2014_Charting a Changing Waterfront

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Journal of Urban Design

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Charting a Changing Waterfront: A Review of Key Schemes for Perth's Foreshore

a Australian Urban Design Research Centre (AUDRC), Hay St Perth, WA, Australia

Published online: 24 Sep 2014.

To cite this article: Julian Bolleter (2014) Charting a Changing Waterfront: A Review of Key Schemes for Perth's Foreshore, Journal of Urban Design, 19:5, 569-592, DOI: 10.1080/13574809.2014.943703

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JournalofUrbanDesign,2014 Vol.19,No.5,569–592, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13574809.2014.943703

JULIANBOLLETER

AustralianUrbanDesignResearchCentre(AUDRC),HayStPerth,WA,Australia*

ABSTRACT Twenty-oneyearshaveelapsedbetweenaninternationaldesigncompetition heldfortheredesignofPerth’sSwanRiverforeshoreandthecommencementofconstruction ofasmall,butsignificant,sectionofthethisriver’sedge.Thisextendedperiodofdesign propositionallowsanopportunitytoreflectontrendsinwaterfrontdesigninPerth,and shiftingnotionsofwhatPerthis,andcouldbe,asexpressedbytheproposals.Trends identifiedincludeagrowingappreciationofurbanvalues,increasingaspirationstoproduce symboliccapital,increasingproductionofstylizedurbanimageryandthecorresponding dominanceofthearchitecturaldiscipline.Perth’sforeshorehasbeenuntilrecentlyavast expanseoftypicallyunoccupied,turfedparkland.Analogoustoascaled-upsuburban‘front yard’,itsrolehasbeentypicallysymbolicratherthanfunctional.Assuch,schemesforthe redesignofthisforeshore,andsubsequentpublicreactions,alsotendtorevealaspectsof Perth’scollectiveidentity.Whilethe1991competition-winningschemerecreateda naturalisticlandscapeontheforeshore,laterstategovernment-endorsedschemesin2008 and2011proposedtheurbanizationoftheforeshoreatsignificantdensities.Theserecent schemesreflect,andhaveforged,agrowingdesireforurbanityinPerth.

Introduction

Asaresultofcollatingmaterialforthispaper,weestimatedthatover200proposals havebeenmadeforthePerthforeshoreareasincetheearly1990s.Thisincludes153 proposalsfromaninternationaldesigncompetitionconductedbythestate governmentin1991,proposalsbyCityVision(alocaladvocacygroup)in1988and 2013,proposalsdevisedaspartofacompetitivetenderprocessin2007,proposals fromtheCityofPerth’s‘WhatIf’designcompetitionin2010,andrecommendations madeforthewaterfrontbyJanGehl,alsoin2010.Thisfiguredoesnotincludethe hundredsofstudentprojectsproducedfortheforeshoreaspartofurbandesign studiosheldattheUniversityofWesternAustraliaandatCurtinUniversityover theyears.Thelegacyofthisprolongeddesignprocessisacomprehensiverecordof evolvingtrendsinwaterfrontdesignandchangingnotionsofwhatPerthis,and couldbe,asexpressedthroughdesignsforthewaterfront.

Forthepurposesofin-depthanalysisthispaperwillanalysethreeofthe schemesproducedinthisperiod.Theseschemeshavebeenselectedbecausethey Correspondenceaddress.AustralianUrbanDesignResearchCentre(AUDRC),Level2, 1002,HayStPerth,WA,Australia.Email: julian.bolleter@uwa.edu.au *JulianBolleterwasemployedbyAshtonRaggattMcDougalltoworkonthedesign ofElizabethQuaybetween2009and2011.

ChartingaChangingWaterfront:AReviewof KeySchemesforPerth’sForeshore
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werethosethatcameclosesttoimplementation;indeedthethirdoftheseisnow underconstruction.Theschemesincludethe1991internationalcompetitionwinningproposal,producedbyKevinLynch’sMassachusettsenvironmental designfirmCarr,Lynch,HackandSandell,thatproposedtherenderingofthe foreshoreasanaturalisticlandscape.ThesecondisaschemebyMelbourne architectsAshtonRagattMcDougall(ARM)thatproposedthedevelopmentofthe foreshoreatasignificantdensity,andinahighlystylizedmanner.Thethird scheme,alsoproducedbyARM,proposesthedevelopmentofthewaterfrontat lowerdensitiesandinaformpartlyreminiscentofconventionalpost-industrial waterfrontsinAustralia.

Theseschemesarediscussedinrelationtotheirmorphology(formal properties),thedesignideologyembodiedintheschemesandthepublic discoursetheyprecipitated.Themorphologyoftheschemeswillbeunderstood byreviewingthevariousdrawingsandimagesproducedoftheschemes. Thedesignideologywillbeunderstoodthroughareviewoftheliterature concerningthedesigner’sphilosophyandpractice,andascanbededucedby analysingthedesigns.Ofcoursedesignideologyandmorphologyareclosely entwinedandthediscussionoftheseunderseparateheadingsisintendedpurely toprovidegreaterclarity.Thepublicdiscourseprecipitatedbytheschemeswillbe understoodthroughareviewofthelocalmediathathasactedasalightningrod forpublicandpoliticalopinion,andthroughsurveysconductedatthetime.

Thesecriteriaareemployedtoinvestigatetworesearchquestions,namely:

Howdotheseschemesreflectevolvingtrendsinwaterfrontdesignin Perth?

HowdotheseschemesreflectPerth’schangingidentityasacity?

TheextendedperiodofrethinkingPerth’sforeshorehasbeenparalleledby changingideasofwaterfrontdevelopmentaroundtheworld.Theseincludeanew appreciationof‘urbanvalues’(RigbyandBreen 1994,2),theuseofwaterfront redesign,tocreatetheconditionsattractivetoglobalinvestmentinthecontextof increasinglyflexiblecapitalflows(Dovey 2005,11),andtheincreaseddominance ofthearchitecturalprofessionactingasleadconsultantonwaterfrontredesign projects.Thesebroadertrendsinwaterfrontredesigncanallbemapped,to varyingdegrees,throughproposalsforPerth’sforeshore.

BeyondthesebroadertrendstheredesignofPerth’sforeshorealsooffersa lensthroughwhichtoanalysechangingideasofwhatPerthisandperhapscould be.Perth’sforeshore,sincebeingreclaimedfromtheSwanRiver,hasbeenawide expanseofturfedparklandandhasfunctionedsymbolicallyasthecity’s‘front yard’.LikesuburbanfrontyardsPerth’sforeshorehasbeentypicallyabout ornamentaldisplayratherthanactualuse(Hall 2010,29).Assuchthe aforementionedschemestendtorevealaspectsofPerth’scollectiveidentity, particularlyinthecontextofPerth’srecenteconomicbooms,whichhavebrought aboutsignificantsocietalchange.AsKimDoveyexplains‘Thewaterfrontisan edgeofthecityandithasacertainedginess;itisa“front”or“frontier”,a“face”or “mask”ofthecitythatconstructsurbancharacterandidentity’(Dovey 2005,24). ThispaperwillexaminethismaskasarepresentationofhowPerthconstructsits identityasacity.

TheredesignofPerth’sforeshorecanberegardedasanalogouswith Melbourne’sFederationSquaresite(Brennan 2010),whichhasbeenthesubjectof bothinternationaldesigncompetitionsandprolongedandpolarizedcity-wide

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debate.However,proposalsforPerth’sforeshorearealsomarkedlydifferentfrom FederationSquare,andindeedtheraftofwaterfrontredevelopmentprojectsthat haveoccurredinrecentdecadesinAustralia;includingMelbourne’sDocklands andSouthbank,Sydney’sDarlingHarbour,Darwin’swaterfront,andthePort Adelaidedevelopment.ThisisduetothefactthatPerth’sforeshorehasneverhad anysignificantindustrialorrecentportfunction;rather,ithasbeensincethelate nineteenthcenturylandscapedpublicopenspace.Whilemostwaterfront redesignsinvolveconversionofanindustrial‘backyard’intoa‘frontyard’ (Kreiger 2004,27),inthecaseofPerth’sforeshoretheexisting‘frontyard’is actuallybeingredeveloped.WiththeexceptionofCanberra’sKingstonforeshore andWestBasinproposal,thissituationisuniqueinAustralia.Thishassignificant implicationsforboththesymbolismofitsdevelopmentandsubsequent communityreactions.

