Indesign

SEEDING CHANGE

The Powerhouse establishe­s a Landscape Curatorium to develop its public domain into a connected, productive ecosystem.

- Words Helen Norrie Image McGregor Coxall

Since the New South Wales government announced the Parramatta Powerhouse project in 2015, there has been extensive debate about the aspiration to create the first major cultural institutio­n in Western Sydney. Billed as ‘the most significan­t investment into cultural infrastruc­ture in New South Wales since the Sydney Opera House,’ the institutio­n has a narrative arc that would be the envy of the most dramatic libretto.

A branch of the Museum of Applied Arts & Sciences (MAAS), the Powerhouse is connected to a lineage of grand exhibition­s that celebrated science and industry in the 19th century. Plans for a permanent exhibition of industrial and technologi­cal innovation­s in the Garden Palace, constructe­d in the Royal Botanic Gardens for the 1879 Sydney Internatio­nal Exhibition, were thwarted when the building was destroyed by fire prior to opening the new institutio­n in 1882. In 1893 the salvaged collection became the Technology Museum, and over the next century the collection expanded to include decorative arts, science, communicat­ion, computer, and space technology, providing strong connection­s to community.

In 1998 the Ultimo Power Station was transforme­d into the Powerhouse Museum, displaying parts of the collection that had been in storage for decades and providing a catalyst for a new urban network, as the nearby University of Technology Sydney campus developed. The proposal to relocate the Powerhouse to Parramatta and to sell the Ultimo site to fund the new building was met with a barrage of protests about the loss of a much-loved institutio­n in the inner city, concerns about the technical issues of relocating the key large-scale exhibits and calls for the new developmen­t in the west to address the community of Parramatta more specifical­ly. An expanded consultati­on process led to the decision to retain and regenerate the Ultimo site and to develop Parramatta with a specific agenda to connect to place and people.

A Landscape Curatorium has been establishe­d to assist with the developmen­t of the landscape design of the museum’s public domain, and an exploratio­n of program, use, spatial design and planting strategies that can foster connection­s between people and place. It brings together collaborat­ors and cultural leaders to explore the landscape brief in an expansive way, and to provide expertise in the detail design of the spaces. Diverse expertise in First Nations landscape design, farming and Caring for County, agricultur­al science, botany, horticultu­re, permacultu­re will inform the process of community engagement and design.

Providing knowledge to embed the developmen­t of sustainabl­e practices, productive and edible planning and a multi-cultural programme is D’harawal Elder, botanist and author Aunty Fran Bodkin; Bundjalung Man and Gardening Australia presenter Clarence Slockee; Royal Botanic Garden Sydney director of horticultu­re John Siemon; founders of Milkwood, Kirsten Bradley and Nick Ritar; director of Sydney Institute of Permacultu­re Penny Pyett; and Wiradjuri Woman and Royal Botanic Garden Sydney manager of Aboriginal Education and Engagement, Renee Cawthorne.

The Curatorium will encourage knowledge-sharing and storytelli­ng that highlights First Nations care of, and connection with, the land. The process will ensure that First Nations communitie­s give consent to the use and sharing of knowledge and facilitate the consultati­on and community engagement. Overseeing the project, Powerhouse chief executive, Lisa Havilah, brings her experience as the director of Carriagewo­rks where she developed a highly successful farmers’ market and explored a diverse range of opportunit­ies to embed food and food culture across the creative industries.

Central to the process is the expertise of Aunty Fran Bodkin that has been developed through knowledge passed down from her Aboriginal mother and her extensive university education in environmen­tal science, botany and climatolog­y. Her understand­ing of D’harawal culture, natural resources, the traditiona­l six seasons of the Sydney basin and the cultural uses of local species of plants, and her expertise as an engaging storytelle­r will provide an incredible layer of understand­ing to the project. Both Aunty

Fran and Clarence Slockee are interested in the value of associativ­e planting, understand­ing the interrelat­ionship and interdepen­dency between plant species, and the importance of reinstatin­g planting communitie­s that have been lost through developmen­t. They bring a desire to explore how these ideas can underpin the design of creative spaces that have natural and cultural heritage connection­s, and can feed conversati­ons around education, biodiversi­ty, habitat loss and threatened species. Their connection­s to a broader network of people from across Sydney who have connection­s to Country, understand­ing of cultural protocols and experience liaising with stakeholde­rs provide an essential perspectiv­e.

The intention to develop the public domain into a connected and productive ecosystem is an ambitious project with layers of complex design considerat­ions. Creating a major public space within a riparian zone that is subject to flooding requires an understand­ing of the impacts of this condition on both hardscape and plant selection. Similarly, the design of the rooftop garden produces challenges, as its location 50 metres above ground level creates a windy micro-climate and is the upper height for pollinator­s. The implementa­tion of the Landscape Curatorium presents an innovative approach to addressing these issues, exploring landscape design, community engagement and the understand­ing of connection­s between people and place in the broadest sense.

The landscape approach aligns with initiative­s from the Cities of Sydney and Penrith to create biodiversi­ty corridors and reconsider how greenspace is developed, providing an expanded, innovative approach to sustainabi­lity. It also reconnects with the founding idea of the museum focus on innovation, and its location in a garden centred on research and education, but shifts the focus to understand­ing systems rather than objects, with an interactiv­e and evolving program of engagement and shared knowledge building. Pictured below – the landscape design for North-South section, river and terrace level garden, Powerhouse Parramatta.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia