Category: NSW Chapter President

From the NSW Chapter President

If you asked Sydney-siders what future they saw for such a valuable part of our landscape; what would they choose:

  • a public park on the harbour, or
  • a private casino?

 

This was the question I put to the Planning Assessment Commission panel at the public hearing on Modification 8 to Concept Plan 06_0162, the Barangaroo casino proposal.

I also said:

‘I am here today to discuss MOD8 with you in a way, and in a language, that I believe the average person in Sydney would understand and relate to. Planning can sometimes be by necessity technical and the language almost impenetrable with jargon.

I will simplify it because we need to explain these significant city making proposals in a way that brings the people of Sydney along with us.

What planning fundamentally needs to do, is to include the citizens in the discussion of the how and why the city is changing and how and why these changes are in the public’s interest, or not.

That is not to say as professionals we abandon the field and delegate our responsibility to the people. Quite the opposite. What we need to do is have the conversation about what type of Sydney we want to have, and argue the merits of any proposal.

The Australian Institute of Architects believes we, as professionals of the built environment, need to lead the discussion:

  • to have an intelligent discussion about the opportunities of change;
  • but also, to inform the people what they will lose;
  • to present a balanced view and argue for the merits of any change;
  • and these arguments need to always start, and end, on how a change is in the public interest.

 

This is the test that you as delegates of the government need to be sure and certain any application passes before approval is granted.’

I queried how the Department of Planning could largely ignore the views of the Minister for Planning’s expert design assessment panel (including NSW Government Architect Peter Poulet) in its recommendations to the Commission.

I disputed how the proposal could even be regarded as a modification when the changes proposed were so significant. I said:

‘A reasonable person would think this is a new development application. The average Sydney-sider would think this is a new DA.’

I also answered the question I posed at the head of this message:

‘What do you think they would say (to the choice between a public park on the harbour or a private casino)?

I can tell you what they will say.

They would say they would want a public park on the harbour.’

The Planning Assessment Commission is expected to make its determination on the casino proposal in the next few weeks.

 

Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

From the NSW Chapter President

Commenting on Barangaroo

The NSW Chapter has had a keen interest in the re-development of the public land at Barangaroo for a number of years.  We made three submissions in 2010 and 2011 focusing on the quality of the concept plan and on the process for assessing development proposals at Barangaroo South.

The finalists in the James Packer casino design competition prompted a letter by then NSW President Joe Agius in 2013, which was then picked up by the Sydney Morning Herald’s State Political Reporter Sean Nicholls.

It was my turn in late March when I criticised the Department of Planning & Environment’s decision not to include some of the design review panel’s key recommendations in its submission to the Planning Assessment Commission, which makes the final decision on the development application. These comments generated some spirited contributions to the Herald’s letters column the next day.

Articles about the design review process by Anne Davies and Sean Nicholls were published in the Herald in the last two weekends.

Podium recess

Changes to the proposed podium include revised cladding and a seven-metre-wide recess.
Photo: Planning and Environment

NSW Chapter President

20th Century heritage has been a major focus of Institute activity in the past few months.


Saving the Sirius

I have been chair of the Save our Sirius group since November last year. You may recall that Minister Hazzard had announced that the building would be sold for re-development; he also expressly rejected the idea of heritage listing for the building.

Sirius is listed on the Chapter’s Register of Significant Architecture. Read the citation here.

We also endorsed the Heritage Council’s decision to recommend the listing of Sirius on the State Heritage Register.

We need to be more than the sum total of our bank balance. Whilst heritage is a challenging issue for development in NSW, exemplar buildings that are recommended for heritage listing need to be protected. This is a fight we have to have.


Saving the Powerhouse

We also strongly object to the Premier’s intention to move the Powerhouse Museum to Parramatta, and to sell the Ultimo for re-development to pay for it. The Institute supports the proposal for a sister building to the Powerhouse in Parramatta, but not at the expense of the Powerhouse in Ultimo. The building is listed on the Chapter’s Register and on the statutory Sydney Local Environmental Plan 2012. The adaptive reuse won the Institute’s Sulman Medal in 1988.

I have written an opinion piece that was submitted to the Sydney Morning Herald but not published.

I encourage you all to join our fight for our 20th century modern heritage.


Advocacy and the media

One of the key tasks of Chapter Presidents is to be the representative voice of the architecture profession in the public domain. Advocacy is certainly seen by members as probably my major focus, and it’s certainly a role I both enjoy and also take very seriously.

