An Australian post for Australia Day – Decentralising Australia

January 26, 2010

Looking at the Sydney Morning Herald on this Australia Day, I came across an article to my liking. Sure, I didn’t mind reading some of the gushing spiels and navel-gazing diatribes on the great Southern Land on this most special of special days for Australians. But, I was glad to see some people addressing an issue that has seemingly been given little attention despite the relative surge in Australia’s population over the past 10 years mainly due immigration and to a lesser, yet significant extent, natural increase.

That issue is decentralisation and the article is based on rational, logical, intelligent and thoughtful analysis by experts in the fields of demography and geography, Bernard Salt and Graeme Hugo. Demographer Bernard Salt makes the claim that Australia should consider building a planned city(/ies) to take in the growth that is expected to continue in Australia, and looks towards the relatively under-populated Kimberley and Pilbara regions of Western Australia as an areas with sufficient rainfall and agriculture to be able to accommodate greater numbers of residents in the future.

Salt states that improvements in renewable energy resources and other technologies along with changes in the current usages of cars and an increase of individuals working from home would help make decentralisation a more viable option than is perhaps considered today, given its relative inattention. Salt also makes the claim that Australia cannot just turn off the tap of immigration as with our aging population and greater numbers of individuals preparing to leave the workforce than enter the workforce, immigration is needed to keep the economy and society growing at a steady pace.

Coupled with this is the moral obligation on Australia’s part to be open to immigration seeing as the world population will grow from over 6 billion currently to over 9 billion by 2050 and with the problems this influx will create to already impoverished regions of the world, it would be imperative that the huge landmass of Australia takes its fair share of migrants.

Likewise, Professor of Geography Graeme Hugo cites Australia’s aging society stating that 40% of the workforce will be lost over the next 15 to 20 years, so it will be a matter of finding people to replace the jobs being vacated.   Hugo states how jobs are less determined on a particular location adding that ”we have to look at the technological and environmental situation now.”  Hugo furthers that, ”whether it’s a totally new city or development in places less affected by climate change, such as Tasmania or the northern parts of Australia, all those options have to be on the table.”

Decentralisation. It makes sense on so many levels, yet until now it has been seemingly a forgotten concept in Australia ever since the Whitlam era with the scrapped proposals of new towns in the New South Wales and Victoria interior.  Major centres of Australia, in particular Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane are choking on their own success. Each year the cities swell in size and numbers as migrants – both international, inter- and intra-state – flock to these hubs of politics, business, culture, industry, education and life. The end result is an ever-growing urban sprawl, half-hearted (and loathed by many) urban consolidation and a major strain on already overstretched basic amenities and infrastructure – in particular, transport networks, roads, water supplies, schools and hospitals.

Decentralisation and planned cities are concepts Australia has tackled before and with – dare I say it – much success. After all, Melbourne and Adelaide were surveyed and established as planned towns by Hoddle and Light respectively in 1837 . And, most importantly of all, our national capital – Canberra – is the quintessential planned, decentralised city being born for the sole purpose of being the national capital, whilst at the same time being in between but not in Sydney and/or Melbourne! Walter Burley Griffin, architect of Canberra (along with his wife, Marion) also went on to design the New South Wales Riverina cities of Griffith and Leeton.

Walter Burley Griffins final plan for Canberra

Walter Burley Griffin's final plan for Canberra (1913)

As we can see, decentralisation and planned cities have been tackled in the past in Australia and with great success. So, why when Australia is experiencing substantial and sustained population growth, ever increasing stresses and strains on its existing major centres, a relative decline in quality of  life in these major centres due to the stress of extra numbers put on the urban and surrounding physical environment, its infrastructure and amenities has the powers that be not adequately looked at decentralisation as a solution or at least an alternative to sustained population growth both now and in years to come in Australia? Why, indeed.

One good thing about urban development in South Korea, despite its relative lack of respect for the physical and natural environment – something that is starting to gain more attention but as of yet not nearly enough, is the ability to think outside the box and look to  forward when deciding where, when and how to develop new centres rather than add on already largely crippled urban environments. South Korea has the disadvantage of a population of 50 million cramped in a bottom of an already small peninsula of which 70% of mountainous and a large proportion of the rest is needed – or at least used – for agriculture. The end result is extreme land availability issues. But, with challenges often comes creative solutions, and this has been the case to some degree with Korean urban planning with the development – both completed, under developed and planned – of new towns.

Changwon, nearby the cities of Jinhae and Masan and not far from the port and second largest city of Busan, is a planned city of 500,000 residents (soon to be significantly bigger with the proposed merger with Jinhae and Masan) near the southern coast of the Korean peninsula. The city was established in 1974 as industrial and residential centre to stimulate growth in the region and take pressure off nearby overloaded cities such as Busan and Masan.

