City living: Karen Ward at VAC gallery
BENDIGO’S residential Strategy will be reviewed because of greater than expected growth.
The State Government has announced a grant of $50,000 to carry out the review.
The review is needed because, according to the State Government, 40 per cent of the forecast growth between 2006 and 2031 had already been realised.
Regional Development Parliamentary Secretary Damian Drum made the announcement this morning.
Mr Drum said the Bendigo Residential Strategy Review would deliver greater community and investor certainty, helping the region grow.
“The Bendigo Residential Development Strategy was adopted in 2004 and is currently being audited because of the faster than anticipated growth that has occurred in Bendigo in recent years,” he said.
“Strong residential growth has many flow-on economic benefits and having a clear framework for future development will position Greater Bendigo City Council to undertake more detailed, place-based planning in the future.”
Deputy Premier Peter Ryan said about 40 per cent of the forecast growth between 2006 and 2031 had already been realised.
The Residential Strategy impacts directly on where and how property developments use “infill” parcels of land, range of housing styles and also on housing affordability.
“This project will review the strategy, assess current and estimated land supply and demand and consider various legislative and policy changes,” Mr Ryan said,
“It will also consider the latest demographic data and establish a new strategic framework to guide the long-term residential growth of Greater Bendigo.
“The project will result in a revised residential strategy that will give developers, the community and service providers greater surety and confidence about where land can be developed for residential purposes, and that sufficient land is available to accommodate the City of Greater Bendigo’s future growth.”
Mr Ryan said a contemporary strategic planning framework was essential to the economic development of a large regional centre like Bendigo.
“Clearly identifying future growth options and supporting infrastructure needs will enable the Greater Bendigo City Council and other infrastructure providers to plan their capital works programs well in advance,” he said.
“Identifying long-term growth areas will enable the council and other service authorities to start planning for the delivery of services, thereby minimising the lag time between when residential development occurs and when the services need to be in place.”
Anthony Radford | Bendigo Weekly | 10-Aug-2011 2pm
«
Situation, by Karen Ward
»
Karen Ward's show at the La Trobe University Visual Arts Centre includes a painting with a title that quotes Charles Baudelaire: "the city changes faster than the human heart".
This beautiful but disturbing idea tells us something about the power of art, and its goal, to hold a moment, to capture the fleeting of human existence and focus, stilling the transitory and perhaps, then, enabling our understanding.
Ward says she is interested in the way living in high-rise apartments, which she compares to "human aviaries", may change the way we not only live but also think. She refers to the city as a kind of "living creature" like a brain, and, like a brain, it offers unpredictable pathways. As a pulse moves through a brain, and builds connections, so a walker can move through a city, crossing gaps and linking with new parts of the city, new people, new meanings.
These ideas, both challenging and optimistic, result in a collection of works that are both elegant and brooding. Geometric like buildings, they are grids of glossy colour, maze-like, slightly jail-like, creating barriers.
Another work has a Thoreau quote as its title: "it's not what you look at that matters, it's what you see". Thus, you have to let your brain free when you look at one of these works, with their blocks of colour, and grids of wood laid over a wilder background, sometimes dark and sometimes diaphanously white.
Although the artist's statement talks about the rapid growth of Melbourne, the big four-panel work in this show, "The forest is never far away" seems a very Bendigo painting, reminding us of how close the bush is to this neat, fast-growing little city.
Even though there is something solid about the works, because several are more like wall-hung sculptures than paintings, the key to each of them is the movement Ward infuses in the composition. Your vision is never able to rest, bouncing off glossy surfaces along lines and around angles: an analogy of what it is like to look out a window in a dense urban space.
This is a show of ideas, and Ward makes many references to writers such as Italo Calvino. And yet, at the same time, it is an exhibition about the very basics of painting/sculpture: colour and line in space, and our emotional response to form.
These are neat, almost crisp works, strong and tactile. Whether you find them calling you in, or sending you out, will depend, maybe, on your reaction to city living.
Karen Ward, Synapse, at the La Trobe University VAC Gallery, View Street, until September 4.
BENDIGO’S residential Strategy will be reviewed because of greater than expected growth.
The State Government has announced a grant of $50,000 to carry out the review.
The review is needed because, according to the State Government, 40 per cent of the forecast growth between 2006 and 2031 had already been realised.
Regional Development Parliamentary Secretary Damian Drum made the announcement this morning.
Mr Drum said the Bendigo Residential Strategy Review would deliver greater community and investor certainty, helping the region grow.
“The Bendigo Residential Development Strategy was adopted in 2004 and is currently being audited because of the faster than anticipated growth that has occurred in Bendigo in recent years,” he said.
“Strong residential growth has many flow-on economic benefits and having a clear framework for future development will position Greater Bendigo City Council to undertake more detailed, place-based planning in the future.”
Deputy Premier Peter Ryan said about 40 per cent of the forecast growth between 2006 and 2031 had already been realised.
The Residential Strategy impacts directly on where and how property developments use “infill” parcels of land, range of housing styles and also on housing affordability.
“This project will review the strategy, assess current and estimated land supply and demand and consider various legislative and policy changes,” Mr Ryan said,
“It will also consider the latest demographic data and establish a new strategic framework to guide the long-term residential growth of Greater Bendigo.
“The project will result in a revised residential strategy that will give developers, the community and service providers greater surety and confidence about where land can be developed for residential purposes, and that sufficient land is available to accommodate the City of Greater Bendigo’s future growth.”
Mr Ryan said a contemporary strategic planning framework was essential to the economic development of a large regional centre like Bendigo.
“Clearly identifying future growth options and supporting infrastructure needs will enable the Greater Bendigo City Council and other infrastructure providers to plan their capital works programs well in advance,” he said.
“Identifying long-term growth areas will enable the council and other service authorities to start planning for the delivery of services, thereby minimising the lag time between when residential development occurs and when the services need to be in place.”