9th Making Cities Liveable Conference · entitled The Routledge Handbook of Planning for Health and...

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healthycities.com.au Pullman Melbourne on the Park 27 - 28 June 2016 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference CONFERENCE HANDBOOK 2016

Transcript of 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference · entitled The Routledge Handbook of Planning for Health and...

healthycities.com.au

Pullman Melbourne on the Park

27 - 28 June 2016

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference

CONFERENCE HANDBOOK 2016

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016 - Page 3

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General InformatIonThe following information is offered to make your attendance at the 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference as pleasant as possible.

If you require help, please visit the Conference Secretariat at the registration desk or call us on 0478 958 841 and we will do everything to assist you with your enquiry.

reGIstratIon and InformatIon desk

Upon arrival, please ensure you collect your name badge at the registration desk. The registration desk will be open as follows;

Monday 27 June 8:00am – 5:00pm Tuesday 28 June 8:00am – 5:00pm

ConferenCe entry

Each Conference Delegate will be issued with a name badge on registering. The name badge must be worn at all times as it is your official pass to all sessions, meal breaks and the Welcome Reception.

speakers prep

Speakers Prep is located in the Hotham Room. Please refer to the floor plan on page 21. If you are a presenter please ensure you upload your presentation at least one hour prior to your scheduled presentation time.

ConferenCe twItter

Join the conversation by using the Conference hashtag #HealthyCities. Delegates are encouraged to share their thoughts and questions throughout the Conference.

mobIle phones

Please ensure mobile phones are on silent during the Conference sessions.

Internet

Complimentary Wi-Fi internet has been arranged for all delegates. To connect your device please follow these simple steps:

1. Choose the WiFi network Pullman-Lobby1 on your device2. Enter the password: MCL163. You Are Connected!

aCCommodatIon

Accommodation accounts must be settled with the hotel on check out. Neither the Committee nor the Secretariat are responsible in any way for outstanding accommodation accounts.

welCome from the ConferenCe ChaIr

In 2016, our Liveable Cities Conference adopts the theme ‘Generating a mood for change’. This theme speaks to the reason we might be called to gather. In curiosity, to learn, to connect and share our unique perspectives compelled by the moods of wonder and possibility. These are the moods that move us forward.

During the past 9 years, our conference has facilitated dialogues that open delegates to new ways of seeing and being in the world. Ways that inspire us as professionals to move towards imagining, creating and designing cities and places that are healthy, resilient and sustainable.

This year, we will host an exceptional line up of keynote speakers to set the scene for our two-day dialogue. Moving from listening to participation, we have designed the second day of our event to maximise shared discussion and to elevate speakers from concurrent streams to the main stage to share their unique perspectives.

Over the course of our conference, our intention is to generate discussion - lively, fresh discussion, infused with momentum for action beyond the two days. Whether you’re an influencer, an idea-generator, a connector, a creator, an academic, or a professional passionate about what constitutes ‘liveable’, we’d love to hear from you too.

Welcome to our growing community of change makers.

Paula DraytonDirector, Resource Advisory

ConferenCe seCretarIat Tara LemmonAST Management Pty Ltd Suite 3, 8 Short Street, Nerang QLD 4211PO Box 29, Nerang QLD 4211 Ph: 07 5502 2068 Fax: 07 5527 3298 Mob: 0478 958 841Email: [email protected]: www.astmanagement.com.au

telephone dIreCtory

Registration Desk 0478 958 841AST Management Pty Ltd 07 5502 2068Pullman Melbourne on the Park 03 9419 2000Silver Top Taxi 131 008Virgin Australia 136 789Jetstar 131 538Qantas 131 313Tiger Airways 02 8073 3421

9th makInG CItIes lIveable ConferenCe 2016

Ms Paula Drayton, Director, Resource Advisory (Conference Chair)Dr Bhishna Bajracharya, Associate Professor, Urban Planning, Bond UniversityMs Suzette Jackson, Director, Innate EcologyAssociate Professor Caroline Miller, Massey University, New ZealandDr Lennert Veerman, Senior Lecturer and Program Director, Masters Public Health, School of Population Health, University of QueenslandMs Kerryn Wilmot, Architect, Research Principal, Institute for Sustainable Futures, University of Technology, Sydney

CONFERENCE COMMITTEE

9th makInG CItIes lIveable ConferenCe 2016

maJor prIZe draw

The Conference Committee are pleased to announce that one lucky delegate will win an Ipad Mini at the Closing Ceremony of the Conference.

The prize will be drawn at 5pm on Tuesday 28 June.

Collect your raffle ticket on the way into the final Plenary Session for your chance to win.

*delegate must be in the room to win.

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mrs sarah breavInGton, Group sustaInabIlIty manaGer, mIrvaC

Group Sustainability Manager for Mirvac, Sarah Breavington, is responsible for their sustainability strategy “This Changes Everything” and the strategic direction of Mirvac’s community investment programs. Most recently this has involved the

incorporation of Social Return on Investment as a tool for analysing and influencing major new developments.

Prior to joining Mirvac, Sarah worked for Hammerson, the European property developer as their community manager. She has also worked on a range of major infrastructure projects providing community consultation and engagement support for the 2012 London Olympics, Transport for London road and rail programs and a range of nuclear power station sites.