Likewise, Songdo International City is a planned city under construction within the metropolitan city of Incheon and the Incheon Free Economic Zone. Here a forward-thinking, ambitious and modern city is being built on reclaimed land a new, long, grand bridge across from Incheon International Airport, South Korea’s premier international gateway. The city is being built to capitalise on its convenient location – both within the Korean peninsula and East Asia as a whole, to entice foreign direct investment and job growth, and rejuvenise the industrial, port city of Incheon nearby the national capital of Seoul. Currently, residents and businesses are starting to move into the half-completed mini-city and by 2020 the city should be fully up and running, and it will be fascinating to see just how well this city develops off the planning board, and just whether it can be the successful model for the world’s future city it plans to be.

Songdo so far

Songdo International City's Asia Trade Tower and Convensia exhibition centre on a gloomy winter day

Meanwhile, Korean lawmakers are currently negotiating the size and scope of the next major new planned city in South Korea, Sejong City. Located in what is now South Chungcheong province not far from the city of Daejeon, the city was originally planned as an administrative capital to take the strain off Seoul. However, this has since been scraped and instead the city is planned to be developed as a science and technology hub.

My belief is that Australia needs to be more like South Korea when it comes to urban development and think outside the box when planning where, how and when to develop a new centre. Whilst, Australia may not be as geographically challenged as South Korea when it comes to space and while Australian cities may not be as choked and congested as their South Korean counterparts. Surely it would make sense for the Federal and State Governments to ‘look forward to the past’ and reconsider developing new towns in areas of sufficient rainfall and resources away from already established and relatively crowded areas whilst taking into account the natural environment making sure there is as little detrimental impact as possible.

I recommend the region south of Longford, Tasmania nearby the town of Perth and the second largest city of Launceston (info & aerial satellite, zoom out to see more thorough view of the region), areas to the east and north of Kununurra in Western Australia nearby the Northern Territory (info & aerial satellite) and Katherine area of Northern Territory (info & aerial satellite) as three sites which could be considered as possible new town development regions.


Suncheon’s Old Core :: 순천의 정신 :: 順天의 精神

April 15, 2009

With Spring having sprung and the weather becoming more palatable, barring the Yellow Dust, I’ve spent more time going on and about taking photos of some of the scenery nearby my apartment in ‘old’ downtown Suncheon. My apartment is located in and around the traditional settlement of Suncheon, right by the old city walls – which have now completely disappeared beside some markers here and there – and as such has hundreds of interesting nooks and crannies which thankfully haven’t all been destroyed just yet despite the local council’s (my employer’s) best efforts!

Being Spring I also took the opportunity to take pictures of the blooming flowers, in particular the Cherry Blossom (or 벚꽃, さくら、桜), one of the few pleasant legacies of Japan’s colonisation of the Korean peninsula.

As you’ll see from these photographs below the area is full of life, character and history. Unfortunately, this very character is being torn up bit by bit to make way for wide, modern roads and generic apartment complexes. Even more depressing is that seemingly no one begrudges this march towards modernity and destruction of the past. Granted the ancient schools and Confucian academies will remain but little of the soul and character surrounding these sites will remain as rustic street after rustic street is torn up to make way for progress. Unfortunately, to many locals’ eyes, rustic shacks and old alleyways are merely eyesores and painful reminders of when Korea wasn’t as prosperous as it is today. It’s very understandable really. But,  I just hope that at least some of it will remain so that future generations can fully appreciate where they came from and how their forefathers’ lived.

The whole collection is located at: Suncheon’s Old Core (Part I and Part II).

Enjoy!

Suncheon Jeojeon-dong Catholic Cathedral

Suncheon Jeojeon-dong Catholic Cathedral, the oldest cathedral in town

Suncheon Jeojeon-dong Catholic Cathedral, the oldest cathedral in town

Cherry Blossom tree on the cathedral grounds

Cherry Blossom trees on the cathedral grounds

Okcheon seowon Confucian school (옥천서원 |玉川書院)

500 year old tree nearby Okcheon Seowon Confucian school

500 year old tree nearby Okcheon Seowon Confucian school

Entrance to Okcheon seowon - former Confucian school

Entrance to Okcheon seowon - former Confucian school

Flowers by the river

Suncheon’s soul

Plaque and pavilion inside memorial site

Plaque and pavilion inside memorial site

Pavilion containing beautiful calligraphy and paintings

Pavilion containing beautiful calligraphy and paintings

Old alleyway full of character, unfortunately will most likely be lost in the next few years to make way for a road and/or apartment complex

Old alleyway full of character, unfortunately will most likely be lost in the next few years to make way for a road and/or apartment complex

Main gate to Suncheon Hyang-gyo, former Buddhist school

Main gate to Suncheon Hyang-gyo, former Buddhist school


Rough n’ ready Sin City livin’ up to its reputation

March 22, 2009

It seems Sydney – dismayed at being somewhat overshadowed during the past decade with the Melbourne Gangland warfare and subsequent Underbelly series is going out of its way to restore its rightful position as Australian Crime Central No.1. (The country as a whole has a crime rate comparable with that of other Western nations such as the US and UK).  Granted that there’s still some stiff opposition from increasingly violent major cities: Melbourne, Darwin and Perth (probably the most violent major city per capita), but I believe Sydney still is the place for crime in Australia – three major riots in the space of 20 months surely can’t hurt the claim! ;) Plus, would you expect anything else from a city specifically set up to house criminals…

Today’s a perfect example of why no Australian city does crime like Sydney. In the last 24 hours we have coverage on the deadly bikie brawl at Sydney airport’s domestic terminal which resulted in one fatality and whole lot of bad PR, and overnight we have accounts of a possibly related shooting spree in the mid-western suburb of Auburn.

