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  5. arrow_forward_ios Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn

Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn

DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
DAB Student Project: Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn, by Ben Hardy-Clements
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Uncovering the In-between: Daylighting the Duck River Catchment in Auburn

Ben Hardy-Clements

This project proposes the daylighting of multiple tributaries of the Duck River catchment in the suburb of Auburn in Western Sydney. Daylighting, a form of naturalised infrastructure where buried stormwater pipes are brought to the surface to implement natural streams, offers multiple benefits over pipes, including restored habitats, enhanced stormwater management, and a natural asset for the community to enjoy. Since colonial settlement, the Duck River corridor has suffered fragmentation and degradation. This strategy aims to restore environmental, recreational, scenic, cultural and social values, and address key management issues such as conservation, access and public engagement. It introduces a series of cycleways and walking paths along the restored waterways, and includes a number of interpretive re-adaptations of post-industrial infrastructure to engage the diverse contemporary inhabitants of Auburn with Indigenous, environmental and industrial histories of the site, and to begin the construction of a new eco-cosmopolitan future.


In this studio, students explored landscape design solutions in a contested urban site framed by an exploration and application of landscape and urban theory, method and precedent. The studio was framed around the notion of cities as ‘entrepots’ – a word typically used to refer to centres of trade through which goods pass on their journeys around the world. This studio took a broad view of the concept of the entrepot in the context of current global systems, considering the impact of the flows, not just of goods, but people, information, capital, energy, water, and other organic and inorganic materials. 

School of Architecture
Academic leader
Andrew Toland
Affiliations

Entrepot Cities: Designing for Openness and Uncertainty (Landscape Architecture Studio 6: City)

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DAB Student Project: Wandering Ecologies: Anthropochory as a Method of Restoration; Seed Dispersal in the Urban Landscape, by Brittany Johnston

Wandering Ecologies: Anthropochory as a Method of Restoration; Seed Dispersal in the Urban Landscape

Brittany Johnston

DAB Student Project: Giving Ecology Primacy, by Ao Zhou

Giving Ecology Primacy

Ao Zhou

DAB Student Project: Spatial Communication 2, by Amaia Sanchez Velasco

Spatial Communication 2

Bachelor of Design in Architecture students

DAB Student Project: Experiential Ecologies: Designed Futures of the Cobar Peneplain,  by Brendan Murphy

Experiential Ecologies: Designed Futures of the Cobar Peneplain

Brendan Murphy

DAB Student Project: Urban Hinge, by Lu Bai

Urban Hinge

Lu Bai

DAB Student Project: Transect, by Junru Yang & Katrina Shaw

Transect

Junru Yang, Katrina Shaw

Acknowledgement of Country

UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

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