Conference Proceedings

(Not) Royal Park: Recovering the Enduring Importance of a Kulin Nations Gathering Place for Culture, Health, Wellbeing and Healing.

Janet McGaw, Alasdair Vance, Aunty Margaret Gardiner, Uncle Gary Murray, Aunty Esther Kirby, Sue-Anne Hunter, Moira Rayner, Selena White, Sharon Mongta

What if? What next? Speculations on History’s Futures. Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand | Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand | Published : 2021

Abstract

Royal Park, Parkville, an area of windswept and open parkland just north of central Melbourne, has a long and complex history that has been well documented in historical studies and cultural heritage reports. Set aside early in the colony after La Trobe and his council petitioned for an area of 2560 acres to be reserved for “public advantage and recreation” and named in honour of the distant English monarch, it was quickly whittled down to 700 acres after gold was discovered. Land was needed for housing, experimental agriculture, a zoo, psychiatric asylum and hospitals in the rapidly expanding colony and this empty patch of land in close proximity to the town centre seemed suitable for ready..

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