Easy to say but hard to do! Even with a life span of two years in the role it takes a while for journalists and the media generally to know there is a new person in the role, especially coming in to it hard on the heels of the highly effective media presence of my predecessor, Joe Agius.

So the first year of my term was a learning curve, both for me and for the journalists and media with whom I need to interact. It has taken some time to be known by media outlets and journalists but I feel we now have made good connections, especially with the Sydney Morning Herald’s urban affairs and built environment writers. Institute staff have played a key role in generating these connections.

The fight for the Sirius has been the major focus of my media activity in recent weeks, including discussions with the Herald’s Jacob Saulwick and an interview on 2SER-FM. I have also been interviewed regarding the changing role of the Government Architect’s Office and, in the property media, choosing an architect rather than a building designer.

 I am also proud of a deal we have struck with the Sky News Saturday property program for a weekly seven minute segment featuring a different architect each week, gender balanced of course.  And there is daily advocacy and information via my Twitter feed.

I am sure you will agree that we would like to get more media exposure for the Institute’s views, for the public good, on architecture in general and design in particular, but we have to recognise that it is the editors of the individual media outlets that determine their own priorities. They will only run articles or op-eds if they believe their audience will be interested. That is why it is important for us to continue generating debate on architectural and urban issues in our own publications and discussion forums.

Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

 

 

 

NSW Chapter President

Dear Members

I am pleased to welcome the following members as new Chapter Councillors following the recent elections:

Steven Donaghey (dwp|suters)

Ashley Dunn (Dunn & Hillam Architects)

Kathlyn Loseby (Turner)

Peter Smith (Smith & Tzannes)

Congratulations also to Alex Kibble (Tanner Kibble Denton Architects), who was re-elected as Chapter Councillor from the previous term.

And my thanks to outgoing councillors Nigel Bell, Kirsten Orr, Shahe Simoneon and Paul Walter for their contribution to the previous Chapter Council. And we also welcome Monica Edwards (Cox Architecture) who has been appointed to replace the position of Kirsten Orr who has resigned.

Coalition for NSW Planning Reform

The Institute was a founding member (with PIA, the Property Council and the Sydney Business Chamber) of this group of professional, property and business groups. Formed in August 2007, we gained government support for several substantial planning system improvements, such as the delegation of major project assessments to the Planning Assessment Commission and the creation of the Housing Code and Joint Regional Planning Panels.

We also supported the White Paper and the draft planning legislation introduced into Parliament by the O’Farrell Government. But that legislation failed to pass the Legislative Council.

Earlier this month I was part of a delegation that met with Planning Minister Rob Stokes to urge the Baird Government to adopt some significant initiatives that would improve the functioning of the planning system under the current legislation, while also providing stepping stones towards a more comprehensive overhaul through new legislation at a later date. These include:

  • replacing all current State Environmental Planning Policies with State Policies and Regional and Subregional Plans;
  • a new standard LEP;
  • template DCPs;
  • piloting the public participation principles outlined in the White Paper;
  • greater use of independent hearing and assessment panels and similar arms-length assessment models;
  • complying development assessment models;
  • non-discretionary development standards, particularly in the standard LEP; and
  • certification by certified professionals of certain elements of development (e.g. architects verifying the plans for complex buildings and building elements).

The Minister gave us a good hearing. I am confident that with further consistent lobbying, both as an individual organisation and as a member of the coalition, we will achieve these necessary improvements to the current complex planning system.

Vale Paul Pholeros

It’s almost a month ago now, but the untimely passing of one of our greatest colleagues still hits me with terrible force. He was a true innovator and visionary, for whom architecture was a means of providing dignity and honest shelter to many outback families. His life and example offer us the best possible role model. We may not individually choose the path he followed, but we should be inspired by him to do the best we can in using our professional skills to improve the world we live in.

Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

NSW Chapter President

 

Greetings to all NSW Institute members and my best wishes for another busy and productive year. While the overseas economic situation is unsettled, to say the least, the indications are that the national economy will perform at least as well in 2016 as it did in the previous year.

Architects of influence

One of the key ways architects can achieve strategic improvements in the built environment is through their appointment to influential positions. A case in point is Graham Jahn AM, a Life Fellow of the Institute and the Sydney City Council’s Director City Planning I Development I Transport. In his time in this critical position Graham has made a major contribution to the city’s built environment by influencing the development community to improve design quality and make positive contributions to the city’s public domain.

The past year ended well, with two Institute members appointed to highly influential positions.