Theimplicationsofthisresearchrelatetotheimportanceofhigh-profile, symbolicallyloadedprojectssuchastheoneproposedforPerth’swaterfrontfor galvanizingcommunitysentimentinrelationtourbandensification,acriticalissue inPerth.Ifindeedthepublic’simageofthecitycanbe‘remade’atwaterfronts,as Marshall(2001a,9)attests,thentheconstructedschemeforthewaterfrontwillhelp tosetthetoneforstategovernmentandCityofPerthdensificationeffortsincentral Perth,butalsoelsewhereinthecity.Indeedforgovernment,waterfrontrenewalis oftenthecentrepieceofmetropolitanpromotionandpartofanoverall densificationagenda(Oakley 2011,222).Vancouver’splanningdirectorLarry Beasleyspeaksofusing‘waterfrontlocationstocreateacompetitiveadvantagefor downtownlivingthatiscapableofoffsettingtheallureofthesuburbs’(Kreiger 2004,37).Perthhasyettoleveragefullytherivertocatalysehigherdensityurban environments,howeverthePerthWaterfrontprojectunderconstruction,withits 1700apartments,isastepinthisdirection.

TheSite

ThecityofPerthisthecapitalofthelargeandresource-richstateofWestern Australia.WhilePerthisthemostremoteurbancentreintheworld,itispresently growingatanextremerate.Thisgrowthhasbeenfuelledbyaseriesofminingbooms thathaveseenPerth’spopulationincreasefrom1.18millionin1991to1.9million peopletoday.Thisgrowthisalso,inpart,duetoPerth’senviablesuburbanlifestyle;it hasadensityofonly3000people/km2 andassuchhasoneofthelowesturban populationdensitiesintheworld.Theprincipalurbannodewithinthissuburban milieuisPerth’scentralbusinessdistrict(CBD),whichissituatedonthebanksofthe meandering,estuarineSwanRiver.

PriortoSwanRiver’scolonizationbyEuropeans,thesiteofwhatisnow Perth’sforeshorecomprisedveryshallowrivermarginsedgedwithdenserush bedsandinterspersedwithsaltmarshes(SeddonandRavine 1986,76).Knownas GumapbythelocalNoongarpeople,thiswasoriginallyafishingareaanditis recordedtherewereNoongarcampsonthesiteatthetimeofcolonization (Hughes-Hallett 2010).TheadjacentPerthWater,or‘Buneenboro’totheNoongar people,wasalsohometohundredsofblackswanswhoswamandrestedon exposedshoalsandsandspits(SeddonandRavine 1986).

Despiteitsrichbiodiversity,sincetheearliestEuropeanoccupationofPerth theforeshorewasdeemedproblematic.First,PerthWaterisshallow,exceptwhere ithasbeendredged,withtheconsequencethatthePerthforeshorewasvery

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unsatisfactoryasaportintheearlyyearsofthePerthcolony(Nevill 2007).Assuch Fremantle,andlaterKwinana,becametheportsthatservedtheadministrative andcommercialcentreofPerth(SeddonandRavine 1986,56).Bythe1880s progressiveinfillingofPerth’sadjacentriveredgesbegansoastoprovidethecity withrecreationalspacesnecessitatedbytheperceivedabsenceofanycentral parkland(SeddonandRavine 1986,89).

Furthertorecreationalneedstheriverinelandscapeshadcometoberegarded bymanyasa‘noisomemarsh,amosquito-breedingmorass’(SeddonandRavine 1986)andassuchwereperceivedtobeinneedof‘beautification’viainfillingand turfing.Thisdrivetocreatehandsomeriversideparklandcanbealignedwiththe CityBeautifulmovementinwhichproponentsheld‘idealisticnotionsaboutcivic well-beingandthesocialbenefitsofpubliclandscapesandparks’(Rigbyand Breen 1994,12).Asaresultofthesebeautificationendeavours,by1955thePerth Waterfrontsite,1 historicallyreferredtoastheEsplanade,formedpartofalarger expanseofgenericturfedpublicopenspace(POS),some80hectaresofwhichhad been‘reclaimed’fromtheSwanRiver’smarshybanks(Stephenson 1975,7) (Figure1).Bythelate1960sthePerthWaterfrontsitewasframedtothewestbya sprawlingfreewayinterchangesitereclaimedfromthenowburied‘MountsBay’, thehistoricSupremeCourtGardensimmediatelytotheeast,andPerth’sCBDto thenorth.Asignificantarterialparkway,RiversideDrive,ranbetweenthePOS andtheSwanRiver,disconnectingthecityfromtheriver.

Sinceitsreclamationfromtheriverinthelatenineteenthcentury,the Esplanadehashadalonghistoryasaplaceformajoreventsinthelifeofthecity, bothinpubliccelebrationandinprotest(CityVision 2013)(Figure2).Despitethis, onaday-to-daybasisitwastypicallyunoccupied.Windswept,overshadowedby tallbuildingstothenorthandperiodicallyreclaimedbytheriverinstormevents, theEsplanadeofferedlittleamenitytoencourageitsoccupation.ClintonYabuka describesthereclaimedandturfedexpanseofthesiteashavingbeenviewedfor manyyearsfromtwocontrastingperspectives:‘oneseeingablightofuntenable

1991competitionsiteinorange.

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Figure1. ProgressiveinfillingoftheSwanRiver:thePerthWaterfrontsiteisshownoutlinedinred;the
J.Bolleter

Figure2. TheEsplanadehashadalonghistoryasaplaceformajoreventsinthelifeofthecity,butona day-to-daybasiswastypicallyunoccupiedandbarren. Courtesy:MichalLewi.

vacuousness,andtheotherseeinganidyllicanduntouchablenaturalsetting’ (Yabuka 2008,41).Eitherway,itwaslikeatypicalsuburbanfrontyard,generally unoccupiedbutnonethelessconcernedwithsymbolicdisplay(Hall 2010,16). RecognizingtheuntappedpotentialofthePerthwaterfront,andPerth’sforeshore generally,in1989anurbandesigncompetitionwasconducted,jointlyfundedby theCityandtheState,fortheentireextentofPerth’sforeshore.

TheLandscapeScheme(1991)

TheCompetitionBrief

Thestatedaimofthecompetitionwasto‘canvassthewidestpossiblerangeof ideasandsolutionstotheproblemofacityseveredfromitsriver’(Western AustralianGovernment 1991,22).Despitethetitleofthe‘PerthCityForeshore UrbanDesignCompetition’,thebriefcalledexplicitlyforalandscapeproposal andspecificallyidentifiedthecompetitionasnotbeingan‘architectural competition’(WesternAustralianGovernment 1991).Theovertdirectiveofthe briefforalandscaperesponsecanbeattributedtotheroleofGeorgeSeddonas competitionadvisor.SeddonisareveredfigureinPerthwhoauthoredaseminal book ASenseofPlace (1972)thatdissectedtheSwanCoastalPlain,thegeological unitwithinwhichPerthissited,intoitsconstituentlayersofgeology,soils,plants andsubsequentculturaloverlays.Thebookprovidesacomprehensiveguideasto thebiophysical‘senseofplace’oftheSwanCoastalPlainbutlittledirectguidance astohowarchitecturalformcouldbereconciledwiththislandscape.Itisnot unreasonabletopresumeSeddon’sovertfocusonlandscapeinfluencedthe competitionbrief.

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Morphology

Aftermuchdeliberationbytheassessingcommittee,on16June1991thePremier ofWesternAustraliaannouncedthatKevinLynch’sMassachusettsenvironmental designfirmCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellwasthewinnerofthecompetition (Figure3).Thewinning,andcommended,schemeswereovertlylandscape compositions,nodoubtreflectingthebriefandthejudgingpanel.However,there were‘protests’againsttheovertlandscapefocusencouragedbythecompetition brief.LocalPerthfirmDonaldsonWarnproposedtheurbandevelopmentofa significantsectionofPerth’sforeshorearoundageometricinlet,amovewhich waspremonitoryoftheschemenowunderconstruction.

ThewinningCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellschemedeferredtothePerth region’sendemiclandscapetoinformtheirnaturalisticscheme.Broadswathesof landweredesignatedas‘WesternAustralianGardens,NaturalRiverine Landscape,HistoricGardensBio-Exchange’and,oneofthefewbuildings proposedontheforeshore,an‘EnvironmentalLearningCentre’(WestAustralian Government 1991).Asignificantpublicgestureincludedagrandcurvingjetty,the ‘GrandCrescent’,whichprovidedaviewbacktotheskylineofPerthoverthe water.A‘SwanIsland’alsoformedanestingareaforthelocalblackswans. Inaddressingtheperceiveddisconnectionbetweenthecityandriver,thedesign teamproposedtoexcavateasignificantsectionofLangleyParktocreatethe‘Old

Figure3. The1991competition-winningschemebyCarr,Lynch,HackandSandell.Thescheme addressedthedisconnectionbetweenthecityandriverbyexcavatingasignificantportionofLangley Parktocreatea‘creek’attheedgeofthecity.AsperLynch’surbantheory,theschemeretainedthe clearlydefinededgeconditionbetweentheurbanformofPerth’scentralbusinessdistrict(CBD)and thelandscapeoftheforeshore. Courtesy:CityofPerth.

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ShoreCreek.’Theaimofthiswastobringtheriverbacktotheedgeoftheexisting citystructure,ratherthanadvancingtheurbanformofthecityitselftotheriver’s edge.Thescheme’sretentionofthelegibilityoftheurbanedgeofthecitycanbe partlyexplainedintermsofLynch’surbantheory.

DesignIdeology

Lynch,inhisseminalbook TheImageoftheCity (1960,91),identifiesthe opportunityofforming‘ournewcityworldintoanimageablelandscape:visible, coherentandclear’.Hereferstothislegibilitybeingachieved,inspatialterms,by elementssuchas‘paths,edges,districts,nodesandlandmarks’(48).Ofthese elements,the‘edge’wasmostdominantintheexistingstructureofPerth’s foreshorein1991.Infactthethenwell-definededgebetweentheurbanformofthe cityandthegreenbeltoftheforeshoresubscribedtoLynch’spropositionthatan edgegainslegibilityifitis‘laterallyvisibleforsomedistance,marksasharp gradientofareacharacterandclearlyjoinstoboundedregions’.Inkeepingwith thisphilosophy,theCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellschemedidnottransgressthe existingclearlydelineated‘edge’conditionbetweentheurbanformofPerth’s CBDandthelandscapeoftheforeshore.Perhapstherewasanattempttoemulate theChicagolakeshorearea,whichLynchcitesinthisrespectasa‘magnificent exampleofavisibleedge,giganticinscale,thatexposesandentiremetropolisto view’(66).ItseemedthatCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellwerekeentomaintainthe distinctedgeconditionsbetweenbuiltformandlandscapethatpresumablyaided Perth’scitizensintheirmentalimagingofthecity.Indeed,tofurtherthisend,the schemeproposedagrandcurvingjettythatallowedviewerstogazebackatPerth skylineinonecoherentview.

WhiletheCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellschemesawthecity’surbanedgeto theforeshoreremainunchanged,theCityBeautifullandscapeoftheforeshore itselfwassignificantlyaltered.Thisgenericgreenbeltwasexcavatedtoexpressthe morphologyoftheoriginalshorelineandreplantedtorepresentthewider biodiversityoftheSwanCoastalPlain.BonnieFisherextolstheimportanceof inscribingtheuniquecharacteristicsofburiednaturalsystemsintowaterfront design,astrategythatiscentraltotheCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellscheme: themostengagingbuiltelementsontheshorelineretaintheessential qualitiesofwhatcamebefore,andtreatnaturenorasanadversarybutas anaccomplice ... Drainagesthatwerecovered,beachesthatwerefilled in,shorelinesthatwerestraightened:allhavethechancetobereclaimed andredefined.(Fisher 2004,49)

Thisdesiretobreathenewlifeintotheseburiednaturalsystems,whileprobably wellintentioned,alsocouldhavebeenanattemptbyCarr,Lynch,Hackand SandelltoappealtoSeddon,thecompetitionadvisor.

PublicDiscourse

Asperhapscouldbeexpectedofsuchagenerousupgradetoapubliclandscape, 81%ofpeoplesurveyedwereinfavourofredevelopingtheforeshoreand71% thoughtthatthewinningentrywas‘agoodbasisfortheproject’(Gregory 2009, 15).IfMarshall’sassertionthatthatwaterfrontstendto‘expresswhatweareasa culture’(Marshall 2001a,4)isaccepted,thentherelativepopularityoftheCarr,

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Lynch,HackandSandellschemereflectsacitizenrywhowascomfortablewith Perth’ssprawlinglandscapecondition.AsYabukadescribes,Perth’surban structurehasnotgenerallyencouraged‘theintenseinteractionofitscitizens,but ratherhassupporteda“lifestyleofquietcontentment”’(Yabuka 2008,41). Thissituationalsoextendedtoatraditionofobservingratherthanengagingwith theSwanRiver(Yabuka 2008).Indeed,thiswasnottheRiverSeine,theurban imageoftheYarraRiveradoptedbyMelbourneinthe1980s(Doveyand Sandercock 2002,154);thiswastheriverasanArcadianescapefromthecity,a placeoutsidetheordinarydominionofurbandwellers(Fisher 2004,63).This perceptionoftheriverisconfirmedbya1985surveyconductedbytheCityof Perthtogaugetherelativepopularityofvarious‘activity,environment,and movement’strategiesfortheforeshore(CityofPerth 1985).Thissurvey establishedthatthepublichadfavoured‘environments’ontheforeshore,which included‘opengrassedfields,informalparklandandnaturalisticriveredges’ (WesternAustralianGovernment 1991),andthattheystronglydisapprovedofa ‘livelywaterfrontatmosphere,waterfrontbuildings,orbuildingsonjettiesor marketsandsouvenirstalls’(CityofPerth 1985)(Figure4).Withrespectto ‘movement’,theystronglydislikedcarparks,deckedorotherwise,andthe wideningofroads.Whereroadswereunavoidabletheyfavouredthembeing swathedingreenery(CityofPerth 1985).Withrespectto‘activity’,thepublic stronglyfavouredjoggingandcyclingtrails,butstronglydislikedmessierand livelieractivitiessuchasfunfairs,marketsandsouvenirstalls,crafts,andwater playgrounds(CityofPerth 1985),whichinterferedwithanArcadianconception

Figure4. CommunitypreferencesastothepotentialdevelopmentofPerth’sforeshore.Thebarsatthe bottomofeachimagerelateto:1,likealot;2,like;3,don’tmindonewayortheotherorcannotdecide; 4,dislike;and5,dislikestrongly(WesternAustralianGovernment 1991). Courtesy:CityofPerth.

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oftheforeshore.Inessencethesurveyresultsindicated‘thepublicwantedthe spacetostaymoreorlessthewayitwas;agreenbeltdelineatingthecityandriver [ ... ]’(Westbrook 2008,44).

Whiletheimplementationofthecompetition-winningschemeultimately becameboggeddownwithcontractualissues,itsdemisecouldbeattributedto otherfactors.First,poweroverthedevelopmentandmanagementoftheforeshore restedwithanumberofdifferentauthorities(Gregory 2009,15),asituationthat hamperedearlyimplementationefforts.Furthertothis,giventhenegligible residentialpopulationoftheadjacentCBD,atthetimetherewouldbescarcely enoughpeopletooccupytheparkoutsideofmajoreventslikePerth’sannual fireworks‘Skyshow’.AsNigelWestbrookidentified,withoutanadjacenturban residentialpopulation‘theoutcomewillbeatawdry[ ... ]scrapingofsuperficial urbangestures,fuelledbyshort-termtourism,withoutsubstance’(Westbrook 2008,44).However,inthelong-termtheproposedriversideparkwouldhave providedasignificantamenityfortheprojected45,900peoplewhowillliveinthe CityofPerthby2026(MetropolitanRedevelopmentAuthority 2013b).Regardless, in1991theissueofanegligiblepopulationextendedtothewaterfront’spotential activationandalsoastohowitwouldbefunded.Thepresumptionwasthatdue toanabsenceofsignificantprivatedevelopmentopportunities,theprojectwould needtobefundedentirelyoutofthepublicpurse.Unfortunately,bothCity Councilandgovernmentresourceswerelimitedatthetime.TheLabor Government,marredbytheexcessesofcorruptionscandals,fell,andthescheme wasscrappedbythenewlyelectedLiberal-NationalPartyGovernment(Gregory 2009,15).Thuswhiletheschemewaswellalignedwithpublicsentiment,it ultimatelyfounderedduetoaprevailingperiodofeconomicuncertaintyand politicalchange(Gregory 2009,16).