She currently sits on the board of the charity City Community Care and the Steering Group for LBG, the global standard for measuring and benchmarking corporate community investment. Sarah previously sat on the board for the U.K. national skills academy for retail.

dr ellIot fIshman, dIreCtor of transport InnovatIon, InstItute for sensIble transport

Dr Elliot Fishman completed his PhD at the Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety on the topic of global bike share. His work has been published in the top ranking industry journals including the British Medical Journal, Journal of Transport Geography and a range of

other transport and health publications. He has advised the Australian Prime Minister’s Office on sustainable mobility and has written for The Age, the Herald Sun and other major daily newspapers on transport issues.

He has lectured in Integrated Transport Planning at RMIT and since 2005 has been the Director of Transport Innovation at the Institute for Sensible Transport. He currently acts as a consultant to several Australian councils on disruptive transport innovation and sustainable mobility. He has advised the NYC Department of Transportation and Transport for London on their bike share programs.

mr peter malatt, dIreCtor,sIx deGrees arChIteCture

Peter Malatt is an architect and founding director of Six Degrees Pty Ltd, with over 25 years experience in the industry. He has been project leader for many of the large institutional projects completed by the Six Degrees, most notable

being for the UTAS, MTC and University of Melbourne.

In 2012 Peter was elected to the National Council of the AIA, and in 2013 he was elected President of the Victorian Chapter.

mr Jeremy mCleod, dIreCtor, breathe arChIteCture

Jeremy is the Founding Director of Breathe Architecture, a team of dedicated Architects that have built a reputation for delivering high quality design and sustainable Architecture for all scale projects.

Breathe Architecture has been focussing on sustainable urbanisation and in particular have been investigating how to deliver more affordable urban housing to Melbournians.

Breathe were the instigators of The Commons housing project in Brunswick and now are collaborating with other Melbourne Architects to deliver the Nightingale Model. Nightingale is intended to be an open source housing model led by Architects. Jeremy believes that architects, through collaboration, can drive real positive change in this city we call home.

mr ben peaCoCk, founder and partner, republIC of everyone

Ben is Founder of Republic of Everyone, a company that brings brands, sustainability and creativity together to make doing good, good for business.

He is Co-Founder of the Garage Sale Trail, Chief Architect of the 202020 Vision and author

or Lessons From My Left Testicle, a book about kicking cancer’s butt and learning to live.

dr sheryn pItman, proGramme

KEYNOTE PRESENTERS

manaGer, InspIrInG south australIa, south australIan museum

With a multidisciplinary background in environmental management, education, writing and communication, Sheryn manages the Inspiring South Australia Program, the implementation of the national Inspiring Australia Strategy to strengthen our society’s engagement with the sciences. For the previous eleven years Sheryn managed the

South Australian Green Infrastructure and Sustainable Landscapes Projects, multi-agency partnerships bringing together diverse stakeholders to integrate the planning and design of green spaces and water systems that underpin the health and sustainability of towns and cities.

Prior to this she worked with Greening Australia engaging communities in landscape rehabilitation and habitat restoration, and also spent many years as a creative and technical writer including documentary film, television and radio. Sheryn’s recently awarded doctorate has a focus on ‘ecological literacy’.

professor susan thompson, professor of plannInG and dIreCtor, CIty wellbeInG, CIty futures researCh Centre, unIversIty of new south wales

Susan Thompson is Professor of Planning and Director, City Wellbeing Program in the City Futures Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Susan has qualifications in urban planning, geography and education. Her areas of expertise encompass cultural diversity in urban

planning, meanings of home and the use of qualitative research methodologies in the built environment disciplines.

For over a decade Susan has focussed on the interdisciplinary area of healthy urban planning in her research, teaching and advocacy work. Susan is widely published in urban planning and health. Her most recent book (2015) is a co-edited international collection entitled The Routledge Handbook of Planning for Health and Well-Being: Shaping a sustainable and healthy

future. Susan is editor and chapter author of Planning Australia (Cambridge University Press, 2007; 2012). Now in its second edition, this was the first comprehensive monograph in planning for more than 30 years, winning state and national awards for excellence from the Planning Institute of Australia.

Professor Susan Thompson’s longstanding contribution to the planning profession was recognised in 2012 when she was elected Fellow of the Planning Institute of Australia and in 2015, with the award of the Sidney Luker Memorial Medal.

mr martIn udale, dIreCtor of tamakI reGeneratIon, dIreCtor of panuku development auCkland and ChaIr of waIraka land Company, new Zealand

Martin brings to this discussion more than 30 years experience in commercial and residential property development and investment in Australia and New Zealand. Before moving to New Zealand in 2003, Martin spent more than 20 years working in the Australian property markets holding senior

roles in a number of organisations.

From 2003 – 2009 Martin led McConnell Property Limited as CEO. In that period he established McConnell Property as a highly regarded business and market leader in New Zealand operating in both the commercial and residential development sectors.

Since stepping back from that role he has pursued his interests in the wider areas of urban strategy and city development; urban regeneration; partnership models for public and private sector participation; and, institutional transformation.

Martin has been an active participant in and contributor to the urban development and housing debates in New Zealand, in particular in Auckland, and an advisor to both central and local government around these issues.

Martin now holds a number of Board and governance roles including inaugural Chair and now Director of the Tamaki Regeneration Company, Director of Panuku Development Auckland, Chair of the Wairaka Land Company ….among other things.