Firstly, the appointment of Institute member Rod Simpson as Environment Commissioner in the newly created Greater Sydney Commission is an extremely positive move. Rod’s experience and expertise make him admirably suited for this new role. He led the urban design and spatial planning component of the City of Sydney’s Sustainable Sydney 2030 Strategy and has been Director of the Urban Design Program at the University of Sydney for the last four years. Prior to these achievements he developed the Green Olympic Village concept, was Manager of Urban Design at the Sydney Harbour Federation Trust and was involved in the development of the ‘City of Cities’ metropolitan strategy for Sydney.

Another esteemed Institute member was recognised in a major appointment late last year. Helen Lochhead has been appointed Dean of the Faculty of Built Environment at the University of NSW, replacing Professor Alec Tzannes. Helen has moved on from her roles as Deputy NSW Government Architect and Adjunct Professor at the University of Sydney. Previously she has also taught at UTS and internationally at Harvard, MIT, Columbia University and the New York Institute of Technology.

Helen is a previous recipient of both Fulbright and Churchill Fellowships, and most recently completed a Loeb Fellowship at Harvard University interrogating proposals and governance models for more resilient and liveable cities. She is a Fellow of the Institute and is Honorary Secretary of the National Council.

Congratulations to both Helen and Rod on these prestigious and influential appointments.
Best wishes
Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

NSW Chapter President

 

In my final message for the year, in addition to wishing all our members a safe and enjoyable holiday break, I am reviewing the key highlights of my first year as your President.

I am particularly pleased to see progress on the gender equity issue, which I consider one of the highest priorities during my term. The Champions of Change program was established seven months ago and is a key factor in achieving change that is positive, real and lasting.

Taking Chapter Council on the road has enabled me to connect with many more members; I am grateful to so many of you for taking this opportunity to let Chapter councillors know of your concerns. Your participation in these sessions reveals the widespread passion held by our members for our professional organisation.

The future of the Government Architect’s Office has required considerable attention. The new focus on the office’s strategic role advising government on design excellence at all levels is welcome. But this ambition can only be realised if it has the staff numbers and expertise to fulfil these demands.

The profession in NSW is the fortunate beneficiary of SEPP 65, the only design legislation in Australia. With the gazettal in June of the amended SEPP and the greatly improved Apartment Design Guide, we also benefit from a bi-partisan approach to the issue of apartment design.

Similarly, the announcement of the Greater Sydney Commission was welcome news, although I am still concerned that design has not been addressed in any of the material released by the government to date.

UrbanGrowth NSW has made the first move towards the revitalisation of the Bays Precinct. The Institute will be watching the bidding process for the development of the White Bay power station locality with considerable interest.

These and many other issues will keep us fully occupied in the year ahead.

I wish you all season’s greetings and a prosperous and productive new year.

Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

NSW Chapter President

There has been progress on a number of fronts in the big picture built environment space:

Coalition for NSW Planning Reform

This loose grouping of like-minded built environment organisations, including ourselves, PIA, AILA, the Property Council and the Sydney Business Chamber, first came together in August 2007 to lobby the then Labor government. We had several wins along the way, such as the delegation of major project assessments to the Planning Assessment Commission and the creation of the Housing Code and Joint Regional Planning Panels.

Our principal focus this time is to convince the Baird Government that the process of planning reform shouldn’t stop just because the O’Farrell Government failed to win the support of the Legislative Council to pass its new planning legislation two years ago.

There was broad community and industry acceptance of the White Paper reforms, specifically in areas such as strategic planning, community participation and infrastructure delivery. It was mainly in the area of development assessment that the major differences and contentions arose.

The coalition is therefore proposing that Minister Stokes moves quickly to implement these reforms while also laying the groundwork for the eventual re-introduction of the new planning bill.

Greater Sydney Commission

In last month’s message I welcomed the government’s announcement of the shape of the Greater Sydney Commission, while noting that design was absent from the scheme.

I have since written to the Department of Planning & Environment recommending four inter-related proposals:

Built Environment Committee

As the principal focus of the Commission’s work is the re-configuration of the built environment of the region I have recommended the creation of a built environment committee sitting alongside the Commission’s other committees to focus on this essential task.

Observer status for the Government Architect’s Office (GAO)

It is clear that the GAO will be adopting a more strategic role in the future, giving it the opportunity to provide advice on the achievement of design excellence across the government and public sector agencies. In my proposal it would share observer status with Infrastructure NSW and UrbanGrowth NSW.

