Category Archives: Available To
PUBLIC PLANNING FORUM – Richmond Town Hall 4pm, Sunday 7th Nov
POPULATION – MELBOURNE’S PLANNING PUZZLE
Melbourne’s population is over 4 million
They are planning for 8 million
Is that too many?
How many is too many?
IS SUSTAINABILITY IMPORTANT ?
Infrastructure, who pays for it ??
PUBLIC FORUM
Richmond Town Hall
333 Bridge Rd, RICHMOND
4pm, Sunday 7th November 2010
Speakers:
Andrew MacLeod, CEO Committee for Melbourne
Kelvin Thomson MP, Federal Member for Wills
Panel:
Melina Sehr – Stonnington City Councillor
Rupert Mann – Melbourne Heritage Action Group
David O’Brien – Planning Barrister
Mary Drost – Convenor Planning Backlash
Moderator – David Trenerry
Sponsor: PLANNING BACKLASH INC.
Notice of SOS 2010 AGM – 3pm 14th Nov 2010
Save Our Suburbs Inc (Vic) will hold its 2010 AGM on Sunday 14th November 2010 at 3pm at The Elsternwick Club, 19 Sandham St Elsternwick (Melways 67 G3).
GUEST SPEAKER
Julianne Bell, Secretary of Protectors of Public Lands Vic), will outline some of the positive actions that PPL and other groups have been taking recently to oppose planning and transport projects that increasingly threaten the residential amenity of Melbourne.
Protectors of Public Lands is a coalition of community, environmental and heritage organisations formed to protect and preserve significant public lands in public ownership for present and future generations.
Refreshments will be served after the meeting
At this AGM, SOS will:
- Confirm the minutes of the last preceding annual general meeting;
- Receive reports from the Committee on the Association’s transactions during the last financial year –
- Consider the statement submitted by the Association under section 30(3) of the Act.
- Elect officers of the Association and the ordinary members of the Committee
- (NB: At this AGM, the President, Treasurer and three ordinary committee members will be elected. SOS members financial until 30 June 2010 or later are eligible to vote)
- be made in writing by a current financial member, signed by two other financial members of the Association and accompanied by the written consent of the candidate (which may be endorsed on the form of nomination); and
- be delivered to the Secretary of the Association not less than seven days before the date fixed for the holding of the annual general meeting (ie before the 7th of November, 2010).
Richmond 3121
Ian Wood,
President, Save Our Suburbs
Forum – Melbourne’s Urban Growth Boundary
7pm Thursday 9 Sept, RMIT Bldg 50, Orr St Carlton entry – gold coin donation
The State Government recently announced that Melbourne’s Urban Growth Boundary would be expanded by around four times the size of Phillip Island to accommodate 134,00 new houses (just over 3 dwellings per hectare – very low compared to the 10 dwellings/ha average for suburbs south-east of the CBD).
The decision was supported by the Coalition and applauded by housing and property industry groups which claimed the expansion would make housing more affordable.
But it also caused disbelief and dismay among other parts of the built environment profession – planning groups and the community in general.
Melbourne’s steady outward sprawl has been long criticised for pushing people further from jobs and services, forcing car dependence and subsuming much-needed agricultural land. Now it looks like the sprawl may be here to stay. But:
– is this really the answer to housing affordability?
– how does this expansion impact on social and ecological sustainability?
– what does this mean for Melbourne in general?
Join in this public forum as we explore these issues with a number of leading experts:
– Paul Mees, lecturer at RMIT GLobal Studies, Science & Social Planning
– Stuart Worn, CEO, Planning Institute of Australia
– Ian Wood, President, Save our Suburbs
– Tony Di Domenico, executive director, Urban Development Institute of Australia
– Carolyn Whitzman, associate professor in Urban Planning, University of Melbourne
– Kate Shaw, ARC research fellow, University of Melbourne
– Dianne Moy, project coordinator, Victorian Eco Innovation Lab
– Maree McPherson, CEO, Victorian Local Governance Association
chaired by Ian Woodcock, research fellow in Urban Design, University of Melbourne
words@bld50 – monthly talks in 2010 www.architectsforpeace.org
NEW PHOTO EXHIBITION – HARBINGERS OF CHANGE: CITIZENS AND SUSTAINABILITY
Coburg Town Hall, Aug 12 – Sept 29
This
photographic
exhibition
portrays
some
of
the
diverse
range
of
Victorians
who,
faced
with
evidence
of
climate
change
and
environmental
degradation,
have
acted
to
live
more
sustainably.
