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Re-designing the Australian dream : Homeness imaginaries in emerging residential typologies

Dahl, Caroline ; Dahl, Per-Johan LU and Aranda-Mena, Guillermo (2024) 57th International Conference of the Architectural Science Association 2024 p.274-274
Abstract
Housing provisions in the Western world, Australia included, are characterised by several challenges. New residential typologies are needed to cope with, for example, environmental and economic considerations of land use, escalating construction cost, and the lack of affordable housing. Urban form determines measures of density. It also spurs our common imaginaries of urban life. Hence,
to calibrate urban form with new residential typologies, we need to upgrade the prevailing homeness imaginaries. This paper explores new narratives of housing density generated through contemporary transformations of the urban fabric, and draws on cultural implications when increasing density. Proposing Melbourne as object of inquiry, it takes Ian H.... (More)
Housing provisions in the Western world, Australia included, are characterised by several challenges. New residential typologies are needed to cope with, for example, environmental and economic considerations of land use, escalating construction cost, and the lack of affordable housing. Urban form determines measures of density. It also spurs our common imaginaries of urban life. Hence,
to calibrate urban form with new residential typologies, we need to upgrade the prevailing homeness imaginaries. This paper explores new narratives of housing density generated through contemporary transformations of the urban fabric, and draws on cultural implications when increasing density. Proposing Melbourne as object of inquiry, it takes Ian H. Thompson’s scholarship on imaginaries in landscape architecture as a theoretical framework to extrapolate means of upgrading the Australian Dream of homeness. While these planning operations bring together disparate imaginaries – the convention of cosmopolitan urban lifestyle in the inner city versus the family-oriented lifestyle in the wider outer suburbs – they also tell a story about the coexistence of multiple imaginaries in contemporary global cities, such as Melbourne. This paper will discuss findings from studies on Swedish waterfronts and American suburbs to draft a research proposal concerning emerging residential typologies feasible to be applied to Australian cities. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Imaginaries, waterfront liveability, suburban transformation, densification cultures
host publication
Harmony in Architectural Science and Design : Sustaining the Future - Sustaining the Future
editor
Zhang, Fan ; Yu, Rongrong ; Bischeri, Cecilia ; Liu, Tingting and Khoshbakht, Maryam
pages
281 pages
publisher
The Architectural Science Association (ANZAScA)
conference name
57th International Conference of the Architectural Science Association 2024
conference location
Gold Coast, Australia
conference dates
2024-11-26 - 2024-11-29
ISBN
978-1-7637399-0-1
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b52719a4-9873-4599-94f1-4b7c6dc04e1c
date added to LUP
2025-02-27 14:39:26
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:33:26
@inproceedings{b52719a4-9873-4599-94f1-4b7c6dc04e1c,
  abstract     = {{Housing provisions in the Western world, Australia included, are characterised by several challenges. New residential typologies are needed to cope with, for example, environmental and economic considerations of land use, escalating construction cost, and the lack of affordable housing. Urban form determines measures of density. It also spurs our common imaginaries of urban life. Hence,<br/>to calibrate urban form with new residential typologies, we need to upgrade the prevailing homeness imaginaries. This paper explores new narratives of housing density generated through contemporary transformations of the urban fabric, and draws on cultural implications when increasing density. Proposing Melbourne as object of inquiry, it takes Ian H. Thompson’s scholarship on imaginaries in landscape architecture as a theoretical framework to extrapolate means of upgrading the Australian Dream of homeness. While these planning operations bring together disparate imaginaries – the convention of cosmopolitan urban lifestyle in the inner city versus the family-oriented lifestyle in the wider outer suburbs – they also tell a story about the coexistence of multiple imaginaries in contemporary global cities, such as Melbourne. This paper will discuss findings from studies on Swedish waterfronts and American suburbs to draft a research proposal concerning emerging residential typologies feasible to be applied to Australian cities.}},
  author       = {{Dahl, Caroline and Dahl, Per-Johan and Aranda-Mena, Guillermo}},
  booktitle    = {{Harmony in Architectural Science and Design : Sustaining the Future}},
  editor       = {{Zhang, Fan and Yu, Rongrong and Bischeri, Cecilia and Liu, Tingting and Khoshbakht, Maryam}},
  isbn         = {{978-1-7637399-0-1}},
  keywords     = {{Imaginaries; waterfront liveability; suburban transformation; densification cultures}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{274--274}},
  publisher    = {{The Architectural Science Association (ANZAScA)}},
  title        = {{Re-designing the Australian dream : Homeness imaginaries in emerging residential typologies}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}