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    UNSW Canberra City campus masterplan approved

    The ACT government has approved the UNSW Canberra City masterplan, designed by MGS Architects, Snøhetta and Turf Design.
    The major new campus, to be built on government-owned land on Constitution Avenue within the Parliamentary Triangle, will accommodate 6,000 students and become a hub for defence and security innovation.
    “The campus is an ideal location for industry, government and universities to collaborate and work more closely together,” said Emma Sparks, who has been appointed dean and rector of UNSW Canberra.
    “The campus will also be the new home for UNSW Canberra’s highly successful Launch initiative, which is a purpose-built precinct designed to host industry and entrepreneurs in a vibrant, connected environment.”

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    UNSW Canberra City masterplan: view west to Reid Campus Core. Image:

    Courtesy UNSW Canberra City

    The masterplan includes 14 buildings across eight hectares and is framed as an integrated learning community with five connected precincts with distinct themes: City Edge, which will showcase the university to Canberra City; Reid Parkside, which will create a “sensitive interface” with the heritage easement and suburb of Reid; Reid Campus Core, which will form the heart of the campus; Civic Interface, which will be a “distinct and activated academic streetscape”; and Parkes View, which will “connect the campus to the city’s parliamentary and natural landscape views.”
    “The last three years [have] seen UNSW consult and work with the local community to ensure the masterplan not only delivers educational and innovation outcomes, but also delivers a campus that revitalizes the eastern edge of the Canberra CBD,” said ACT chief minister Andrew Barr.
    The appointment of architects will begin later this year. The campus will be built in stages, with the final stage scheduled to finish in 2036. More

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    NSW gov’t introduces Connecting with Country Framework

    The New South Wales government has finalized its Connecting with Country Framework, which provides guidance for designers, planners and governments on how to respond to Country and empower Aboriginal voices in the design process.
    Developed by Government Architect NSW, the framework encourages all built environment projects to take a Country-centred approach, guided by Aboriginal people.
    “What better time to introduce this important new planning and design guide than during NAIDOC Week – a time when we celebrate and recognize the rich history, culture and achievements of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples,” said planning minister Paul Scully.
    “Introducing this framework will enable the NSW Government to better protect Country, community, and sacred sites in the planning and design of our places and buildings.
    “Archaeological investigations and recording of Aboriginal heritage have been a well-established part of the planning process. This new framework builds on those practices by valuing, respecting and being guided by Aboriginal people, who know if we care for Country it will care for us.”
    The framework aims to improve the health and wellbeing of Country through sustainable land and water use management in order to reduce the impacts of natural disasters; valuing and respecting Aboriginal cultural knowledge through co-designed development projects; and protecting Aboriginal sites and ongoing access for Aboriginal people to the ancestral lands.
    “First Nations peoples around the world have long understood the importance of living in balance with the natural world, developing traditional practices and knowledge to support that way of life,” said NSW government architect Abbie Galvin.
    “In a time of rapidly increasing development, the Connecting with Country Framework demonstrates how to work with Aboriginal communities to guide that development to be more sustainable, resilient and culturally responsive.”
    A draft framework was first introduced in 2020 with a pilot program and was used on a number of government projects including Sydney Metro. Feedback from the pilot is also included in the final framework.
    “The Connecting with Country Framework is critical in [the] re-imagining of how we engage with Country and cultural landscapes. It enables Aboriginal people’s values, knowledge systems and mechanisms for connecting to country to influence the design and planning processes for building and architecture,” said the NSW Minister for Aboriginal Affairs and Treaty, David Harris.
    “First Nations peoples’ connection to Country can provide our state with invaluable insight to our design, construction, and architecture.” More

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    Timber offices proposed for Brisbane’s Newstead

    O’Neill Architecture has designed a sustainable commercial office building on the fringes of Brisbane CBD in Newstead.
    The four-storey building will be the headquarters of Asia Pacific Internet Development Trust, accommodating 80 staff.
    “The design is an interrogation of visibility and duality. The building owner and occupants work in a virtual world, providing internet protocols,” said the architects in a design statement. “Everyone connected in the Asia Pacific region experiences their work in their everyday lives. The design for the building reflects this relationship: present but secluded, hiding in plain sight but present visually along Breakfast Creek Road once known.”

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    56 Breakfast Creek Road designed by O’Neill Architecture and Lat Studios. Image:

    O’Neill Architecture

    The building will be partially recessed into the sloping landform of Montpelier Hill in Newstead.
    “The design blends into the exposed phyllite rock face and sub-tropical vegetation endemic to the Montpelier Hill site. This represents the occupant’s connection to the world around them, which is concealed yet omnipresent,” the architects continued.
    The offices will be constructed from cross-laminated timber, with a layered facade of glazing and perforated metal screens that “provide expression and depth from the outside world shielding vision, sound and light where required.”
    “The indoor environment is framed by the materiality, textural tactility, and calming scent of timber,” said the architects.
    The building will be L-shaped in plan, reaching out in parts to the surrounding bushland setting. At the centre of the site, an auditorium, a sheltered courtyard and staff recreation areas form a “social heart.”

