Landscape Architecture Australia – August 2019

(C. Jardin) #1
Perspective
Editor Emily Wong introduces
this issue of Landscape
Architecture Australia.

Noticeboard
News and events.

Queensland urban
design awards
Presenting the winners of
the 2019 Minister’s Award
for Urban Design.

The new groove
The redevelopment of Perth’s
iconic Scarborough foreshore
by TCL and UDLA is bringing
visitors, new and old, back in
droves. Review by Tinka Sack.

Beneath the rail line
Two different perspectives on
the Caulfield to Dandenong
Level Crossing Removal
Project by Aspect Studios.
Reviews by Beau Beza and
Ricky Ray Ricardo.

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ISSUE 163

Strategic International Partners
Landscape Architecture Europe foundation
(LAE), Barcelona International Biennial
of Landscape Architecture, Landscape
Review journal

Fair share
Cars and pedestrian coexist
in Hansen Partnership’s
revitalization of a small
Victorian town’s main street.
Review by Julian Bull.

Clifftop garden
Despite its dramatic location,
this garden by Jane Irwin
Landscape Architecture
favours intimacy and
materiality over grand
gestures. Review by David
Whitworth.

Local agenda
Athens-based landscape
architect Thomas Doxiadis
on advocating for a local
landscape agenda.

Beyond resiliency II
Five leading practitioners
continue their conversation
on tackling climate change
issues through public realm
design. Interview by Rosalea
Monacella.

Grassy woodlands
This issue’s Field Trip
examines the eucalypt
woodlands of Australia’s
south-east, once home to
a diversity of species. Essay
by Sue McIntyre with photos
by Carolyn Young.

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Janet Laurence:
After Nature
A recent survey of the work
of environmental artist Janet
Laurence is a salient reminder
of the large-scale consequences
of human activity. Review by
Emily Wong.

Agency and
instrumentality
A review of the 2019 Landscape
Australia Conference held in
Melbourne in May. Article by
Claire Martin.

Remembering
Ian Oelrichs
Ian Oelrichs was pivotal in the
development of the Australian
profession, nurturing advocacy,
organizational development
and community. Reflection
by Catherin Bull.

Endnote
A tiny sidewalk project in
Melbourne’s inner north
is experimenting with local
biodiversity. Words by Mark
Gillingham.

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Cover image: Scarborough Foreshore Redevelopment by TCL and UDLA.
Photo: Douglas Mark Black.


LANDSCAPE ISSUE 163 002 — 003

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