A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Wilful ignorance at Waterloo: public housing quality and political stigma in Sydney's largest estate renewal
Sydney's Waterloo estate is one of Australia's largest and most concentrated areas of public housing. There has been an almost two-decade-long effort to renew the estate, with successive governments persistently making the case that the demolition and mixed-tenure redevelopment must happen. In the process, the quality of the housing on the estate has been denigrated and misrepresented. This paper combines a detailed examination of the architectural qualities of the Waterloo estate with a critical analysis of historical and contemporary policy settings and political decisions driving the redevelopment project. It identifies the phases of development at Waterloo since the first buildings were constructed in 1948, describing the key characteristics of the dwellings that were part of each phase and situating them within in the wider story of public housing in NSW. It then evaluates the qualities identified in the buildings on the estate against the government's own guidelines for new apartment development. This evaluation reveals the extent to which the state government has avoided a good-faith assessment of the architectural quality of the estate. The paper concludes by reviewing planning and policy objectives and highlighting that tenant interests and housing quality have been obscured through the stigmatzation of the estate.
Wilful ignorance at Waterloo: public housing quality and political stigma in Sydney's largest estate renewal
Sydney's Waterloo estate is one of Australia's largest and most concentrated areas of public housing. There has been an almost two-decade-long effort to renew the estate, with successive governments persistently making the case that the demolition and mixed-tenure redevelopment must happen. In the process, the quality of the housing on the estate has been denigrated and misrepresented. This paper combines a detailed examination of the architectural qualities of the Waterloo estate with a critical analysis of historical and contemporary policy settings and political decisions driving the redevelopment project. It identifies the phases of development at Waterloo since the first buildings were constructed in 1948, describing the key characteristics of the dwellings that were part of each phase and situating them within in the wider story of public housing in NSW. It then evaluates the qualities identified in the buildings on the estate against the government's own guidelines for new apartment development. This evaluation reveals the extent to which the state government has avoided a good-faith assessment of the architectural quality of the estate. The paper concludes by reviewing planning and policy objectives and highlighting that tenant interests and housing quality have been obscured through the stigmatzation of the estate.
Wilful ignorance at Waterloo: public housing quality and political stigma in Sydney's largest estate renewal
Zanardo, Michael (author) / Sisson, Alistair (author) / Logan, Cameron (author) / McLaughlan, Rebecca (author)
Planning Perspectives ; 39 ; 1207-1239
2024-11-01
33 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
URBAN RENEWAL AND THE CREATIVE UNDERCLASS: ABORIGINAL YOUTH SUBCULTURES IN SYDNEY'S REDFERN‐WATERLOO
Online Contents | 2012
|Rock `n' rail Tunnels for Sydney's largest-ever public infrastructure project
British Library Online Contents | 2003
Tunnelling - Rock 'n' rall - Tunnels for Sydney's largest-ever public infrastructure project
Online Contents | 2003
Public-sector housing: rethinking policies and approaches to estate renewal
British Library Online Contents | 2012
|