The
images
(by
John
Werrett,
curated
by
Morag
Loh)
show
home
and
workplace
initiatives by individuals
who
aren’t
waiting
for
government
leadership
but
providing
their
own
solutions
to
one
of
the
most
challenging
issues
of
our
times.
WestWyck Eco Village, West Brunswick, a model of sustainable development
Westwyck aims to minimise reliance on mains water and lessen discharge via storm water and sewer. A CSIRO study found WestWyck town houses and apartments consumed 64% less mains water than similar housing serviced by Yarra Valley Water. Rain water from the roof is heated by solar energy to provide hot water. Grey water from kitchens and bathrooms is treated to Class A Standard and used to flush toilets and water gardens. Organic kitchen and toilet waste is treated in a large worm farm. The resulting liquid is pumped through evapo‐transpiration beds and filtered by indigenous plants such as local grasses and woolly ti‐tree. Excess water goes to the sewers.
WestWyck also demonstrates the two other key sustainability principles of efficient use of materials and energy
SEE THE "HARBINGERS OF CHANGE" PHOTO EXHIBITION AT:
Coburg Town Hall,
90 Bell St Coburg
August 12 – September 29, 2010
(for more details see City of Moreland website – www.moreland.vic.gov.au)
PARLIAMENT WILL BE VOTING ON GOVERNMENT PLAN TO BULLDOZE GREEN WEDGES FOR SUBURBAN SPRAWL – 27July
Rosemary West & Arnie Azaris
Green Wedges Coalition coordinators
VC67 will irrevocably change the face of Melbourne and axe Green Wedges
COMMUNITY RALLY TO OPPOSE OVER-DEVELOPMENT IN SUBURBAN STREETS
- Their height and bulk is visually unacceptable.
- They overshadow neighbours and remove local yards and gardens.
- They create extra traffic and cause problems with street parking.
When Saturday 5 June 2010 – 12 noon
Labor backed Windsor Hotel sham – The Age, 28 April
ALP state government MPs and senior staff in the planning department discussed the initial strategy to refuse the Windsor re-development, the Age revealed today. When the infamous leaked email first became public, the Premier and the Minister swore that the fake public consultation plan was just the concoction of a junior advisor. It’s a tragedy for democracy when neither the government nor the department can be trusted to deal fairly, transparently and accountably with the community.
AGEPOLL: Should Madden be sacked? (CLOSED APRIL 30): YES – 92%; NO – 8%. Total votes: 4707.
www.theage.com.au/polls/victoria/should-madden-go/20100427-tpo5.html
See the full Age article here: www.theage.com.au/victoria/labor-backed-windsor-sham-20100427-tq34.html
Project Melbourne – revealing articles on urban planning by The Age
Project Melbourne: towards a sustainable city
PAUL RAMADGE, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF March 16, 2010
"These days, everything is faster, busier and more congested. A city of human scale has morphed into a 21st-century city. Apartments are towering over quarter-acre blocks. Melbourne has grown out and up. We are on our way to becoming the nation’s biggest city, yet a shared vision of how we would like to live is still lacking.
Project Melbourne is a special series by The Age aimed at encouraging and broadening public debate about Melbourne’s future — particularly the inner 40 kilometres. We are keen to get your views and feedback."
http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/projectmelbourne
Click here for a Multimedia special on Project Melbourne <http://www.theage.com.au/interactive/2010/times/25/>