KEYNOTE PRESENTERS

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8.00am - 9.00am reGIstratIon wIth arrIval tea and Coffee

plenary sessIon

Room: Ballroom 2 and 3Chair: Ms Paula Drayton

9.00am - 9.05am welCome address ms paula drayton, ConferenCe ChaIr

9.05am - 9.25amplaCe makInG for a healthy australIa: opportunItIes and ChallenGes for polICy and praCtICe

Professor Susan Thompson, Professor of Planning and Director City Wellbeing, City Futures Research Centre, The University of New South Wales, Australia

9.25am - 9.50amarChIteCt led multI-resIdentIal housInG whICh ConsIders at Its Core; soCIal health, eConomIC resIlIenCe, and envIronmental sustaInabIlIty

Mr Jeremy McLeod, Director, Breathe Architects

9.50am - 10.15amGeneratInG a mood for ChanGe - tamakI reGeneratIon – puttInG people at the heart of what we do

Mr Martin Udale, Director & Chair, Director of Tamaki Regeneration, Director of Panuku Development Auckland and Chair of Wairaka Land company

10.15am - 10.30am keynote speaker Q & a sessIon

10.30am 11.00am mornInG tea wIth exhIbItors

11.00am - 11.25amCreatInG the urban Cool – lIvInG InfrastruCture and sCIentIfICally lIterate CommunItIes

Dr Sheryn Pitman, Programme Manager Inspiring South Australia, South Australian Museum

11.25am - 11.50am the value of CommunIty – understandInG our soCIal return on Investment

Mrs Sarah Breavington, Group Sustainability Manager, Mirvac

11.50am - 12.15pm dIsruptIve transport teChnoloGy and the role of Government

Dr Elliot Fishman, Director, Institute for Sensible Transport

12.15pm - 12.30pm keynote speaker Q & a sessIon

12.30pm - 1.30pm lunCh wIth exhIbItors

PROGRAM - Monday 27 June

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the makInG CItIes lIveable ConferenCe 2016 Is hosted by the assoCIatIon for sustaInabIlIty In busIness InC.

The Association provides a platform for industry and academic leaders to share sustainability knowledge and is committed to supporting the sustainable business practices of their members. The Association is creating a community for industry to work together on challenging sustainability issues.

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ImprovInG lIveabIlIty: ChallenGes and solutIons

room: ballroom 2

sessIon ChaIr: assoCIate prof bhIshna baJraCharya

CommunIty and soCIal development

room: ballroom 3

sessIon ChaIr: ms danIelle harGreaves

1.30pm - 2.00pm how Important Is ClImate resIlIenCe to lIveable CItIes?

CommunIty InfrastruCture; arena for soCIal InteraCtIon and ConneCtedness

Ms Stella Whittaker, Principal Sustainability & Climate Change,Ramboll Environ

Dr Marjan Hajjari, Senior Community Infrastructure and Service Planner,City of Port Philip

2.02pm - 2.32pm australIa’s rental affordabIlIty Index: understandInG the rental housInG CrIsIs

makInG best of the old, to revolutIonIse the new: humanIsInG ComplexIty In shared spaCes

Ms Ellen Witte, Associate,SGS Economics and Planning

Mrs Lissa Barnum, CEO/Founder,Peopleness: Social Design Action

2.34pm - 3.04pm safe rooms - small steps to Greater resIlIenCe In antICIpatIon of more freQuent extreme weather events

InCreasInG CIty populatIons wIthout deCreasInG lIveabIlIty - manaGInG soCIal and urban data to prove the Case

Mr Tim Adams, Principal, F2 Design Mr Andrew Dingjan, Director,Australian Urban Research Infrastructure Network

3.04pm - 3.30pm afternoon tea wIth exhIbItors

future teChnoloGy and smart CItIes

room: stradbroke

sessIon ChaIr: mr anthony aIsenberG

CIty resourCes: food, seCurIty, enerGy, water and waste

room: huntInGfIeld

sessIon ChaIr: ms kerryn wIlmot

CItIes for everyone: ChIld and aGe frIendly CItIes

room: delaCombe

sessIon ChaIr: assoCIate prof CarolIne mIller

CItIZens of the smarter CIty: enGaGement In the dIGItal aGe

why the soCIal ConstruCtIon of enerGy Is the mIssInG lInk In effeCtIve solutIons to enerGy Issues In our urban envIronment

CreatInG a dementIa frIendly CommunIty: ChallenGInG stIGma and soCIal IsolatIon throuGh CommunIty aCtIon

Prof Rasmus Frisk, CEO, Arki_lab Dr Rory Eames, NSW State Manager,Viridis

Ms Kathy Bell, Policy Adviser,Alzheimer’s Australia

one hundred years from now, vehICles wIll not be the problem

InnovatIons and reforms In urban waste and reCyClInG

the future of aGe frIendly CItIes

Prof Susan Krumdieck, Professor in Mechanical Engineering, University of Canterbury

Mr Mike Ritchie, Director, MRA Consulting Group

Mr Kieran McKernan, Architect,ThomsonAdsett Architects

smart parkInG for smart CItIes the forGotten player In the Green CIty Game: the role of Industry & manufaCturInG In the sustaInable CIty of the future

sleek hIGh-rIse apartment towers may not be the tradItIonal retIrement vIllaGe model but they are a QuIet revolutIon In australIa