TheCircleScheme(2008)

WiththedemiseoftheCarr,Lynch,HackandSandellproposal,theforeshore remainedinastateofstasisdespiteaflurryofnewproposals.Theseincluded masterplansproducedbytheCityofPerthin2001and2005,andaschemebythe stategovernmentin2006.In2007theOfficeoftheGovernmentArchitect,in associationwithLandCorp(thestatedevelopmentagency),calledforexpressions ofinterestandaselectionpanelshort-listedfivearchitecturalteams.Thoseteams wereaskedtopursuetheirdesignideasinaspiritofopencompetitionand subsequentlyAshtonRaggattMcDougall(ARM),oneofAustralia’smost innovativearchitecturalfirms,inconjunctionwithRichardWeller,waschosen. Theselectionofanavant-gardearchitecturalpracticetoleadconsultantsonthe PerthWaterfrontrepresentedashiftawayfromtheplanning-drivenapproaches oftheCityofPerthin2001and2005towardsanarchitecturalfirmthatcould deliverastylizedimageforthewaterfront(Dovey 2005,13).

Morphology

Whilepastdesignsforthesitehadbeen‘stymiedbyaprofoundscepticismtoward verticalinfilldevelopmentingeneralandsentimentalitytowardtheexistinglarge openspaces’(Weller 2009,357),theARMschemeproposedthedevelopmentof theEsplanadeatahighdensityandassuchbroketheperceivedlegibilityofthe lineofexistingurbanformdemarcatingthecity’sedge(Figure5).Thisprecinctof

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ARM’sCircleScheme.TheIndigenousculturalcentrewaslocatedtotheleftofthe‘River Circle’inlet.OppositeisthetalltowerthatprovokedcomparisonswithDubai.

high-densityurbandevelopmentwastobestructuredaroundtwosignificant publicgestures.Thefirstconsistedofaexcavatedcircularinlet,the‘RiverCircle’, whichwould‘enfold’theriverinthecityinaninlet.TheRiverCirclewasscaledto matchtheWesternAustralianCricketAssociation(WACA)ovalinEastPerth,and wasdescribedasalludingtotheAboriginalflagandtoiconsoftheIdealCity (Raggatt 2008).Setwithintheframeofthe‘RiverCircle’wastobe‘SwanIsland’, theblackswanbeingalong-timesymbolofWesternAustralia.Thesecondgesture consistedofEsplanadeSquare,aformalspacethatwouldprovideforthe continuationofmanyoftheciviceventsthathadhistoricallyoccurredon theEsplanade.AniconicIndigenousculturalcentreformedafocalpointfor thescheme,juttingoutintotheSwanRiverandprovidingaculturalanchorforthe scheme.ThisproposalreferencedthehistoricalrolethatPerth’sforeshoreplayed asanentrypointforimperialoccupancyandtrade(OakleyandJohnson 2012,341).

TheCircleSchemeinmorphologicaltermsreferencesanearlier1996proposal preparedbyARMfortheMelbourneDocklandssite.Thisvisionsetupadramatic contrastbetweenthenewDocklandsandtheoldcitywherebythetraditional

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Figure5. Courtesy:ARM.

imageofthecitywas‘destabilised,melted,stretchedandinflected’(Dovey 2005, 141).AsDoveydescribed,thereisasenseoftheexistingcity‘literallyturninginto water’inthenewDocklands.ThefluidityofurbanformintheARMDocklands proposal‘extendedtocurvilinearstreetsandbuildingswithkidney,cylinderand ribbonshapesthatloop,foldandtwistinthreedimensions[ ... ]’(Dovey 2005, 141).Whilelessextreme,themorphologyoftheCircleSchemecertainly contrastedwiththeexistingcitygridofPerth’sCBD.Asthecitygridreached downtotheriveritwarpedaroundthecircularinletandmorphedintoanorganic extensionofurbanformandlandscapealongtheedgeoftheexistingfreeway interchange.ThefluidnatureoftheCircleSchemewascertainlydeliberateand reflectedtheuseofavirtual,computer-driven,‘generative’toolinthedesign process.Inproceduraltermstheripplingeffectsofavirtualdropofwaterwere modelledinthree-dimensional(3D)softwareandusedtodeterminethe geometriesoftheriver’sedge,pavingpatternsandevenbuildingfootprints.

DesignIdeology

TheARMschemeforthewaterfrontcanbeunderstood,ideologically,inthe contextofARM’seclectic,stronglytextual,post-modernarchitecturalpractice (Dovey 2005,143).WhiletheurbanframingoftheCarr,Lynch,HackandSandell scheme,ifnotthelandscapetreatments,couldbebroadlyconsideredaspartofthe rationalandobjective‘designmethodologymovement’(Gelerntner 1996,279),the ARMschemecouldbeconsideredtobealignedwiththemovementof‘postmoderneclecticism’inwhichdesigners‘rummagedthroughhistory,selected fragmentsofforms[ ]andcollagedthemtogether’(Gelerntner 1996,279).ARM buildings,suchasStoreyHallinMelbourneandtheNationalMuseumin Canberra,arecodedwith‘multiplearchitectural,local,historicalandpopular references’(Dovey 2005,143).Theirworkisoftentingedwithcynicism,a ‘deconstructiveresistancetosingularmeanings’and‘adifficultbeautyinthe challengingtraditionoftheavant-garde’(Dovey 2005,143).WiththeCircle SchemetheARMavant-gardearchitecturalideologybecomesextendedtothe scaleofurbanfragmentofthecity.Atthisexpandedscalefunctionalandspatial considerationswerealsonecessarilyatthecoreofthescheme;however,the schemerepresentedawillingness,newtoPerth,toengagewiththesymbolic, stylisticandsculpturalpotentialofurbanformatasignificantscale.

PublicDiscourse

WhiletheurbanityandsymbolismoftheCircleSchemerepresentedadeparture fromearliervisions,italsoreflectedagrowingawarenessofPerth’srelationship withitsglobalcontext.AsWellerexplains,inthedecadeleadinguptotheCircle SchemeproposalPerthhadbecome‘exceptionallyself-conscious.Aboutits image,aboutitsgloballiveabilityranking,aboutwhybrightyoungthingstendto leaveand,mostnotoriously,abouthowtoshakeoffthe“Dullsville”tagthatits citizensregrettablyassigneditinapiqueofself-flagellation’(Weller 2010,38). Perth’sself-consciousnesswasparticularlyevidentintheCircleSchemeforthe waterfront.

OfcoursethissituationwasnotuniquetoPerth;redevelopingDarwin’s waterfrontwascalculatedto‘shiftalong-standingperceptionofitasabigcountry towntothatofatropicalcityofinternationalrenown’(Oakley 2011,234).Abelief

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thatMelbournewasbecominga‘backwater’wasacompellingnarrativedriving theDocklandsproject(Oakley 2011,234).AsSusanOakleyidentifies,‘increasingly theroleandpracticeofurbangovernanceisdirectedtowardsenhancingthe competitivecapacityofcitiesinattractingandretainingglobalcircuitsofcapital andpeople’(Oakley 2011,222).Waterfrontrenewalsareoftenpartofthisprocess throughtheir‘Imagineering’into‘placesofspectacle,symboliceconomyand cosmopolitanliving’(LehrerandLaidlely 2009,799).Consciouslyorunconsciously theCircleSchemeappearedtoattempttogarner‘symboliccapital’forPerthwithin thisglobalcontext.Whilethe1991landscapeschemerepresentedLynch’sideaof an‘imageofthecity’asa‘formofurbancognition’(Dovey 2005,12),the2008Circle Schemeembodiedthe‘imageofthecity’asaformofglobalbranding.