My mother grew up and I spent half my childhood summers in working-class Auburn as it was the home of my grandparents. My grandfather, Poppy, would be spinning in his grave right now. Auburn was always rough but in the last 15 years these kinds of accounts have become commonplace and barely raise an eyebrow anymore.

Sydney has seemingly become an increasingly insular, segregated and hostile city in the last 15 years, particularly after the 2000 Olympics and the resulting economic and social hangover that the city hasn’t seemed to have fully got over. There’s been term after term of bumbling, arrogant, incompetent, self-serving politicians, and an overall lack of leadership, focus, integration and intelligent infrastructure spending which has manifested into itself into an angrier, more marginalised and divided metropolis.

But, then again this is the city that has spawned the likes of Lenny McPherson, Abe Saffron and Neddy Smith. So, should I really be surprised that Sydney still is rough? It’s always been rough, this is the city on which Mark Twain allegedly once remarked:

“It is beautiful, of course it’s beautiful – the harbour; but that isn’t all of it, it’s only half of it; Sydney’s the other half, and it takes both of them to ring the supremacy-bell. God made the harbour and that’s all right; but Satan made Sydney.”

Maybe, we Sydneysiders have just become soft in the past few decades, need a cold, hard dose of reality and – as Chopper says – harden the fuck up!

Ah, Sydney … it may not feel as nice as it once was – or was imagined to be, but it still is home and I’ll most likely move back there before too long, drive-by shootings and all …


Yet another plan for metro rail systems & urban consolidation in Sydney

January 8, 2009

The papers back home are all of a flutter as news of another renewed bid to get a European-style metro line or lines up and running in Sydney has been been published. The city is increasingly choking on crowded roads and crippling, dilapidated public transport networks which is getting to the point that other cities both nationally and in the Asia-Pacific region are leaping ahead as multinational companies would rather base themselves elsewhere than in the quagmired, tangled city.

Parramatta Road, otherwise known more aptly as Parramatta Car Park

Parramatta Road, otherwise known more aptly as Parramatta Car Park, on a reasonably quiet day

Despite a three-fold increase  in population in the last century, Sydney has barely expanded its aging rail network and as the city – bounded by mountains on three sides and the ocean on the other – is running out of space to expand and as petrol prices rise and air quality deteriorates – the car is finally being questioned as the best method of getting people around. Thank Christ, surely all this was apparently at least 10 – 15 years ago! And, thank goodness people are finally realising that humongous McMansions in the back of Woop Woop are not the best enviornmentally sustainable option.

All this sounds good, you would think. But, not every one is happy as you can see in this article focusing on Leichhardt, which would be transformed if the planned metro line from the city to Parramatta ends up being built going through there; and this article, where residents in Ku-ring-gai – where I was born and raised – would see more sustainable, medium-density developments built along the rail line. Shock horror, will someone please think of the children!

Photo of Roseville, on the north shore in Ku-ring-gai on the left, and what it may look like if strategic urban consolidation occurs along its rail corridor

Photo of Roseville, on the north shore in Ku-ring-gai on the left, and what it may look like if strategic urban consolidation occurs along its rail corridor

Rant: You’d think people would be able to rationalise that if you live five kilometres west – in the case of Leichhardt and 12 to 20 kilometres north – in the case of Ku-ring-gai – of the centre of a metropolis of over four million people, you may have to share your suburb with – shock, horror – other people!

The NSW State Government is to wrest a wider scope of control in planning the proposed Metro West rail link and is hoping to be the recipients of $8.1 billion from the Commonwealth Government’s Infrastructure Australia fund in order to do so.  This along with other urban consolidation initiatives are no doubt going to piss off many local councils, residents and NIMBY groups!

And, people wonder why I never followed through with being an urban planner and instead find myself teaching English in a foreign land. There’s nothing more frustrating that seeing things that will benefit many being withdrawn as they will slightly inconvenience a vocal some. Though, I think the chances of this latest proposal getting off the ground is slim, which is a shame as Sydney was once a great city.

Pity is that unless things change and decisions are made and followed through, we’ll be looking at Sydney in forty years and wondering just what went wrong, it used to be a great place that run somewhat efficiently. Meanwhile, South East Asian and East Asian cities of comparable populations – not to mention Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth – will leave it in its dust and Sydney will become the Montevideo of the Asia-Pacific region.