cities. It can only be formulated
as a transformed and renewed right to
Montgomery, C. (2013) Happy City: urban life.”
Transforming our lives through urban
design Penguin Books Ltd, p.7. Henri Lefebvre , 1968 in Montgomery, C. (2013)
Happy City: Transforming our lives through urban
design Penguin Books Ltd, p.233.
Post-Industrial City
(Late 1990s to 2000s)
Influences of the Garden City and Modernist City endure through
land use planning rules (encourages class separation, commercial
strips; discourages mixed land use, pedestrian areas)
Montgomery, C. (2013) Happy City: Transforming our lives through urban design Penguin Books Ltd, p.78.
Land use
http://www.slideshare.net/SarahDee24/urban-land-use-6098777
Land use
CBD
New York
Worldpropertyjournal.com
Inner City
Dublin
Vaw.msu.edu
Suburbs London suburb
Dailymail.co.uk
Rural-urban fringe
Examples of Urban Form
Corridor city –growth along linear corridors radiating from the central
business district, supported by improved public transport.
Source: CSIRO
Planning in Melbourne
Let’s take a look at the current state of planning in
Melbourne
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uT9-gp6N52E
http://www.melbourne.vic.gov.au/future
3 things to remember from today
1. Cities have evolved over time to idealize specific urban forms
that translate cultural values into design aspirations
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ohfCuDnw8jo