Design for Sydney

I envisage Design for Sydney operating in a similar manner to Design for London within the local planning context, identifying opportunities to use major infrastructure projects to create new connections and public spaces, and advising on the implementation of major public benefit programs- such as the green grid strategy. It could be comprised of design experts in key government agencies.

Design review panel

The Commission’s Sydney Planning Panel will determine major developments currently assessed by the Sydney East and West Joint Regional Planning Panels. I therefore propose a design review panel to provide both strategic design advice and design advice on specific development proposals to the panel, following the procedures outlined in the SEPP 65 Apartment Design Guide. The panel should be chaired by the GAO, as is currently the process in South Australia.

Circular Quay                                                                                                                                                        

While we welcomed the Premier’s announcement of a major review of the Circular Quay wharves last month, he missed the opportunity to address the strategic renewal of the precinct as a whole.

Circular Quay fulfils a number of key roles in the city:

  • Birthplace of modern Australia
  • Road, rail and ferry transport hub
  • Centre of a harbourside walk leading in the east to the Royal Botanic Garden and in the west to Walsh Bay and Barangaroo
  • Link between our two greatest tourist attractions, the Rocks and the Sydney Opera House
  • Leading retail, hospitality and restaurant district

To say Circular Quay is underwhelming in the way it presents itself in these major roles is an understatement. It’s not only the wharves that look tired. The whole precinct lacks a unifying idea. It’s full of visual clutter, particularly round the station, and it presents too many barriers to the enjoyment of a unique maritime experience.

Circular Quay could be one of the world’s great outdoor rooms, on a par with Piazza San Marco in Venice, London’s Trafalgar Square and the Place de la Concorde in Paris. Fixing it isn’t rocket science.

Key government agencies have been preparing a renewal plan for the last five years. We know what to do, we just need the political will to decide to do it.

Bays Precinct

The Institute has been an enthusiastic supporter of UrbanGrowth NSW’s approach to the re-imagining of this massive site west of the Pyrmont peninsula. They have gone out of their way to engage with the professions, the experts and the community in the run-up to the development of the eight sites in the precinct.

Now the first step in the development process has been taken. I attended a briefing last week in which three parcels of land including the White Bay power station have been offered for development proposals focusing on the adaptive reuse of the State Heritage structure into a technology hub adjacent to facilities for the health, education and creative industries.

I have severe misgivings about this announcement for the re-development of 10 hectares of waterfront land. Where is the master plan for this site – and how will it connect with the rest of the precinct? How will it integrate into the adjacent suburbs? Where is the commitment to fine grain and multiple players and many authors? How will public transport service this area? These are just a few of the questions I want answered.

Thank you.

Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President

NSW Chapter President

Thoughts from a traveller

I’ve just returned to Sydney from three weeks away in Paris and London. It’s wonderful to visit these great cities and remind yourself how they are made. I found the joy of walking the streets of Paris tempered by the frustration of knowing that in Sydney our decision-makers keep trying to un-learn the lessons of our past, and un-learn the knowledge of how to make a great city. It’s a frustration enhanced by the knowledge that Sydney still has the potential to be a great city that truly reflect its stunning natural landscape.

It seems the “shock of the new” demands an attempt at a new way, which somehow means you throw out the rule book and hope the “Instagram” or “technology” will solve the inherent problems, yet tellingly they always seem to fail. Thankfully cities are dynamic places that are in constant re-making. But the wastefulness of building badly and then replacing one mistake with another one 25 years later is not the way to make a great city – but it’s a pattern we keep repeating.

It is also frighteningly true, as Amanda Burden [past director of the NYC Department of Planning and Chair of the City Planning Commission that commissioned the Highline] says, that you have to constantly fight for public space and domain. I guess this is our role as guardians of the city: to fight for Sydney’s public spaces. It’s a great role for the Institute to embrace through advocacy.

I wrote some notes whilst in Paris on what makes a good city…..these are largely what good architects know, what you as members know, what people like Philip Thalis and Peter John Cantrill advocate so graphically in their book Public Sydney:

  • Start with ambition
  • Great cities take time to make
  • Great cities are designed around great public buildings, great public domain & great public transport
  • Sub-divide into fine & varying grain
  • Design with many skilled authors
  • Buildings and public domain are made with:
    • high quality materials and
    • fine details
  • Buildings respect the street and public domain
  • Cars work around cities, not cities around the car

And above all, great cities are places for social and cultural celebration and growth. They are not solely profit centres.