Whiletheschemewasinitiallypopularwiththepublic,2 theimageofPerth steppingboldlyontotheglobalstage,however,wasnotembracedbyall;muchof thecritiqueoftheschemecentredonitslackofperceivedconnectiontoplace. Inthiscritique,carriedoutinthepopularmedia,theschemewaspejoratively referredtoas‘DubaiontheSwan’(Thomas 2012).Thisstereotypewas perpetuatedbythe‘SwanIsland’,whichwasdesignedtobereadfromGoogle Earth;theobviousreferencebeingtoDubai’slogo-drivenurbanismof‘ThePalms’ and‘TheWorld’developments.Inanotherwisesupportivearticle,RuthDurack describedthe‘generalconsensusseemstobethat(thescheme)isembarrassingly kitsch,withmorevituperativecriticsevensayingitisemblematicofaderivative andDisneyesquedevelopmentthatmocksthenaturalbeautyoftheriver’(Durack 2008,26).

Theindicativeurbanisminthepubliclyreleasedrenderswasalsohigh,and sculptedintoorganicformsreminiscentofDubai’s‘starchitecture’(AMO,Reisz, andOta 2007).ThisservedfurthertoconfirmtheassociationwithDubai,atleast inthemindsofthecritics;thisoccurredatapointintimewhenthepopulationof PerthwereperhapsparticularlysensitivetocomparisonswithDubai,given Dubai’sspectaculareconomiccollapseandPerth’ssimilarrelianceonmineral resources.AsDoveyattests,‘Symboliccapitalisafixedresource,azero/sum game.Thereisonlysomuchdistinctionandprestigetobedistributed.Ifeveryone gets“distinctive”architecture,ifeverycityisdistinctive,noonewinsthesymbolic capital’(Dovey 2005,19).FairlyorunfairlythesymboliccapitalthattheCircle Schemeattemptedtoproducewaserodedbytheperceptionthattheforms,from whichthesymboliccapitalwasderived,hadalreadybeenproducedelsewhere.

Thestylingoftheurbanformalsotendedtopolarizereactionstoit. Thecomposition,atleastinthepublic-releasedrenders,appeareddesignedasan architectural‘setpiece’apparentlymadebyasinglehand.Theuseofthevirtual generativetooltendedtoreinforcethisperceptionthatthewaterfronthadasingle author.Whileperhapsdesirableatthearchitecturalscale,thisrunscountertothe nowwell-establishedbeliefthatwaterfronts‘needtobedesignedasaseriesof creativeandwell-plannedinterventions,intheformofnumerousbuilding projects,thattakeshapeoveralongperiodoftime’(Fisher 2004,52).Indeed, comprehensiveschemesdesignedbyasinglearchitectwerediscreditedbyearly urbanrenewalprojects(Gordon 2004,88).Ofcoursethisperceivedissueofthe CircleSchemecanbelargelyattributedtorepresentationratherthantothedesign itself.Whilethepubliclyreleasedrendersshowallthebuildingsconformingtoa consistentlanguage,itcouldbeexpectedthatinlaterstagesoftheprojectmultiple architectswouldhavebroughtdifferentstylisticapproachestothedifferent architecturalprojects.

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Theheightofthebuildings,particularlythetalltower(inexcessof50storeys) wheretheRiverCirclemettheriver,alsoalienatedsupportforthescheme.While withrespecttoovershadowingitmadesensetolocatethetallesttowersalongthe water’sedge,shadowbeingcastoverwaterandnotpublicspace,thistowerin particulartappedintoPerth’suneaseabouthigh-densityurbanformonitsriver edge.Thisuneaseemanatesfromavarietyofsources.Certainlytheriveris perceivedtobeapublicassetandtheapparentmonopolizationofitsedgefor privatedevelopmentisregardedasanaffront.Well-knownDanisharchitectJan Gehlespousedtheneedfora‘tightblocklayout’and‘humanlyscaled’buildings onthePerth’swaterfrontinareportfortheCityofPerth(GehlArchitects 2009,82).Giventherelativeself-consciousnessofPerthatthetime,manywould havebeenloathtoignoretheadviceofanesteemedinternationalexpert.Thereis alsopotentiallyanunconsciousdynamicatplay.InWesterntraditionsof philosophyandmythology,waterhasacomplexsetofmeanings:life,fertility,and healingandregeneration(23).Inpsychoanalytictheory,waterissymbolicofthe unconscious(Dovey 2005,23),andtheSwanRiver,fromaWesternperspective,is associatedwithaboriginality.Indeedthelocalindigenouscreationmythofthe serpentineWaugalwhoformedtheSwanRiver(Giblett 2007,34)iswellknown. Theimpositionofatowerthatcanbeseentosymbolize‘force,malefertility, masculineviolence’(Dovey 2005,192)withintheSwanRiver’srichveinof associationswasformanyantagonizing.

Whiletheheightandstylingoftheurbanformtendedtoalienatelocal supportforthescheme,publicacceptanceoftheschemewashamperedby perhapsmorefundamentalfactors.Significantly,whileotherAustraliancities haveproducedstylizedurbanewaterfrontsthatareorientedtowardstheglobal audiencesuchasSouthbank(DoveyandSandercock 2002)andFederationSquare inMelbourne,MelbourneDocklands,PortAdelaideWaterfrontandtheDarwin waterfront(Oakley 2011),alltheseprojectsemergedfrompollutedindustrialsites (Oakley 2011,222).Assuchthepopulacetypicallyhadminimalattachmentto suchsites.Indeed,ifpollutedindustrialriverscouldbecleanedandadjoining sitesremediatedforthepurposesofcreatingrealestateandpublicopenspace, thenthiswas,fromthepublic’sperspective,awin–winsituation.GiventhePerth waterfrontsitewasnotparticularlypolluted,andtheriver’sailinghealthisnot duetoindustrialfactors,therewaslittleabilitytoemploya‘clean-up’toleverage communitysupport.TheissueconfrontedbythePerthWaterfrontdesignteam wasthatthisvisionwasbeingwroughtfroma(typicallyunusedbutnonetheless historic)sliceofpublicopenspace,asituationthatfuelledthecontroversy surroundingthescheme.AsJohnSymeofthehighlycriticaladvocacygroup CityVisiondescribedatthetime:

SouthBank,DocklandsandDarlingHarbourwereallrundown underutilisedareas.[ ]Bycontrast,Perthistakingitsoneandonly heritage-protectedriversideparkland,thedresscircleofourcity,digging itupandcreatinganover-intensivedevelopment,alltosupposedly activatethecity.(CityVision 2013,9)

Theperceivedpro-developmentnatureoftheschemealsotappedinto sensitivitiesresultingfromaprolongedeconomicboomthatPerthwas experiencing.WhilethisboomresultedinPerth’spopulationrisingexponentially, italsoledtogrowingpainsintheformofextremehousingaffordabilityissuesand perceivedtrafficcongestion(StolperandWyatt 2012).ThetendencyforthePerth

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Waterfrontdevelopmenttobecritiquedassynonymouswiththeboomitselfis neatlyencapsulatedbyoneofARM’sdirectors,HowardRaggat:

Someonewillsay,‘Butwhereistheaffordablehousing?Whereisthe hospital?Whereistheschool?Whereisthechildcare?’Whereindeed! ButisPerthForeshoretheplaceforeverything?Wehavenotenvisaged thisplaceastheideologicalresponsetoallPerthafflictions;instead,we hopetogivethecityasourceintheSwanRiver,togiveitrootsatthe water’sedgeandtomakeaplaceforeveryone,aplacetolove.

(Raggatt 2008)

Despitesuchprotestations,thePerthWaterfrontproposalbecamealightningrod fortheissuesbeingfeltatametropolitanscale,andassuchmuchofthecritiqueof theschemecanbereadasapplyingtobroaderPerth.Inessence,theschemefor thewaterfrontposedamuchlargerquestionofhowPerthvieweditselfinthe contextofaboomingeconomyandextremepopulationgrowth.AsLeeStickells, lecturerattheFacultyofArchitecture,DesignandPlanning,UniversityofSydney, describes,ontheonehand,somesectionsofthecommunityviewedthisasan opportunityforPerthfinallytobe‘inapositiontosootheitslong-held,aching desiretofeellike,andberegardedas,a“real”city’(Stickells 2008,42).Forothers thehighlyurbaneandgloballyorientedschemewasanaffronttoPerth’sprized suburbanlifestyleandantitheticaltoPerth’s‘uniquesenseofplace’(CityVision 2013,15).

TheseissuesthatsurroundedtheCircleSchemeultimatelyprecipitatedits demise.Withachangeofstategovernmentin2008theschemewasscrappedand thenewlyelectedConservativePremier,ColinBarnett,announcedthatanew proposalwouldbesought.

TheRectangleScheme(2011)

In2009PremierBarnettannouncedthatanew‘scaleddown’schemeforthe waterfrontwouldbeconstructed:‘TheGovernmentdoesnotwanttoimposeyet anothergrandvisionontheWAcommunity.Thisisamoremodestconceptthat showsaground-scaledepictionofwhatcouldbedeveloped’(Rondganger 2009). Barnettsaidhisplansprovidedforgreaterpublicaccesstothewaterfront,while thepreviousgovernmentwantedtodevelop‘monuments’thatblockedoffthe riverfromthepublic(StaffReporter 2009).Despitetheperceivedexcessesofthe previousscheme,theoriginaldesignteamofARMandWellerwasretainedto designthescheme,withtheprovisothattheoldschemewasforgottenandthatan entirelynewschemewasdesignedaroundarectangularinlet.Barnett’s conservativeleaningswerereflectedinthe2012decisiontonametheproject ElizabethQuayinhonourofQueenElizabeth.

Morphology

Thisscheme,whichisnowunderconstruction,isstructuredbyalargerectangular waterbodywithacontinuouscircuitouspublicpromenadebeingcompletedby anislandandaseriesoftwobridges(Figure6).Goneinthisimageisthe‘logo skyline’oftheCircleScheme,replacedinsteadwithacomparativelytame assortmentofbuildingswithanotionalheightlimitof36storeys(Metropolitan RedevelopmentAuthority 2012,26).Thesebuildingsareplannedtoyieldsome

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Figure6. ARM’sRectangleSchemewiththesignificantpublicspacesof‘NewRiversidedrive’and ‘TheLanding’flankingthenorthern(top)edgeoftheinlet.Thedesignteamalsoaddressedthe perceivedgraphicexcessesthathadprovencostlyforthepreviousproposal.Gonewerethesultry eveningimagesofthe‘DubaiontheSwan’scheme,replacedwithperpetuallysunnyrendersthat showanuncharacteristicallyblueSwanRiverand‘ghosted’buildingsthatcastlittleornoshadows. Courtesy:ARM.

87,000m2 ofresidentialdwellings(approximately800apartments),200,000m2 of officespace,25,000m2 ofretailspaceand400hotelrooms(Metropolitan RedevelopmentAuthority 2013a)makingitverymuchanofextensionofPerth’s CBDland-usecharacter.

WhilethecircularinletofthepreviousschemealludedtotheAboriginalflag andiconsofthe‘IdealCity’(Raggatt 2008),therectangularformoftheinletappears toreflecttherobustorthogonalformandscaleof‘honest’post-industrialAustralian waterfrontssuchas,thedeceptivelynamed,CircularQuayandMelbourne Docklands.Inaccordancewiththisdesignlanguage,theRectangleSchemealsois muchmoresubservienttotheexistingformofthecitythantheCircleScheme,the existingstreetgridbeingextendeddirectlytothewater’sedge(Metropolitan RedevelopmentAuthority 2012,26).TheIndigenousculturalcentre,whileshown ontheinitialpressreleaseimagesfortheRectangleScheme,wasnotincludedinthe firststageofworksontheprojectandassuchitsfateisuncertain(Bevis 2013).

TheRectangleSchemealsodiffersfromtheCircleSchemewithrespecttothe absenceofformallandscapedpublicspaceforholdingceremonialevents,these beingrelocatedtotheneighbouringSupremeCourtGardens.Thepromenade encirclingtherectangleinletisnonethelesspunctuatedwithexpandedpublic areas.Theseinclude‘NewRiversideDrive’,asharedpedestrianandvehicular zonethatcanbeclosedoffforpublicevents,‘TheLanding’,aterracedareathat willprovideinformalseatingforlargegroupsofpeople(upto7000)toattend events,‘StationPark’,aprimarilygreenspacethatcanaccommodatesmall-scale events,and‘TheIsland’,whichwillpredominantlybea‘passivegardenspace’ thatwillprovideforleisureandrelaxationintheoverallcircuitoftheriverside promenade(MetropolitanRedevelopmentAuthority 2012).

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DesignIdeology

WhiletheCircleSchemesawARMmorphthecityintonew,curvilinearformson thewaterfront,theRectangleSchemeisinformedbytheextensionPerth’scolonial citygridtothewaterinalogicalfashion.Whilethisprovidesarationalstructure, itprecludestherichassociationsandsymbolismofthe‘RiverCircle’whichare centraltoARM’seclectic,stronglytextual,post-modernarchitecturalpractice (Dovey 2005,143).IntheRectangleSchemetheformalcomplexityand‘difficult beauty’(Dovey 2005,143)characteristicofARM’sdesignworkthusfindsits expressionnotsomuchatthescaleoftheurbandistrict,butinthedesignofthe publicdomain.Whilethedesignteamgenerallyacceptedthedirectiveofa rectangleinlet,alayerofcomplexitywasaddedthroughtheuseofavirtual, computer-driven,‘generative’tool.Aspreviouslytheripplingeffectsofavirtual dropofwaterweremodelledin3Dmodellingsoftwareandusedtoformthe highlyarticulatedinletedgeconditionsandpavingcharacteristicpatternsof thescheme,butsignificantlynoturbanmassing(Figure7).ThegeometricDNAof theschemeisthushybridized,theprimarygeometryoftherectangleandits urbanframerelatingdirectlytothecitygrid(andthedirectiveofaconservative premier)andthedetailedpublicdomaintreatmentsresultingfromARM’savantgardeandabstractvirtualprocesses.

Theuseofthegenerativetooldoesnotextendtotheisland,however,the formofwhichreferencesGianlorenzoBernini’s EcstasyofStTeresa sculpture, inparticularthefoldingformsofclothusedtoinformthemodellingofthe island’stopography.Duetheisland’sphysicalseparatenessfromthecitygrid, andperhapsbecauseislandsfostertheexpectationofsomereleasefrom

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Figure7. Iterationsoftheinletproducedbythevirtual‘generativetool’. Courtesy
:ARM.

therestraintsofthe‘mainland’,ARMhavebeenabletoachievea‘purer’ expressionofitseclecticandcodeddesignideology(Dovey 2005,143).

PublicDiscourse

BeyondthemorphologicaldifferencesbetweenthecircleandRectangleSchemes, theculturalcontextintowhichtheRectangleSchemewasbeingdeliveredhad undergoneasignificanttransition.AsWellerdescribed:

Peopleacrossthesocio-politicalspectrum(bynowallwell-travelled) havedevelopedathirstforurbanity,alongwiththebeaches,therivers andthesuburbs.Thisthirstisnowbeingquenchedbyanumberofurban projectsthatcanbeseentoreflectanincreasinglysophisticatedcultureof designinPerth.(Weller 2010,38)

Thisnew-founddesireforurbanitywasreflectedinpollsgaugingsupportforthe RectangleScheme.Accordingtoapollby WestAustralian,WesternAustralia’s mostreadnewspaper,conductedin2011,49%ofpeople‘agreewiththenewplans forthewaterfront’,14%‘don’tagreewiththenewplansforthewaterfront,’13% ‘wantitdevelopedbutconsiderthisthewronglook’,and24%think‘whocares, justgetitdone’(Rickard 2011).

Despitetheapparentsupportforthescheme,ongoingvocalresistancetothe developmentofthewaterfronthasflownfromalocaladvocacygroup, CityVision.CityVisionhasbeenconcernedwiththedesignsandissues surroundingPerth’sforeshore,andtoalesserdegreeothermajorurbanprojects incentralPerth,sinceitsinceptionin1987.ComprisingseniorPerthplanners, urbandesigners,architectsandhistorians,CityVisionandasplintergroupcalled the‘CityGatekeepers’havebeenvociferouscriticsofthestategovernment’s proposalsforthewaterfront.CityVision’smajorissuewiththeschemecentres onthesellingofpubliclandtocommercialinterests.InaCityVisionreporttothe stategovernment,LinleyLuttonproclaims,‘planningandurbandesignofthe publicdomainismuchmorethanacommercialortechnicalundertaking.Itis, orshouldbe,amoralandcivicenterprise’(CityVision 2013,6).Inessence CityVisioninherentlydistruststhecommercialcontentoftheproposed developmentwhichthegroupconsiderstobe‘inappropriateanddamagingto boththepublicenjoymentoftheforeshoreandthecitycentreasa whole’(CityVision 2013,7).

