Journal article

Density without intensity and what to do about it: reassembling public/private interfaces in Melbourne's Southbank hinterland

K Dovey, F Symons

Australian Planner | Published : 2014

Abstract

Melbourne's Southbank hinterland has developed over the past 20 years from an exclusively industrial area to become one of the densest residential neighbourhoods in Australia containing some of the tallest residential towers in the globe. It is a mixed-use precinct within easy walking distance of a revitalised riverfront, central city and arts centre, yet the streets are relatively lifeless, lined with the black holes and blank walls of car-based urban design. This paper is an exploration of this urbanism of 'density without intensity' and what might be done about it. The relation of density to urban street-life intensity is mediated by the urban design of the public/private interface. Inter..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council Discovery


Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This paper emerges from a Research Project and Thesis by Felicity Symons as part of the Master of Urban Design programat the University of Melbourne, further supported by the award of a summer internship from the Melbourne School of Design. It extends work undertaken by Kim Dovey and Stephen Wood as part of Australian Research Council Discovery project DP0987867 'Planning the Creative City'. We thank Elek Pafka for an incisive critique of an earlier version.