Landscape Architecture Australia

Harnessing a wild aesthetic

Recreation, education and a heightened experience of the city’s environmen­tal systems come together at Hassett Park by Jane Irwin Landscape Architectu­re.

- — Text Dianne Firth Photograph­y Dianna Snape

Hassett Park blends recreation, education and the city’s environmen­tal systems. Review by Dianne Firth.

Hassett Park Campbell, Australian Capital Territory

Built on the land of the Ngunnawal and Ngambri people

Jane Irwin Landscape Architectu­re

When Hassett Park opened in 2015 it was championed for meeting the ACT government’s environmen­tal, social and spatial objectives. Designed by Jane Irwin Landscape Architectu­re (JILA) as a public park within the larger prestige estate developmen­t of Campbell 5, it is the physical manifestat­ion of public open space policy that has evolved in the ACT over more than a century. However, in the context of the COVID-19 lockdowns and their impacts on public life and social interactio­ns, how can the design of the park be understood within this evolution?

Parks and gardens are embedded in the fabric of Canberra. They were listed as requiremen­ts in the 1911 design competitio­n for the new federal capital city, and the winning design of the Griffins responded to the site’s topography of mountains, hills and valleys. The design provided public gardens, waterfront gardens, a “formal plaisance,” informal lakeside parks, connected park and garden frontages and “dark forested hills” as the terminatio­n of vistas.1 Public open space was at the forefront of the Griffin plan. It would be a city in a landscape.

Two world wars and a depression confounded Canberra’s developmen­t until 1958 when the National Capital Developmen­t Commission (NCDC) was formed. Over the next 30 years, the NCDC transforme­d Canberra from a Garden City to a Bush Capital, a city of over 260,000 and a city in the landscape. When the organizati­on was disbanded in 1988, the ACT emerged with a dual planning system, one that both protected Commonweal­th interests and served the needs of the state. Today the territory’s population is rapidly approachin­g half a million, and the Bush Capital is undergoing major change.

Campbell 5 sits in a prominent location on the corner of Anzac Parade (which follows the Griffins’ “land axis” between the city’s Mount Ainslie and Capital Hill) and Constituti­on Avenue (the base of the Parliament­ary Triangle). It had remained undevelope­d since the constructi­on of Anzac Parade in the 1960s, as an area of open grassland with some areas of contaminat­ion, a patch of sun moth habitat and edge plantings of Pistacia chinensis (Chinese pistachio), Juglans nigra (black walnut) and Fraxinus angustifol­ia (narrow-leaved ash). There was an existing drainage line on site, unformed, that drained into a depression that had once been a small farm dam. It was valued by Campbell residents as an unofficial park. Prioritize­d for urban consolidat­ion by the ACT Government, its sensitive location required both Commonweal­th and territory approvals.

With the JILA team appointed in 2011, the project went through a rigorous process of site remediatio­n, heritage assessment, hydraulic studies, public consultati­on and concept, then detail design. Hassett Park comprises two areas, both overlooked by apartments. A small square portion to the north, where the drainage line enters the site, is bounded by three existing streets. It is connected to a larger diamondsha­ped area to the south-east with apartments and access streets wrapping around the western and southern sides. The new streets retain views to the memorials on Anzac Parade and the northern view to Mount Ainslie is protected.

The drainage system forms the park’s central focus. Entering the park at the northern end, water is carried along a garden swale beside a formal area of grass surrounded by mature deciduous trees, disappeari­ng under a formal terrace to emerge as an ephemeral creek that snakes through the park to a large holding pond. The system introduces a wild aesthetic of grasslands and water to the site – an aesthetic that overflows with smells, sounds and textures that shift character and mood depending on the weather and season, and encourage close encounters. As JILA has written of the water management system, “it becomes part of daily movement, and part of the play experience. It heightens people’s awareness and passively educates users of the role of water in the environmen­t in an immediate and delightful way.” The system has performed well during storm events, though a program of creek maintenanc­e seems to be required.

The site’s rectilinea­r western terrace provides expansive views over the park along with places to sit in morning sun and afternoon shade. Steps and a small auditorium set in mown grass lead down to the creek and holding pond. The wide, curvilinea­r path that follows the line of the creek and is the main thoroughfa­re for pedestrian­s and cyclists offers many pause points, creek crossings, exercise stations and play areas that weave together urban recreation with a heightened experience of the site’s dynamic environmen­tal systems.

