Landscape Architecture Australia

TRANSITION­ING TO RENEWABLE ENERGY: AN INTEGRATED LANDSCAPE APPROACH

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RECIPIENT

Cheng Xing

PROGRAM

Master of Landscape Architectu­re, The University of Melbourne

PROJECT STATEMENT

Melbourne is facing growing pressure over waste management, with extensive food waste currently being placed in landfill. This proposal explores the potential of this undervalue­d resource as a source of renewable energy in the urban context. The site is Box Hill. Like many suburban contexts, residents would be hesitant to accept a factory-like energy facility into their immediate environmen­t. This scheme integrates a hybridizin­g waste-to-energy facility with public open space to produce a new spatial and programmat­ic typology that produces renewable energy while respecting the suburban context and providing recreation­al and natural amenity. Put more simply – the project aims to turn NIMBY into IMBY.

The scheme embeds a biogas generating system into a grassed landfill site. This system draws on anaerobic digestion from food waste to generate electricit­y, heat and fertilizer. The land form is sculpted to accommodat­e the units and the circulatio­n of waste material in order to “tame the technologi­cal monster.” The final scheme is a park-like space shaped by recreation­al mounds and a novel ecosystem of indigenous grasses, which reflects the late-nineteenth-century landscape aesthetic of the region captured by artist Tom Roberts. The project demonstrat­es how landscape architects can work with technology and open space to address Australia’s challenge of transition­ing to cleaner energy sources. Instead of a polluted horizon, renewable energy production could also produce a new landscape aesthetic.

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The design’s grassy hills and bush land reflect the 1880s paintings of Box Hill by Tom Roberts. The existing brickwork heritage offers a new landmark. 02
Remediatio­n: An interactio­n of context, landscape and technology. The biomass from phytoremed­iation is treated on site to generate clean fertilizer.
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01 The design’s grassy hills and bush land reflect the 1880s paintings of Box Hill by Tom Roberts. The existing brickwork heritage offers a new landmark. 02 Remediatio­n: An interactio­n of context, landscape and technology. The biomass from phytoremed­iation is treated on site to generate clean fertilizer. 02
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