Dr Jega Balakrishnan, Chief Executive Officer, eSMART 21

Mr Jack Noonan, Project Lead,Sustainability Victoria

Mr Stuart Telha, Head of Retirement Living, Plus Architecture

3.04pm - 3.30pm afternoon tea wIth exhIbItors

PROGRAM - Monday 27 June PROGRAM - Monday 27 June

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ImprovInG lIveabIlIty: ChallenGes and solutIons

room: ballroom 2

sessIon ChaIr: ms ellen wItte

CommunIty and soCIal development

room: ballroom 3

sessIon ChaIr:assoCIate prof bhIshna baJraCharya

3.30pm - 4.00pm enhanCInG lIfe and lIveabIlIty - GrowInG the soCIal fabrIC of melbourne

soCIal housInG - pathway to produCtIve soCIal enGaGement

Mr Jesse Barrett, Principal, Liveability Melbourne Water

Dr Judy Kraatz, Senior Research Fellow, Griffith University

4.02pm - 4.32pm makInG perth lIveable: translatInG envIronmental ChallenGes to plannInG solutIons

densIty has an ImaGe problem: shIftInG the paradIGm

Ms Catherine Garlick, Principal Environmental Officer, Office of the Environmental Protection Authority

Ms Naomi O’Hara, Senior Environmental Officer, Office of the Environmental Protection Authority

Ms Susan Rudland, Director,Urbis Pty Ltd

Ms Sidonie Roberts, Consultant,Urbis Pty Ltd

4.34pm - 5.04pm lIGht raIl to randwICk – publIC transport InfrastruCture and loCal lIveabIlIty

Contemporary urban resIdentIal development and CommunIty buIldInG In south asIan CItIes: a Case of kathmandu valley

Ms Joanna Hole, Coordinator Strategic Planning, Randwick City Council

Dr Rajjan Chitrakar, Visiting Fellow, Queensland University of Technology

5.04pm 6:30pm welCome reCeptIon – level 1 foyer

future teChnoloGy and smart CItIes

room: stradbroke

sessIon ChaIr: mr anthony aIsenberG

CIty resourCes: food, seCurIty, enerGy, water and waste

room: huntInGfIeld

sessIon ChaIr: ms suZette JaCkson

CItIes for everyone: ChIld and aGe frIendly CItIes

room: delaCombe

sessIon ChaIr: assoCIate prof CarolIne mIller

the role of buIldInGs In australIa’s transItIon to a low Carbon eConomy

urban aGrICultural praCtICes and InItIatIves In buIlt envIronments: Case studIes of detroIt and sInGapore explored

CIty eduCatIon InnovatIon

Mr Eli Court, Implementation Manager, ClimateWorks Australia

Dr Sumita Ghosh, Senior Lecturer,University of Technology, Sydney

Ms Princess Ventura, Director,Urbis Pty Ltd

helIostats and the opportunItIes for Improved solar aCCess In urban envIronments

turf - makInG CItes more lIveable reImaGInInG play from younG ChIldren to adults and Importantly everyone In between..?

Mr Tim Phillips, Director, TILT Industrial Design

Mr Richard Stephens, Business & Industry Development Manager,Turf Australia

Mr Aaron Wallis, Director,Playce Pty Ltd

drIvInG uptake of eleCtrIC vehICles In australIa

CommunIty support for water sensItIve urban desIGn

desIGnInG aGe-InteGrated CItIes

Ms Claire Painter, Project Manager, ClimateWorks Australia

Dr Angela Dean, Research Fellow,CRC for Water Sensitive Cities & The University of Queensland

Mrs Jeanette Frisk, Architect MAA, Urban Designer and Founding Partner, Arki_lab

5.04pm - 6.30pm welCome reCeptIon – level 1 foyer

PROGRAM - Monday 27 June PROGRAM - Monday 27 June

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ImprovInG lIveabIlIty: ChallenGes and solutIons

room: ballroom 2

sessIon ChaIr: ms suZette JaCkson

CommunIty and soCIal development

room: ballroom 3

sessIon ChaIr:ms susan rudland

9.00am - 9.30am lIveable yarra - plannInG for the CIty’s future usInG a delIberatIve proCess

henderson town Centre proJeCt: the reduCtIon of vandalIsm and GraffItI throuGh arts based plaCe makInG and youth enGaGement

Cr Amanda Stone, Councillor,Yarra City Council

Dr Fiona Andrews, Lecturer,Deakin University, School of Health & Social Development

Mr Paul Woodruffe, Academic Leader Undergraduate, Unitec Institute of Technology

9.32am - 10.02am more than CleansInG: a new busIness model for loCal Government - drIvInG Cultural and behavIoural ChanGe

makInG best of the old, to revolutIonIse the new: humanIsInG ComplexIty In shared spaCes

Ms Lily Wang, Place Manager, City of Parramatta Council

A/Prof Iain Butterworth, Manager Liveability and Sustainability, Victorian Department of Health and Human Services

10.04am - 10.34am marrICkvIlle publIC domaIn strateGy - urban renewal for lIveabIlIty

‘wyonG alIve’ - an InnovatIve approaCh In buIldInG CommunIty CapaCIty

Mr James Grant, Principal Urban Designer, JMDdesign

Ms Belinda McRobie, Social Planner,Wyong Shire Council

Ms Danielle Hargreaves, Team Leader Community Education, Wyong Shire Council

10.34am - 11.00am mornInG tea wIth exhIbItors

aCCess vs. mobIlIty In transport

room: stradbroke

sessIon ChaIr: dr ellIot fIshman

CIty resourCes: water room: huntInGfIeld

sessIon ChaIr: dr anGela dean

brInGInG nature baCk Into CItIes

room: delaCombe

sessIon ChaIr: dr lennert veerman

bIkespot: explorInG dIfferenCes In the perCeIved rIsk and real rIsk of rIdInG a bIke In melbourne

the water Industry’s lIveabIlIty Journey lIvInG pods and natural water-harvested landsCapes: a new paradIGm for transformInG resIdentIal areas

Mr Anthony Aisenberg, Director,CrowdSpot

Mr Jon Anstey, General Manager Insight and Innovation, Coliban Water

Mr Paul Barnett, Director,Paul Barnett Design Group

Is It all about the helmet? bIkeshare systems as part of an InteGrated publIC transport solutIon

sharInG the lesson of the bendIGo aIrport whole water CyCle manaGement (wwCm) showCase proJeCt

buIldInGs that breathe desIGn GuIde: subtropICal arChIteCture In brIsbane’s Cbd

Mr Armando Mazzei, Senior Consultant, SGS Economics & Planning Pty Ltd

Mr Tim Dunlop, Principal Consultant,Regional Management Group

Mr David Cowan, Senior Urban Planner, Brisbane City Council

would you lIke to CommIt to that? how we Got people to Get out of theIr Cars to Get to work

ways to save water: prIorItIsInG behavIours by ImpaCt and lIkelIhood

how parks and reserves are essentIal for makInG our CItIes lIveable and the ChallenGes we faCe

Mr James Young, Sustainability Adviser, Canterbury District Health Board

Ms Sarah Kneebone, PhD Candidate,BehaviourWorks Australia

Ms Kristen Jackson, National President, Parks and Leisure Australia

10.34am - 11.00am mornInG tea wIth exhIbItors

PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016 - Page 15

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ImprovInG lIveabIlIty: ChallenGes and solutIons

room: ballroom 2

sessIon ChaIr: ms prInCess ventura

CommunIty and soCIal development

room: ballroom 3

sessIon ChaIr:ms belInda mCrobIe

11.00am - 11.30am ImprovInG the eConomy one vanIlla slICe at a tIme

‘toGether alone’. lIved experIenCes of CommunIty In a new suburb on the outer frInGe of melbourne, australIa

Mr Glenn Lawless, Principal Advisor Strategy, Annecto

Dr Fiona Andrews, Lecturer, Deakin University, School of Health & Social Development

11.32am - 12.02pm shapInG a walkInG world reInforCInG IntrInsIC values to buIld publIC support for a Zero net emIssIon future

Mr Joey Schaasberg, Urban Planner,Arup

Mr Adam Majcher, Engagement Manager, ClimateWorks Australia

12.04pm - 12.34pm makInG lIveabIlIty pay for Itself opportunItIes for professIonal praCtItIoners to ImpaCt on CItIZen wellbeInG

Mr Warwick Savvas, Senior Associate,ASPECT Studios

Mr Jonothan Cowle, Design Manager, ROTHELOWMAN

Mr Geoff Barker, Principal,PM+D Architects P/L

12.34pm - 1.30pm lunCh wIth exhIbItors

Growth transformInG our CItIes

room: stradbroke

sessIon ChaIr: assoCIate prof CarolIne mIller

plannInG for health: proGrams, food, lIfestyle

room: huntInGfIeld

sessIon ChaIr: ms Jane murray

urban renewal and Carbon posItIve envIronments

room: delaCombe

sessIon ChaIr: ms kerryn wIlmot

testInG new approaChes to urban renewal- evIdenCe based sustaInabIlIty opportunItIes In fIshermans bend

how to InClude health In urban plannInG? a QuantIfICatIon of physICal aCtIvIty related benefIts of lIveable neIGhbourhoods In australIa

reImaGInInG ChrIstChurCh CIty’s post-Quake publIC realm: the InfluenCe of 21st Century landsCape arChIteCture on the rebuIld

Ms Sarah Reid, Senior Sustainability Officer- Sustainable Infrastructure,City of Melbourne

Mr Nick Alsop, Senior Policy Advisor, Sustainability, City of Port Phillip

Dr Lennert Veerman, Senior Lecturer,The University of Queensland, School of Public Health

Mr Mike Thomas, Principal,Jasmax

parramatta’s ‘open heart surGery’ of aCCelerated Cdb development and the role of plaCe-makInG In ensurInG that the patIent survIves!

an australasIan fIrst health preCInCt partnershIp

Central GeelonG revItalIsatIon - the transformatIon of vICtorIa’s seCond CIty

Ms Imogen Schoots, CBD Place Manager, Parramatta City Council

Mr Steven Ellis, CBD Place Manager, Parramatta City Council

Mr Brent McAlister, Executive Director Sustainable Development, Lismore City Council

Ms Hilary Rutledge, Manager Central Geelong Action Plan,City of Greater Geelong

spaCe: Is It the most useful tool In plannInG and CreatInG lIveable CItIes? the Case of western sydney

plaCe In hospItal desIGn navIGatInG Carbon unCertaInty: learnInGs from a Queensland water utIlIty

Mr Matt Coetzee, Manager Australian and New Zealand Offices, Aurecon

Mr Peter Skinner, Head of Research and Development, Architectus Brisbane

Ms Ilan Ivory, University of Melbourne, Former Senior Strategic Planner and Analyst, Seqwater

12.34pm - 1.30pm lunCh wIth exhIbItors

PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016 - Page 17

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CreatIve CItIes

room: ballroom 2

sessIon ChaIr: mr darren atkInson

effeCtIve plaCe makInG

room: ballroom 3

sessIon ChaIr:mrs amanda stIrrat

1.30pm - 2.00pm Culture and ComplIanCe: buIldInG and plannInG law, and the reGulatIon of CreatIve CItIes

nambour - from where to wow - fIndInG your dIreCtIon

Dr Ianto Ware, Strategy Advisor - Culture, City of Sydney

Ms Jennifer Bartle-Smith,Policy & Strategy Advisor,Water Services Association of Australia

Mr Paul McKinlay, Social Planner,Sunshine Coast Regional Council

2.02pm - 2.32pm publIC art & the lIveable CIty: plannInG for exIstInG and evolvInG urban envIronments

Can you measure plaCe? turnInG the QualItatIve Into the QuantItatIve - trends In CommunIty value

Mr Richard Brecknock, Director,Brecknock Consulting P/L

Ms Kylie Legge, Director,Place Partners

2.34pm - 3.04pm CreatIves In the CIty beyond tradItIonal enGaGement

Ms Marla Guppy, Director, Guppy Associates Art Management

Ms Amanda Newbery, Founder and Director, Articulous

3.04pm - 3.30pm afternoon tea wIth exhIbItors

Growth transformInG our CItIes

room: stradbroke

sessIon ChaIr: ms ImoGen sChoots

plannInG for health: proGrams, food, lIfestyle

room: huntInGfIeld

sessIon ChaIr: dr lennert veerman

open topIC

room: delaCombe

sessIon ChaIr: ms Ilan Ivory

“ConCentrated / networked / CollaboratIve” - lIvInG, CommutInG & workInG In the future meGa-CItIes of ChIna

InCorporatInG healthy eatInG and aCtIve lIvInG wIthIn the nsw InteGrated plannInG & reportInG proCess

the “aurIn workbenCh” enablInG CollaboratIve plannInG aCross Industry, loCal and state Government

Mr Richard Mullane, Principal,HASSELL

Mr Peter McCue, Executive Officer,NSw Premier’s Council for Active Living (PCAL)

Dr Claudia Pelizaro, Urban Data Analyst, AURIN

Dr Tanya Styles, Senior Research Analyst, City of Boroondara

housInG affordabIlIty: a problem wIth a solutIon?

movInG beyond the warm fuZZIes: praCtICal examples of embeddInG healthy polICy In Canterbury

our spaCe, your plaCe: openInG water utIlIty land for lIveabIlIty

A/Prof Caroline Miller, Associate Professor, School of People, Environment & Planning, Massey University

Ms Jane Murray, Health in All Policies Advisor, Canterbury District Health Board

Mrs Kathryn Naylor, Senior Liveability Planner, Melbourne Water

QuestIon and answer sessIon wIth speakers

wInnInG the lIveabIlIty trIfeCta a year In the lIfe of a housInG strateGy

Mr Richard Mullane &A/Prof Caroline Miller

Mr Greg Hunt, Executive Officer,South East Councils Climate Change Alliance

Mrs Joy Chen, Senior Strategic Planner, City of Casey

3.04pm - 3.30pm afternoon tea wIth exhIbItors

PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016 - Page 19

Page 18 - 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016

3.30pm - 3.55pm

plenary sessIon

Room: Ballroom 2 and 3Chair: Ms Paula Drayton

radICal ChanGe to delIver GenuIne lIveabIlIty

Mr Peter Malatt, Director, Six Degrees Architecture

3.55pm - 4.20pm you Can’t ChanGe my behavIour (and It’s rude to try)Mr Ben Peacock, Founder and Partner, Republic of Everyone

4.20pm - 4.30pm keynote speaker Q & a sessIon

4.30pm - 4.55pmConferenCe hIGhlIGhts. what have we learnt?deleGates are InvIted on staGe to summarIse what take home messaGes they are leavInG wIth. what new developments have InspIred them?

4.55pm - 5.00pm

ClosInG Ceremony

wIn an Ipad mInI

ColleCt a tICket on your way Into the fInal sessIon. deleGate must be In the room to wIn.

