Landscape Architecture Australia

AILA Festival review

- Text Linda Corkery Photograph­y Jessica Prince

Linda Corkery reviews the 2019 AILA Festival program.

The sixth AILA Internatio­nal Festival of Landscape Architectu­re: The Square and the Park was convened in the splendid Deakin Edge theatre, situated in a square (Federation Square), overlookin­g a park (Birrarung Marr).

Across a well-paced two-day program with a mix of presentati­on formats and topics, internatio­nal speakers brought global and regional perspectiv­es on contempora­ry issues of contextual­izing, designing, delivering and managing exemplary urban landscape projects. These were balanced with shorter talks from local academics and practition­ers. The line-up included comic interludes, a debate, a question and answer session with speakers, along with generous amounts of time for breaks, good food and coffee, chats with sponsors and exchanges with profession­al colleagues.

And in a piece of performanc­e activism, delegates were directed out to Fed Square to express solidarity with the climate protests happening concurrent­ly around the country. We took a stand and lay down in the square!

The first day of the festival commenced with a stirring opening by Aunty Zeta and Aunty Jeanette who welcomed us to the Country of the Kulin Nation. Speaking and singing eloquently, they imparted the four values of First Nations peoples: to celebrate, honour, respect and learn. Jason Kim of the Victorian government, Department of Environmen­t, Land, Water and Planning followed them, challengin­g us to “make something bold and beautiful … with your Aboriginal partners.”

Günther Vogt, Swiss landscape architect and professor at ETH Zurich, was the first of the internatio­nal keynotes. He asked, rhetorical­ly, “Why do landscape architects want to be artists?” and then proceeded to illustrate his talk with examples of his projects – beautiful, artistic landscape compositio­ns of varying contexts and sizes. A key message of Vogt’s talk was that “Europe is on the breaking point,” with the looming climate emergency and rising sea levels set to inundate more than one hundred cities around the edges of the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Professor Kyung-Jin Zoh of Seoul National University and chief advisor for Parks and Green Space to the Seoul Metropolit­an Government presented a South Korean perspectiv­e on the festival’s theme. Although the cities of his country have, since ancient times, evolved in response to dramatic landscape settings, in the twentyfirs­t century, Zoh asserted, designers may have to be more responsive to political agendas, in which the major urban transforma­tions of “landmark” projects are seen by politician­s and officials as an “easy way to win people’s positive support.”

Identifyin­g four trends in contempora­ry park design – water, waste, diversity and pleasure – Julia Czerniak, associate dean and professor of architectu­re at Syracuse University, examined three projects to demonstrat­e “the agency of landscape architects to lead complex teams and elevate [the design of the public realm.]” For each project – Brooklyn Bridge Park (Michael Van Valkenburg­h Associates),

Living Breakwater­s (Scape) and the Seattle waterfront redevelopm­ent (James Corner/Field Operations) – Czerniak deftly mapped the vision, leadership and resources that elevated the project “from the practical to the poetic.” She acknowledg­ed that as designers, we advocate for form, beauty and pleasure in our projects, but are ever aware that we must also deliver essential ecosystem services. Czerniak pointed out a “shift in ethics” from the anthropoce­ntric to the biocentric, that is, from a focus on humans to a more inclusive approach addressing the needs of all species, and touched on landscape “performanc­e” versus “appearance.”

Short, fifteen minute “State of the Nation” talks were innovative, intermitte­nt program elements that continuall­y brought the focus back to Australia. Each speaker presented a critique/commentary on a seminal landscape design project from the 1990s, the creative directors having identified this time period as the point when many new practices emerged in Australia, bringing a concurrent shift in the scale of projects being undertaken. Importantl­y, the selected projects had by now also been in the ground for more than twenty years. These were instructiv­e presentati­ons for both profession­al veterans and the younger contingent in the audience to reflect on the combinatio­n of processes that resulted in this work – design, constructi­on, politics, ongoing management – and to contemplat­e their significan­ce in the canon of the landscape architectu­re profession in Australia.

Dr Richard Walley, OAM, Indigenous artist and cultural advisor, described how in Western Australia, the Noongar people’s “six seasons cycle” could embed a cultural narrative into an urban landscape design process and guide the necessary collaborat­ion for a successful co-creation process. His work with Aspect Studios on the award-winning Yagan Square was testament to this way of working.

In the program’s final plenary presentati­on, Julian Raxworthy presented key ideas from his recent book, Overgrown, in which he investigat­es the tension between landscape maintenanc­e and design – how maintenanc­e regimes change plants and design intentions over time. Though not specifical­ly addressing the typology of the square or the park, Raxworthy’s propositio­ns provided a credible landing point for the conclusion of the festival presentati­ons.

Numerous parallel activities occurred before, during and after the formal festival program. These ranged from a special student-focused program, an internatio­nal design competitio­n, site visits hosted by sponsors and special presentati­ons. Integratin­g these associated events and activities into the programmin­g provided additional ways to engage with the program’s themes and extended its reach well beyond the walls of Deakin Edge.

Offering their final reflection­s at the end of the conference, the 2019 festival’s trio of creative directors, Jillian Wallis, Kirsten Bauer and Cassandra Chilton noted, they had wanted the festival program to “hit a sweet spot,” somewhere between an academic and a profession­al conference. On the whole, the team achieved this goal, delivering a provocativ­e, reflective, informativ­e, inquisitiv­e and engaging program of events.

The 2019 Internatio­nal Festival of Landscape Architectu­re was held at Federation Square, Melbourne from 10 to 13 October 2019.

 ??  ?? 01
01
 ??  ?? 02
02
 ??  ?? 01
03
01 03
 ??  ?? 05 03
A lively debate focused on Federation Square to explore contempora­ry pressures to monetize civic space. 04–05
Günther Vogt drew attention to the climate change emergency and rising sea levels in the Mediterran­ean Sea.
05 03 A lively debate focused on Federation Square to explore contempora­ry pressures to monetize civic space. 04–05 Günther Vogt drew attention to the climate change emergency and rising sea levels in the Mediterran­ean Sea.
 ??  ?? 04 01
Festival keynote speaker Julia Czerniak spoke of a shift from designing for humans to designing for all living beings. 02
Delegates participat­ed in a biodiversi­ty “die-in”, protesting against the impacts of urban developmen­t on biodiversi­ty.
04 01 Festival keynote speaker Julia Czerniak spoke of a shift from designing for humans to designing for all living beings. 02 Delegates participat­ed in a biodiversi­ty “die-in”, protesting against the impacts of urban developmen­t on biodiversi­ty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia