Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3119466022> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 85 of
85
with 100 items per page.
- W3119466022 abstract "Melbourne’s early speculative urbanization was intricately tied to the promotion of, what was then, a fashionable ideal of a tranquil and healthy suburban lifestyle. The promotion of a “Melbourne retreat” was one of the engines that established the suburb as the long-standing template for the city. While the suburbs still dominate the public and cultural imagination and still constitute the vast majority of the city’s sprawling footprint, a compact and infilled urbanism has gained a foothold in some of the city’s suburbs. Differences between the inner-city and “middle” suburbs have been established for a long time and can be seen to have been shaped by the differing motivations of its early communities. These variations in density have persisted to date where the centrifugal sprawl is propelled by a compulsion for the single-family detached home while the inner-city suburbs are tightly compacted. These two forces of outward expansion and inner densification have only accelerated in recent years. Gardens have been largely jettisoned from the inner city neighborhoods and any resonance with Villa Suburbana or Garden cities has also withered. On the other hand, the far-flung suburbs on the metropolitan periphery negate the gains of backyard gardens with slow congested commutes together with stretched amenities and infrastructure. At both extremities, the suburban promise has either been squeezed out or levies a high cost on the lifestyles of its communities. In a counter-movement away from the urge of a socially distanced suburban lifestyle, livability has come to be associated with the animation of crowded and caffeinated laneways as well as the congested inner-city. The recent turn towards the compact city has been supported by a sea-change in lifestyle priorities coupled with the search for a more manageable urbanization. Two different sensibilities of the metropolitan lifestyle drive the city’s polarized suburbanization. Today, the intricate mosaic of landownership frustrates a bolder engagement with these concerns. However, the densification and compaction of the inner city suburbs and the revitalization of the city’s CBD can be seen to have been exercises in a coordinated yet incremental transformation. Drawing encouragement and inspiration from individual examples of small yet highly concentrated private ecologies scattered throughout the city, we propose to affect an incremental yet systemic recovery of the garden in our suburbs. We propose to reinsert the garden as a structural element through the use of guidelines and regulations that delivers density but in another form. The “high-street” and the “garden-suburb” are shaped by a trade-off between height and ground coverage. The dreaded high-rise is given a new form at different scales to enable different garden cultivating microclimates to thrive. A new constellation of social spaces may also enable an urbanism that reinstates an ecological substrate to our suburbs while also providing a flexible social infrastructures capable of hosting different social and socially-distanced densities. A widely distributed network of garden spaces reconditions the city’s grounds to better modulate our microclimates as well as better support the ecological and hydrological cycles." @default.
- W3119466022 created "2021-01-18" @default.
- W3119466022 creator A5004182016 @default.
- W3119466022 creator A5082225393 @default.
- W3119466022 date "2020-01-01" @default.
- W3119466022 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W3119466022 title "Coding the Garden Metropolis Restructuring Melbourne's Suburban Environments" @default.
- W3119466022 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3119466022 type Work @default.
- W3119466022 sameAs 3119466022 @default.
- W3119466022 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3119466022 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3119466022 hasAuthorship W3119466022A5004182016 @default.
- W3119466022 hasAuthorship W3119466022A5082225393 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C123657996 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C127413603 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C147176958 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C158739034 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C162324750 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C207141826 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C26271046 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C2776556313 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C2779276850 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C2993877802 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C39853841 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C45237549 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C487182 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C49545453 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C50522688 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C94625758 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConcept C98147612 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C123657996 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C127413603 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C144024400 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C147176958 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C158739034 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C162324750 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C166957645 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C17744445 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C199539241 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C205649164 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C207141826 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C26271046 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C2776556313 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C2779276850 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C2993877802 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C39853841 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C45237549 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C487182 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C49545453 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C50522688 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C94625758 @default.
- W3119466022 hasConceptScore W3119466022C98147612 @default.
- W3119466022 hasLocation W31194660221 @default.
- W3119466022 hasOpenAccess W3119466022 @default.
- W3119466022 hasPrimaryLocation W31194660221 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W1045853816 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W1591273671 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W1989469591 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2005210869 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W201634294 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2095265305 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2124499054 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2183253203 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2238824654 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2782776711 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2793568663 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2800366498 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2898702795 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2946429817 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W3021004264 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W3041242265 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W623673269 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W649541120 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W2605678546 @default.
- W3119466022 hasRelatedWork W3111697865 @default.
- W3119466022 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3119466022 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3119466022 magId "3119466022" @default.
- W3119466022 workType "article" @default.