PROGRAM - Tuesday 28 June

3d modellInG for CommunICatInG urban revItalIsatIon - a loCal Government experIenCe Mr Alex Crothers, Spatial Sciences Manager, City of Launceston

CreatIves In the CIty

Ms Marla Guppy, Director, Guppy Associates Art Management

enGaGInG CommunItIes to beCome advoCates In reGIonal towns

Ms Claire Bower, Healthy Communities Planner, Bellarine Community Health

Invertebrate bIodIversIty on Green roofs: applICatIons of the lIvInG lab ConCept

Miss Katherine Berthon, Student, Macquarie University

‘knowInG your plaCe’ 3214 ConneCtInG to your neIGhbourhood In an aCtIve way

Mrs Amanda Stirrat, Community Development Officer, City of Greater Geelong

manaGInG melbourne’s stormwater throuGh Green roofs

Mr Joseph Glesta, Student, University of Melbourne

publIC spaCe, the rIGhts to the CIty and the Case study of the melbourne ‘park party’Ms Amelyn Ng, University of Melbourne

soCIal JustICe In rural land use plannInG In honG konG: a Case study of small house polICy In honG konG

Dr Milton Chi Hong Lau, Lecturer, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

strateGIC busIness sustaInabIlIty and rIsk manaGement for lIveable CItIes Dr Ian Kirkwood, Associate Dean, Senior Lecturer, James Cook University Brisbane

Miss Eszter Kiss, Lecturer, Coordinator - Leading to Work, James Cook University Brisbane

the reGIonal food system allIanCe’s role In CreatInG a food seCure reGIon Ms Claire Bower, Healthy Communities Planner, Bellarine Community Health

POSTER PRESENTATIONSPoster presentations will be on display for the duration of the Conference in the Foyer.

KEYNOTE ABSTRACTS

the value of CommunIty – understandInG our soCIal return on Investment

Mrs Sarah Breavington

As one of Australia’s largest residential developers, Mirvac is committed to providing sustainable and liveable communities. In an industry first, Mirvac and KPMG have created a framework and tool to measure the social and economic impacts of Mirvac’s residential developments. By combining qualitative and quantitative data, Mirvac can start to demonstrate economic outcomes linked to improvements in safety, sense of community, sense of place and active living.

This important work has enabled Mirvac to start to answer some difficult questions and demonstrate how the Group creates safe and happy communities, and contributes to residents’ health and wellbeing.

dIsruptIve transport teChnoloGy and the role of Government

Dr Elliot Fishman

Dr Fishman provides an overview of some of the technologies disrupting the transport industry and how it is likely to change the way people travel in cities. Ride sourcing Apps like Uber, bike share and autonomous vehicles are all set to change the way we move around cities.

These changes have major implications for government and present an opportunity to enhance the liveability and productivity of our cities. However to realise these benefits, major policy shifts are required, in the way we design our streets, allocate road space, price transport and regulate an ever-changing industry.

radICal ChanGe to delIver GenuIne lIveabIlIty

Mr Peter Malatt

The presentation will look at 5 areas. I will be using Melbourne as a case study:

1. A Definition of ‘Livability’2. What a lack of livability looks like3. Putting a size on a City (Melbourne)4. Population density & architecture5. Radical Opportunities

arChIteCt led multI-resIdentIal housInG whICh ConsIders at Its Core; soCIal health, eConomIC resIlIenCe, and envIronmental sustaInabIlIty

Mr Jeremy McLeod

Quality and well-designed housing is critical to securing individual and collective well-being, economic progress and ultimately social prosperity in urban environments. Nightingale seeks to create a world in which housing in contemporary urban environments is built to support wellbeing, community and liveability.

you Can’t ChanGe my behavIour (and It’s rude to try)

Mr Ben Peacock

Everyone is talking behaviour change but could it be a phrase that needs changing? Ben looks at some campaigns that create more sustainable behaviour in cities and leaves you with a simple concept for how change really happens.

CreatInG the urban Cool – lIvInG InfrastruCture and sCIentIfICally lIterate CommunItIes

Dr Sheryn Pitman

The cities of the world have an increasingly significant task in providing habitat for most of the world’s human population. By 2050 about 75% of the world’s human population will live in urban areas. Cities have an increasingly extensive footprint; they account for 75% of global carbon emissions and between 60-80% of energy use.

While they are growing larger, taller, wider and denser, many cities are also growing hotter, drier, windier and more polluted. They are, by nature and/or design, vulnerable to the vagaries of disasters and major disruptions.

All cities are built on and are dependent on natural ecosystems and, despite great diversity in history, culture and style, they have a key feature in common; cities cannot exist without the services provided by healthy ecosystems. Given that ecosystem services are critical for cities, and have almost immeasurable value, a serious question must be asked: what level of knowledge and understanding about how ecosystems function and provide their services should our planners, designers, engineers, builders, resource managers, financiers and decision-makers have?

Page 20 - 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016

KEYNOTE ABSTRACTS FLOOR PLAN

This presentation weaves into the story of liveable cities two essential threads: the critical role of nature-based and ecosystem service-based systems which we can call green or living infrastructure; and the vital importance of having a scientifically literate decision-making community.

plaCe makInG for a healthy australIa: opportunItIes and ChallenGes for polICy and praCtICe

Professor Susan Thompson

There is an established body of research evidence demonstrating the critical role that the built environment plays in supporting healthy behaviour as part of everyday living. Examples of excellent practice abound, many of these involving built environment and health professionals working in close collaboration. Nevertheless, global governments continue to be slow to legislate for healthy place making, even though they face escalating rates of chronic disease and resultant burgeoning health care budgets. This sets the background for my keynote address. It progresses to examples of healthy place making in Australia and internationally, showcasing how the built environment can support healthy behaviours that reduce the major risk factors for physical and mental ill health. Enhancing opportunities for bodily movement in leisure and transport activities, as well as ensuring easy access to healthy, affordable and ethnically appropriate food, are two of the most significant interventions. Healthy place making is also about connecting communities in a built environment that is safe, welcoming and environmentally sustainable for everyone, irrespective of age, ability or cultural background.

