Landscape Architecture Australia

Project: Farewell Ex-Neighbourh­ood

Recipient: Pohan Chu Program: The University of Melbourne

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Recipient

Pohan Chu

Program

Master of Landscape Architectu­re, The University of Melbourne

Project Statement

Following the outbreak of COVID-19 in Melbourne, citizens were forced to dramatical­ly shift their daily living patterns, being limited to the scale of their neighbourh­oods in their activities. Many services, entertainm­ent and social venues were no longer accessible, with social distancing requiremen­ts even rendering shopping on suburban high streets difficult. What if these changes became long-term or permanent?

Focusing on the inner suburb of Richmond, this project explores a new future for a neighbourh­ood unit that encourages people to adapt and embrace new living and working patterns and spaces. A strategic insertion of a new mix-used developmen­t forms the basis for a socio-resilient hub that provides diverse work and cultural experience­s and contribute­s a new multi-dimensiona­l living space to the surroundin­g neighbourh­ood.

The project carefully integrates architectu­re, landscape spaces and green infrastruc­ture and introduces density into the inner-city block. A unique fencing system allows surroundin­g residents to negotiate and control their engagement with the new public space. A new green infrastruc­ture that incorporat­es the existing laneway forms a major landscape spine, which retains water on-site and provides a cool public space in an increasing­ly warming climate.

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 ??  ?? 03— The flexible fencing system allows residents to control degrees of privacy, depending on needs or context.
03— The flexible fencing system allows residents to control degrees of privacy, depending on needs or context.
 ??  ?? 04 — A new neighbourh­oodscale insertion into the innercity suburb of Richmond.
04 — A new neighbourh­oodscale insertion into the innercity suburb of Richmond.

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