01_ Title
Defining the future of the Bellarine Peninsula
02_Sub title
A new urbanity, breaking away from unsustainable patterns of previous
sprawling forms
03_ Research Question
- What are the 21st century suburban living forms of Geelong and the
Bellarine Peninsula, with its own set of defining cultural and
landscape values?
- How can I conceptualise the spatial order of suburban
development on the Bellarine Peninsula, which embodies existing
lifestyle qualities and is
sensitive to the existing town’s characters?
- What can I learn from new developments that can help make inner
city/town living, on the Bellarine Peninsula more desirable?
- What can be done to refocus new development from the rural
edge back to Geelong’s neglected centre?
04_What
My proposal is to create a strategy that will enhance the current lifestyle
standards on the Bellarine Peninsula, but also to create a basis of urban
living types that could be used to suggest how other areas around the
country, that share similar urban development pressures, could form.
I wish to generate a deep understanding of the current and future
role that Geelong and the Bellarine Peninsula together have in relation
to a large population increase expected to occur in the next 20 years.
I suggest a redirection of planning towards New Urbanism, where a
range of housing types are part of a compact and site responsive
development, which aim to produce walkable and mixed use communities
and neighbourhoods -this in return helps to reduce the travel times
and demand on the automobile, taking on an approach to sustainable growth.
05_Why
“We live today…in cities and suburbs whose form and character
we did not choose. They were imposed upon us by federal policy,
local zoning laws and the demand of the automobile.
If these influences are reversed – and they can be – an environment
designed around the true needs of individuals, conducive to the
formation of community and preservation of the landscape
With a 45% increase in population within Geelong by 2030, not including
the Armstrong Creek development, which is expected to house between
55,000 and 65,000 people, and a 47% increase across the
Bellarine Peninsula, with Queenscliff alone expected to increase by 733%,
the fate of the region is undecided. With current trends in residential
housing and urban development, the surrounding farm land is under
pressure to be subdivided into housing estates. The character, qualities
and uniqueness across the peninsula are under “attack”. There needs to
be a solution/strategy in the way new urban and renovated urban areas
are designed, which allows the population to increase whilst being sensitive
to what makes this area attractive today, with its safe bays and
ocean beaches, wineries, golf courses, theme parks, historic towns,
eateries, shops, galleries and beautiful countryside.
Precedents:
- Armstrong Creek Urban development
- Coastal Towns Design Frameworks
- Rippleside, North Geelong (David Lock Associates)
- Eynesbury Township, Melton (ESD, Contour, Land design, Tract)
- Film - Radiant City, 2006, Film, Directed by Gary BURNS and Jim BROWN,
Canada, National Film Board of Canada