Drawing from my team’s recently completed Australian Research Council Linkage Project involving built environment and health partners, I also consider the ways in which lived experience can enhance our understandings of how to create healthy places. This study focuses on four different localities, typical of new and redeveloping residential development in Australia, and uses both quantitative and qualitative methods. Lessons for achieving healthy built environments synthesise the major research outcomes, demonstrating the importance of moving beyond the simple provision of infrastructure supportive of health, to deeper understandings of how different communities respond to varying initiatives, their local needs and aspirations, and cultural mores. Ongoing challenges for healthy place making in Australia and beyond conclude the presentation. What policy and legislative options are

available to ensure that the built environment supports people being healthy as part of everyday living? How can the built environment and health disciplines be better aligned to ensure that healthy place making is part and parcel of 21st Century practice, as well as mandated.

GeneratInG a mood for ChanGe - tamakI reGeneratIon – puttInG people at the heart of what we do

Mr Martin Udale

The Tamaki Regeneration programme is New Zealand’s first urban regeneration project and will be delivered across Auckland’s eastern city suburbs - Glen Innes, Panmure and Point England, positioned on the Tamaki estuary and only 12 minutes from the city centre.

The Tamaki Regeneration Company (TRC) is working with partners and the community to deliver the programme and make Tamaki a great place to live, work and raise a family. Over the next 10-15 years, the programme will provide 7500 new quality homes and unlock opportunity for social and economic growth. Revitalised town centres, new education and childcare facilities, new jobs and business, new innovative home ownership schemes, will create opportunities for the current and future residents of Tamaki.

On April 1, 2016, Housing New Zealand transferred 2800 of its social housing properties in Tamaki to TRC’s ownership, marking the first major transfer of social homes from Housing NZ to a community housing provider (CHP) under New Zealand’s Social Housing Reform Programme (SHRP). Tamaki Housing Association – established as a subsidiary of TRC - is now New Zealand’s second largest social housing provider. Housing led regeneration has already begun to create opportunities for many in the community. But how has this significant programme of change been received by the Tamaki communities, residents and businesses? What building blocks are in place? What are the lessons learned so far? How has TRC overcome the long running and complicated legacy issues in Tamaki? Martin Udale will provide a retrospective view of TRC’s first three years in Tamaki leading up to this significant transaction to accelerate the programme. The Tamaki story will provide insights on working with community including its Neighbourhood Approach and how it has worked with a diverse community in generating a mood for change in Tamaki. 0m

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australIan forestry standard ltd

bIGbelly solar

envIroGroup

popCar

routledGe

9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016 - Page 23

Page 22 - 9th Making Cities Liveable Conference 2016

aurIn

AURIN is a national collaboration delivering e-research infrastructure to empower better decisions for Australia’s urban settlements and their future development. Funded by the Australian Government through the NCRIS Strategy, AURIN provides urban researchers, policy and decision-makers with an infrastructure to facilitate web-based access to a wealth of information on urban environments across Australia.

australIan forestry standard ltd

Australian Forestry Standard Ltd was established in 2002 to promote the sustainable management of Australia’s plantation and native forests. AFS Ltd can trace its origins to the 1992 United Nations Rio Earth Summit when the principles for sustainable forest management were established.

bIGbelly solar

Bigbelly Solar is the world leader in smart Waste and Recycling solutions. We are transforming the way organisations tackle public space waste & recycling, saving time, money and fuel while reducing their carbon footprint. BigBelly solar compactors compact up to 5 times the equivalent waste of a 120L bin and provide up-to-the-minute status on which locations need to be collected.

envIroGroup

EnviroGroup provide integrated sustainability solutions for the built environment, working with architects, town planners and local governments around Australia. Combining sustainability consulting services with the hands on technical experience of our trades and engineering teams across energy efficiency, solar power, battery storage, heating and cooling and more.

Clients include City of Melbourne, Sustainability Victoria, Monash University, South East Water and many others.

popCar

Popcar is about challenging inferior traditional concepts about personal mobility and making things better. Through leading technology we want to redefine the way Australia moves around, to redefine what it is to take a Journey. As a member with Popcar, you’ll get to be part of it.

routledGe

Routledge is a global publisher of academic books, journals and online resources in the humanities and social sciences. We publish thousands of books and journals each year, serving scholars, instructors, and professional communities worldwide. Routledge is a member of Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business.

EXHIBITORS NOTES

The 9th International Urban Design Conference Smart Cities for 21st Century Australia

Join us in Canberra from the 7 - 9 November 2016 as we address the theme, Smart Cities for 21st Century Australia; How Urban Design innovation can change our cities. The Conference will focus on an understanding of what makes a city ‘smart’ from a urban design perspective and how the built environment develops during the city planning process.

CONFERENCE STREAMS

· How to make a city smart?· Sustainability in a smart city· Urban design innovation for smart cities· City Infrastructure· Urban design opportunities in high density living areas· Mixing up residential and commercial uses in inner cities· Population change and livability· Housing affordability· Financing city development· What future for car dependent cities like Canberra?· Politics and city form: lessons learnt from the City of

Canberra, and other Australian cities

ABSTRACT SUBMISSIONS OPEN UNTIL 25 JULY 2016For further details visit www.urbandesignaustralia.com.au

HYATT, CANBERRA7–9 november 2016