TheongoinguncertaintysurroundingtheIndigenousculturalcentre certainlyraisestheissueofthewaterfront’slargerculturalorciviccontribution tothecity.AsDickRigbyandAnnBreenextol:

Publicareasalongwaterfronts[ ]offeranunusualopportunityto educatepeopleofallagesaboutthesocial,maritime,cultural,and environmentalheritageofanarea.Urbanwaterfrontsusuallyhave historicconnections,veryoftenincludingthefoundingplaceofacityor itsreasonforbeing.(1994,27)

Indeed,theygoontoidentifyoneofthemostcommonfailingsofwaterfrontsasa lackofinterpretationofbothnaturalandhistoricfeaturesofthesitesandregions (27).InthisrespecttheCommitteeforPerth,alocaladvocacygroup,generally supportiveofthewaterfrontredevelopment,lobbiedthepremiertoconfirmhis supportofa‘WorldCentreforIndigenousCulture’withintheRectangleScheme

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(Fulker 2010b).ThethrustoftheCommitteeforPerth’sargumentistwofold. FirstlythatPerthcould,andshouldbe,thecityinAustraliathatacknowledges, respectsandcelebratesitsIndigenouspeopleandtheirculture(Fulker 2010a). SecondlythatgivenitsscaleiscommensuratewithCircularQuayinSydneythe schemeneedsanequivalenttotheSydneyOperaHouse,abuildingthatelevates thewaterfrontabovethestatusoftheeveryday(Fulker2010a)inbothformaland culturalterms.Undoubtedlyitisimportanttorecognizethatnoteverywaterfront settingcanaccommodateagrandnewlandmarkliketheSydneyOperaHouse, theGuggenheimMuseumBilbao,ortheTenerifeOperaHouseintheCanary Islands.Indeed,Fisheridentifies‘Thereareonlyafewlocationsinanycitywhere suchmomentousarchitecturecanbesustained’(Fisher 2004,56),howeverit wouldseemthatthephysicallyprominentandsymbolicallypotentsiteofthe PerthWaterfrontisonesuchlocation.

DespitethelowerbuildingheightsassociatedwiththeRectangleScheme, criticshavecontinuedtopointtothepotentialofprivatedevelopmentalongthe northernedgeoftheinlettoovershadowthekeypublicspacesofTheLanding andNewRiversideDrive(CityVision 2013,8),whichwillbeclosedtotraffic duringmajorpublicevents.Whilethedesignguidelinesforthesesitesstipulatea minimumamountofsolaraccessto thepublicdomain(Metropolitan RedevelopmentAuthority 2012,33),itremainstobeseenhowtheseguidelines willbereconciledwiththecommercialrealityofthedevelopmentsitestothe north.CertainlytheCityGateKeepersdonothavemuchfaithindesignguidelines toregulatethissituationandhaveproducedarenderofthisareathatdepictsthis spaceascold,darkandforeboding(Figure8).Inthepubliclyreleasedimagesof thescheme,ARMhaveoptedto‘ghost’thesebuildingsandtouseasummersun settingthatminimizestheovershadowingofthisarea—arepresentational approachwhichisperhapstelling(Figure6).

AswasplannedfortheCircleScheme,theRectangularschemeisbeing deliveredviaapublicprivatepartnershipinwhichtheroads,services,public domainandtheinletitselfarefundedbythestategovernment(Metropolitan RedevelopmentAuthority 2013a),whiletheprivatesectorwilldevelopthesites itself.InthispartnershipitisprojectedthegovernmentwillinvestA$440million andtheprivatesectorA$2.2billion(MetropolitanRedevelopmentAuthority 2013a).Asignificantdifferencebetweenthedeliverymodelsofthetwoschemes isthattheMetropolitanRedevelopmentAuthority(MRA)hasbeentaskedwith overseeingthedeliveryoftheRectangleScheme,replacingtheDepartmentof Planning.ThissituationmirrorsthatinVictoria,SouthAustraliaandthe NorthernTerritorywherestategovernmentshavereliedondevelopment authoritiestooverseeandmanagetheirwaterfrontredevelopments(Oakley 2011,228).Thedecisiontorelyonaquasi-governmentdevelopmentauthorityto overseethedesignandconstructionoftheRectangleSchemeperhapsreflects autonomyfromelectedgovernmentthattendstocharacterizetheseauthorities. AsDoveyexplains,‘Thissituationenablesgovernancewithoutelectoral obligation,ratherthelegitimationofauthorityisgrantedonthebasisthat autonomyisnecessarytowealthgeneration’(Dovey 2005,12).Presumablyit helpstoinsulateaschemefromchangingpoliticalfortunes.Evidenceofthisis theMRA’srecordofdeliveringlargeprojectsinPerth,suchastheClaisebrook CovedevelopmentinEastPerthandSubiacoCentro,underavarietyofLiberal andLaborgovernments.

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Figure8. ACityGatekeepers’posterreinforcingtheperceptionofpubliclandbeingsoldfor commercialinterests.There-renderedimage(top)isalsopartofawarofrepresentationinwhichthe schemeisrepresentedinamannerthattheyconsiderevokesitstruenature. Courtesy:CityGatekeepers.

Conclusion

ChartingaChangingWaterfront

AnanalysisofproposalsofthePerthwaterfrontfrom1991tothepresentprovides aninsightintochangingapproachestowaterfrontdesigninthePerthcontext.

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WhileAlexKreigeridentifiesthatthe‘re-planningofawaterfrontisarecurring need[ ]’(Kreiger 2004,23),thePerthWaterfrontisexceptionalinthatsome21 yearshavingelapsedbetweentheinternationaldesigncompetitionof1991and thecommencementofconstructionoftheElizabethQuayschemein2012. Thelegacyofthisextendedprocessisthemultitudeofschemesthatilluminate changingapproachestowaterfrontdesign.

Asthispaperhasdiscussed,withinthePerthcontextatransitionhas occurredfrompredominatelylandscapecompositionstohighlyurbane ensembles.Thewinningsubmissionsforthe1991competitionfortheforeshore workedwithinaCityBeautifulunderstandingofwaterfrontsas‘handsome shorelineparks,plazas,walkways,bridges,andriversidedrives’(Rigbyand Breen 1994,12),whichitsoughttoreconcilewiththeSwanRiver’ssenseofplace. By2008thishadshiftedtoanunderstandingofwaterfrontsasmanifestationsofa growingappreciationofurbanvalues(RigbyandBreen 1994,5).Changesalso includeashiftindesignideologies,fromthe‘rationaldesignmovement’of Lynch’surbantheory,whichinformedtheurbanframeofthelandscapescheme, tothehighlytextual(Dovey 2005,143),stylizedapproachofARM.Thefocusona local‘senseofplace’(Seddon 1972)definedbythesculptingofhistoricshorelines andplantingofendemicplantspecieshasgivenwaytourbandesignimagerythat aspirestoproducingsymboliccapitalinrelationtoincreasinglyvolatileglobal flowsofcapitalandskilledlabour(Marshall 2001b,53).Adisciplinaryshifthas occurredinwhicharchitecturehastrumpedtheprofessionsofplanningand environmentaldesignforitsabilitytoproduce‘newformsofplaceimagery’ (Dovey 2005,13).Finallythemodelbywhichthewaterfrontsweretobedelivered hasshiftedconsiderablyfromamodelofentirelystategovernmentfundingin 1991tothepublic–privatepartnershipsproposedfortheRectangleScheme.In conjunctionwiththis,thedirectinvolvementofthestategovernmentindelivering theprojecthasshiftedtotheroleofsemiautonomousdevelopmentauthorities (Dovey 2005,129).