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    56 Breakfast Creek Road designed by O’Neill Architecture and Lat Studios. Image:

    O’Neill Architecture

    “For the owners and occupants, the design creates a new home within the city, and a thriving community within the site,” the architects said.
    Renewable and recycled materials will be used throughout in a design that maximizes natural ventilation, energy creation and efficiency.
    The project will be targeting 6-star Green Star, 5.5-star NABERS and WELL Gold certifications, as well as a 20 percent reduction in carbon emissions through design and material selection.
    The landscape, designed with Lat Studios, will “enhance functionality, enjoyment and identity through a contemporary scheme that includes lush and layered terrace planting and hardy, sun-loving courtyard gardens. Endemic species encourage a local ecology with a focus on re-use of existing geology and reinstatement of the existing bushland to the west of the site.” More

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    Institute calls for amendments to NSW’s new affordable housing planning rules

    The New South Wales government has unveiled plans to increase the supply of affordable and social housing in the state by offering developers fast-tracked planning assessment and extra developable area. Residential developments of more than $75 million of capital investment value, with a minimum of 15 percent gross floor area allocated to affordable housing, will […] More

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    Croxon Ramsay designs ‘visionary’ regional library

    Baw Baw Shire Council in Victoria’s West Gippsland region has announced that Croxon Ramsay has completed detailed designs for the proposed Baw Baw Library and Learning Centre. The $30 million project is set to become the heart of the Baw Baw Culture and Connection Precinct. The civic and community building will occupy underutilized areas of […] More

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    Brisbane Open House returns in July 2023

    Brisbane Open House returns in 2023 with a curated selection of iconic and contemporary buildings open to the public. Taking place on 15 and 16 July, the program spans 80 buildings and places across 11 Brisbane precincts, particularly this year’s Iconic Precinct: Herston Health and Heritage. The area’s buildings represent more than 120 years of […] More

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    ArchitectureAU launches new directory for practices

    Architecture, landscape architecture and interior design practices can now create their own profile pages on ArchitectureAU, with the launch today of ArchitectureAU Directory. This new feature provides an opportunity for practices of all sizes to tell their story in their own words and benefit from the credibility inferred by association with Australia’s most respected architecture […] More

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    Open House Melbourne 2023 to explore architecture in a time of housing uncertainty

    Open House Melbourne 2023 has unveiled its program of more than 180 buildings, tours, events and design talks across the last weekend of July.
    Themed “Collective City,” the program explores architecture and design across Melbourne against the backdrop of climate, economic and housing uncertainty.
    “As Melbourne expands to reach a projected population of 8 million by 2050, our theme for Open House Melbourne 2023, Collective City, seeks to explore how will we reinvent, re-purpose and adapt our city to live better together now, and into the future,” said Open House Melbourne executive director Tania Davidge. “We want to inspire every Victorian through the Open House Melbourne Weekend to consider the principles of good design so together we can advocate for a more equitable and welcoming city that meets the needs of all Melburnians. Our program for 2023 reflects our desire for all to come to a shared understanding of the best way to shape the future of the city.”
    Highlights in the 2023 program include Making Home, a perennial series of talks and tours that explores social and affordable housing. It will include a panel discussion on the role of developers in the provision of social housing , as well as a tour of a Markham Avenue project designed by Architectus and delivered as part of the Homes Victoria Big Housing Build program.
    Flat Life offers Open House Melbourne visitors a walking tour guided by architect David Brand through St Kilda and its apartment housing stock, including subdivided mansions, 1960s six-packs, and high-rise towers designed by European émigré architects.
    Private home tours will also be returning after a pandemic-induced hiatus, with 16 contemporary and historic houses participating across Melbourne. The 2023 program newcomers include Lippincott House (co-designed by Walter Burley Griffin) and Gantry House by Oof Architecture.
    The Victorian government’s Future Homes design competition entries will also be a feature of Open House Melbourne. Audiences can experience full-size interactive walkthroughs of the designs, as well as a presentation.
    The soon-to-be-opened Holocaust Museum by Kerstin Thompson Architects (KTA) will return in 2023 with tours guided by KTA associate principal Claire Humphreys. Open House Melbourne will also honour Kerstin Thompson, who was awarded the 2023 Gold Medal from the Australian Institute of Architects, with a film celebrating her career.
    Comedian, author and historian Michael Veitch will be giving the 2023 Heritage Address, which will explore untold stories of Melbourne.
    RMIT academics Christine Phillips, Beau de Belle and Jock Gilbert will discuss the role of Indigenous wisdom in contemporary architecture in Design with Country.
    The 2023 Open House Melbourne will take place on Saturday 29 and Sunday 30 July. The program will be live on 28 June. More