Sydney Architecture Festival

Congratulations to members, Chapter staff, volunteers and everyone else involved in the events of the past weekend. The Festival is now in its ninth year and is a firm fixture on the city’s event calendar.

The new format of a four day Festival condensed the 10 day program of previous years into an action-packed long weekend of talks, events, tours, competitions and activities.

The flagship public event for the festival was #TheGoods, the first major public event held at the Ultimo Goods Line, one of the most exciting recent urban regeneration projects in the city. The full-day event included yoga, tai chi, talks, symposiums, a zine fair and a night-time short film festival. The Meet an Architect segment seemed to be particularly popular.

Country Conference / Chapter Council on the road

The Country Division conference in Bathurst last month gave us the opportunity to extend the Chapter Council meeting ‘on the road’ into the regions for the first time. I thank Andrew Nimmo, Sarah Aldridge and other councillors for making this such a successful event in my absence overseas.

I’ve been particularly impressed by the quality and innovation evident in the Country Division Awards this year – everything from a café on the outskirts of Mudgee using containers as building blocks to the re-imagining of a tired shopping mall in Ballina, and lots of other interesting and successful projects in between. Congratulations to our country members for such an impressive and varied line-up of their work.

Greater Sydney Commission

We welcomed the announcement of this body last year and now there’s a definite shape to it: the Secretaries of Planning & Environment, Transport and Treasury, six district commissioners, an independent chair, an environment commissioner, an economic commissioner and a social commissioner plus four committees and two observers. So far so good – but design is nowhere to be seen. We will be lobbying hard to make sure design excellence is an important part of the Commission’s work.

Shaun Carter
NSW President

NSW Chapter President

SEPP 65 / Apartment Design Guide

NSW members are fortunate beneficiaries of the SEPP, which is the only design-based legislation in Australia and which requires all multi-residential buildings to be designed by architects. In the 13 years of the SEPP’s operation the quality of apartment design in NSW has improved significantly. This will have a beneficial impact on the international competitiveness of the city in the decades ahead as the rate of apartment living continues to outpace that of detached housing.

The Chapter is presenting a series of professional development events to inform members of the key elements of the revised SEPP and to enable you to visit exemplary apartment buildings. I hope you will take advantage of these sessions to build up your skills.

NSW architects have some immense advantages at the present time:

  1. We benefit from the SEPP’s mandatory requirement that only architects can design apartment buildings;
  2. Multi-residential projects now exceed the construction of single or attached housing projects; and
  3. NSW is the fastest growing construction sector in the country.

I acknowledge that there may be some teething problems as the new documents are used in the real world. No legislation is ever perfect, particularly when it is linked to a guideline that contains details of specific minimum standards and advice as to how they should be applied. The Department of Planning & Environment is also well aware of the possibility that there may be some anomalies that will need to be corrected or clarified.

If you find something in the SEPP or the guide that doesn’t appear to make sense I encourage you to contact the Chapter’s policy advisor, who can refer your concerns to a skilled member of the Built Environment Committee and advise you how to resolve the problem. Don’t be shy in coming forward; we all want the new SEPP to work effectively for our mutual benefit in the years ahead.

The Institute has commissioned a research project to collect, collate and interrogate qualitative and quantitative data based on 13 years of lived experience of SEPP 65-compliant apartment buildings. The outcome of this project is to understand the effects of SEPP 65 against desired objectives and assess the efficacy of the controls. The overarching goal of the research project is to use this data to support the SEPP in future reviews so that NSW can develop world’s best apartment design legislation.

I am also keen to eventually extend the reach of the design quality principles underpinning the SEPP to other building types, such as boarding houses, student accommodation, serviced apartments, villas and townhouses.
Shaun Carter
NSW President

NSW Chapter President

 

In a recent meeting with the Minister for Finance, Services & Property, Dominic Perrottet, I reiterated the Institute’s concern that if the Government Architect’s Office is to move to a more strategic role in government it needs to have sufficient expert staff to do that job effectively. It’s one thing for the office to give up its current design workload for public sector building projects; but quite another to be advising on the strategic use of design excellence and expertise without itself having access to the experienced people who understand first-hand what design excellence and expertise can achieve. This initial meeting was a positive step. The Minister was quite open about the options for giving the GAO a central role.

Gender Equity
The Chapter’s future Champions of Change had their second face to face meeting recently. I am heartened by the honesty with which these men are facing the challenge of gender equity in their workplaces – and their willingness to join others working to change the culture of the profession. I will keep you posted on further developments.


Shaun Carter
NSW Chapter President