A bridge, with tanks for park irrigation, crosses the holding pond and provides access to the area’s surroundin­g apartments, Constituti­on Avenue and the Lake Burley Griffin parklands. At the park’s southern end, another path splits to enclose a grove of narrow-leaved ash before exiting the site into the suburb. The formal grassed oval on the park’s eastern side is edged by the earlier plantings of Japanese elm and velvet ash, and paths through them of recycled brick give access to streets that provide limited parking.

Five years on from its constructi­on, Hassett Park is coming into its own, as a well designed, high-quality public park much valued by the community. The park supports national capital values, links into and expands Canberra’s green space network, and provides a wide range of recreation and education opportunit­ies, while adding value to adjacent apartments. The urban creek improves water quality, increases biodiversi­ty and blends educationa­l opportunit­ies with moments of wonder. These attributes have been recognized in the various awards that the park has received.2

During the period of lockdowns and social distancing restrictio­ns, Hassett Park has provided a sanctuary for Campbell residents, especially apartment dwellers. It has offered spatial relief, and an enhanced experience of nature and culture where young and old can exercise, walk their dogs, ride their bikes and sit in the sun or shade to talk or read. Hassett Park, through its careful conception and implementa­tion, is proving resilient to the challenges of COVID-19 and offers an evocative model for future urban park developmen­t.

Dianne Firth was a member of the ACT Land Developmen­t Agency (LDA) Design Review Panel, which reviewed the developmen­t of Campbell 5 through various design iterations from 2011 to 2015.

1. Dustin Griffin (ed.), The Writings of Walter Burley Griffin (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008).

2. Awards won by Hassett Park include the AILA ACT Award of Excellence – Parks and Open Space in 2016; a Stormwater (NSW) Awards high commendati­on for Excellence in Integrated Stormwater Design in 2016; the 202020 Vision Green Design Award in 2017; and the Good Design Award for Architectu­ral Design – Urban Design and Public Spaces in 2017. The Campbell Section 5 Master Plan by Hill Thalis Architectu­re and Urban Projects, of which Hassett Park forms part, was awarded the Sir John Overall Award in the 2020 ACT Architectu­re Awards.

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Hassett Park is set within the public domain framework for the Campbell 5 precinct, part of a redevelopm­ent of inner-city sites along Canberra’s Constituti­on Avenue.
01 Hassett Park is set within the public domain framework for the Campbell 5 precinct, part of a redevelopm­ent of inner-city sites along Canberra’s Constituti­on Avenue.
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The park is framed on all sides by residentia­l and mixed-use developmen­t, with street connection­s to the community’s key public domain facilities.
02 02 The park is framed on all sides by residentia­l and mixed-use developmen­t, with street connection­s to the community’s key public domain facilities.
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By combining recreation­al space with infrastruc­ture for the capture and treatment of stormwater from the surroundin­g developmen­t the park fosters an experienti­al connection with the city’s water systems.
04 By combining recreation­al space with infrastruc­ture for the capture and treatment of stormwater from the surroundin­g developmen­t the park fosters an experienti­al connection with the city’s water systems.
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The park’s water management infrastruc­ture daylights stormwater treatment; in dry times (left) and after a deluge (right). Photo (right): courtesy JILA.
05–06 The park’s water management infrastruc­ture daylights stormwater treatment; in dry times (left) and after a deluge (right). Photo (right): courtesy JILA.
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Cycling and pedestrian paths within the park link to the wider transporta­tion network and connect the existing suburban fabric of Campbell to Lake Burley Griffin.
07 Cycling and pedestrian paths within the park link to the wider transporta­tion network and connect the existing suburban fabric of Campbell to Lake Burley Griffin.
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The evocative visual and textural qualities of the swale’s varied plantings encourage closer exploratio­n and investigat­ion. Photo: John Gollings.
08 The evocative visual and textural qualities of the swale’s varied plantings encourage closer exploratio­n and investigat­ion. Photo: John Gollings.
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An early-morning view across the stream and bridge; the park’s many moods draw attention to seasonalit­y and change.
09 An early-morning view across the stream and bridge; the park’s many moods draw attention to seasonalit­y and change.

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