Itisinformativetocomparethechronologyoftheseshiftswiththosethat haveoccurredwithwaterfrontsglobally.The1991winningandcommended schemesforPerthforeshorecanbeconsideredtosharetheformalgreenbelt morphologytypicaltotheCityBeautifulwaterfrontcompositionsofDaniel Burnham,FrederickLawOlmstedandJohnC.Olmstedfromtheearlytwentieth century(RigbyandBreen 1994,12),albeittemperedwithlocalreferencestoa ‘senseofplace’,Interestinglythereappearstohavebeenadelayedreactionin Perth,whichmeantthatprojectslikeBaltimore’sInnerHarbour,whichis regardedasa‘classictaleofmoderntimes’(RigbyandBreen 1996,23),wasnot heldupasamodeltowhichtoaspire.ThisisdespiteBaltimore’sredevelopment precedingthe1991competitionby11years.TheCircleScheme,withits‘logo skyline’andsupergraphicSwanIsland,stylisticallyresonateswithprojectsinthe ArabianGulf,includingDubai’sBusinessBay.Thismorphologicalsimilarity reflectsthefactthatinDubai,andtheArabianGulfgenerallywaterfrontsarenot retrofittedindustrialportsbutratheraresculptedoutofrelativelyunencumbered land.Thereisalsotheprojectionofa‘newcity’onthewaterfrontassomewhat separatetothe‘old’citywhichtheseschemesshare.Finally,theoverall morphologyoftheRectangularSchemerelatesinscale,ifnotdetaileddesign treatments,tohonestpost-industrialwaterfrontslikeMelbourneDocklandsand Sydney’sCircularQuay,asituationthatperhapsrepresentsanattemptby

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administratorstopositionPerth’swaterfrontwithinthecanonofnow well-establishedand‘safe’waterfrontmodels.

ChartingaChangingCity

Whiletheschemescanbeinterpretedinrelationtoshiftingtrendsinwaterfront design,theyalsochartaPerththathaschangedsignificantly.Since1991 successiveeconomicboomsandanenviablelifestylehaveaddedoverhalfa millionpeopletoPerth’spopulation(AustralianBureauofStatistics 2013). Emergingfromacitythathasoneofthelowestpopulationdensitiesintheworld, Perthnowhasa‘planningvisionofitselfin2031asavibrant,urbane,andtransit orientedcity’(Weller 2007,28).Thereappearstobeagrowingperception,as indicatedbysupportfortheRectangleSchemeunderconstruction,thatwelldesignedurbanityinareasofhighamenityandassociatedwithpublictransport links,asadvocatedinPerth’sstrategicplanningdocument,donotneedtooccurat theexpenseofPerth’ssuburbanidyll.Thisisasubstantialshiftforacitywhichin 1991stronglydisapprovedofa‘livelywaterfrontatmosphere,waterfront buildings,buildingsonjettiesorevenmarketsandsouvenirstalls’(Western AustralianGovernment 1991).

Inessence,proposalsforPerth’swaterfrontchartthethroesofacity strugglingtobecomeurban:fromtheearly1991competition-winningscheme, whichreservedtheforeshoreas‘nature’,tothecurrentschemeforthe waterfront,whichcontinuestoembodytheambitiontoenfoldthelanguid SwanRiverinamomentaryurbanembrace.Theabilityoftheschemesto chart,andforge,thischangingmentalityrelatestotheunprecedentedamount ofdebatetheyhaveprecipitated,inbothprintanddigitalmedia,andat barbecues,dinnertables,pubsandrestaurantsaroundPerthoverthepasttwo decades.Priortoschemesfortheforeshorein1991,urbandesign,through thelensofasingleproject,hadneverbeenthesubjectofsuchprolonged populardebateinPerth.Itisthissustaineddebate,carriedoutinthepublic sphere,thathasbeeninstrumentalinforgingsupportforurbandensification inPerth.

Implications

Thepaperhasexploredeachschemeinrelationtoitsmorphology,ideologyand publicdiscourse,withtheinteractionsbetweenthesecriteriadiscussedthrough thelensoftheparticularproject.Thequestionremains,however,howcanthis triumviratebereconsideredsoastominimizethepolarizingandsometimes paralysingdebatewhichtheprojecthassometimesproduced?Inthisrespect, whilethepublicdiscoursegenerallyappearstoreflectabroadunderstandingof themorphologyoftheproposals,inrelationtothetworecentARMschemesit wouldappearthepublichaslittleunderstandingofthedesignideologyfrom whichtheschemesemerge.Thisbreakdowninunderstandingpartlyreflectsthe heavy‘stagemanagement’of,inparticular,the2011RectangleSchemebythe MRA.Toalargedegreethedesignershavebeenkeptoutofthepubliceyeand assuchdirectcommunicationofthedesignideologybehindtheschemesis absent.IndeedtheMRAwebsitecompletelyomitsanyreferencetowhothe designconsultantsareorindeedwhattheirdesignideologymaybe.Giventhat debateabouturbandesigninPerthisgaininginmaturity,itwouldappear

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timelythatdesignersofkeypublicprojectscancommunicatemoredirectlywith thepublicabouttheideologythatunderpinstheirdesigns.Inturnifthepublic hasabroaderunderstandingofthephilosophybehindascheme,theyareless likelytobeperturbedbyisolatedmorphologicalelementssuchasatalltoweror swan-shapedislandandideallythedebatecanshifttomorefundamental issues.

Atabroaderscaletheresearchalsoraisesthequestionofwhatnextforthe foreshore?The300mstretchofriver’sedgethatisbeingredevelopedaspartof theRectangleSchemerepresentsasmallfractionofthe8kmofriveredgesof PerthWater,edgesthatwillrequiresignificantredesigninthiscenturyofsea levelrise,increasedintensitystormeventsandsignificantpopulationgrowth. Indeedmappingofthe1.1mofsealevelrisepredictedtohaveoccurredby2100 (DepartmentoftheEnvironment 2013)showsLangleyPark,HeirissonIsland andtheSouthPerthforeshoresalmostcompletelyunderwater.Thecombination ofthispredictedsealevelrisewithfloodingfromincreasinglydramaticstorm eventscouldbecatastrophic.Unlessitisabletobebarricaded,themajorityof Perth’sforeshorewillbe‘reclaimed’bytheriver;possiblyrevertingbacktoa pre-settlementlandscapeofrushbedsandsaltmarshes.Indeedwhilethispaper haschartedashiftfromnaturalistictourbaneconceptionsofPerth’sforeshore, someliteraturewouldsuggestthatthe‘softinfrastructure’ofvegetatedislands andwetlandsmaybethebestresponsetosealevelrise(Nordenson,Seavitt,and Yarinsky 2010),andassuchthependulummayintimeswingbackinthis direction.Intuitivelyadegreeofhybridizationofbothurbaneandnatural systemswouldbeappearideal;urbandevelopmentbeingrequiredtohelpmeet stategovernmentdensificationtargets,butalsotogeneratethefundsrequiredto construct‘softinfrastructure’.Speculationaside,themainissueremainsthat Perthstillhasnocoordinatedplanforhowtoreconcilethesevariouscompeting conceptionsofitsforeshore.

ItisinthiscontextthattheconstructionofElizabethQuayishighly significant,butitdoesnotmarkanendpoint.AstheSeinewasheldupasa modelfortheredevelopmentofMelbourne’sYarraRiverinthe1990s(Dovey andSandercock 2002 ),thequestionforPerthbecomeswhatistheappropriate modelforPerthWaterintheearlydecadesofthe21stcentury?Thisquestion, ofcourse,goesbeyondtheissuesofmorphologyorfunction.Ashasbeen described,waterfrontsarethesiteswhereculturestendtoconstructand expresstheiridentity(Oakley 2011).Thereforetheprocessofenvisioningthe urbanroomofPerthWaterwillbeverymuchaboutassertingPerth’sculture, inpartinrelationtoanancientriverinelandscape.Throughananalysisof proposalsforPerth’sforeshorethispaperhasaimedtoprovidethenecessary backgroundfortheadvancingofthismodelforPerthWaterinthe21st century.

Acknowledgements

ThankstoGeoffreyLondon,NigelWestbrookandtwoanonymousreviewersfor providinginsightfulandusefulcommentsonearlierdraftsofthispaper.Thanks alsotoJillPenterforhereverpatientcopyediting;andtoDinisCandeiasand RosemaryHalsmithforassistancewiththeimages.

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Notes

1.InthispaperPerth’sforeshorewillrefertothebroaderlandscapedelineatingPerth’srelationshipto theSwanRiver.ThePerthWaterfrontsiteisasmallerdefinedsitethatiscurrentlyunder development.

2.Ina2008survey,of1300people,67%ofcommentsregardingtheschemewerepositive, 20%negative,andtheresteitherneutralorunrelated(HatchandJerrard 2008,17).

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