WALLA MULLA PARK
Terragram's redesign of this inner-Sydney park demonstrates that there is more than one way to occupy public space. - see the original article on Architecture AU here
Words by Scott Hawken - (profile on Academia.edu)
Photos by Terragram, Paul Patterson, City of Sydney, Vladimir Sitta
Landscape Architecture Australia - Issue 134 (2012)
Around
Woolloomooloo Bay tanned bodies and
coffee-sipping cafe-goers bask in the sun as if life is one big luxury good. An
advertisement declares that a $1.25-million, two-bedroom apartment is
“surrounded by iconic Sydney landmarks and a host of fine dining options,
[offering] an envious waterfront lifestyle.” This is global Sydney. It is the
kind of image you can put on brochures and sell in package deals to tourists.
In stark contrast, less than a minute away, there is deprivation and
vulnerability. Sydney’s highest concentration of homeless people sleep rough in
the public spaces of Woolloomooloo.
In the 1970s Green Bans saved
Woolloomooloo from high-rise commercial development. Built instead, in 1974,
was a redevelopment project involving a significant amount of public housing
and heritage building stock. One of the most creative urban projects in Australia’s
history, it came into being due to the cooperation of all levels of government.
Despite these promising beginnings the area is in need of renewal and better
management. Even though the state government is responsible for much of the
land here, the City of Sydney is trying to revitalize the areas it has
jurisdiction over with an inclusive and practical strategy to encourage
middle-class locals to use the public space alongside more disadvantaged locals
and the homeless population. The recent redesign of Walla Mulla and BourkeStreet Parks, by the landscape architecture firm Terragram, is emblematic of
this ambition.
When I arrive at Walla Mulla Park
there are groups of homeless people scattered throughout the park. The main
group occupies around four square metres of space defined by scattered sleeping
bags, pillows, and “survival” swags. A man with greying hair, dressed in jeans
and thongs, walks into the park with a duffle bag, a suitcase with wheels and a
sports backpack resting on top of the suitcase. He wheels them through the park
and puts them down next to another man sleeping in paint-splattered shorts and
work boots. He sets up his sleeping berth for the night, disappears for a
moment to buy a bottle of beer, returns, and reclines on his blanket before
taking out some spectacles and a paperback. A variety of different routines
unfold before my eyes as I sit and take notes.
Walla Mulla and Bourke Street Parks
are two of a series of public spaces underneath a rail viaduct in
Woolloomooloo. The viaduct might be a 1970s engineering innovation but the
novelist Ruth Park suggested that even “in poor decrepit Woolloomooloo the
thing is a blasphemy.” The public spaces beneath the viaduct are left over from
metropolitan-scale transport planning rather than being spaces created
expressly for the local community. Around seventy homeless people sleep rough
in the rain shadow beneath the six-hundred-metre-long viaduct. There were
previously around ninety rough sleepers but the City of Sydney Homelessness
Unit has managed to find accommodation for twenty of them over the
last year.
The brief for the redesign of the
parks realistically acknowledged that they would continue to attract the
homeless. Terragram suggests that it was a delicate situation for the City of
Sydney, as they did not want to appear to legitimize chronic homelessness
through the provision of amenities. The resulting strategy involved encouraging
a shared ownership of the site through generous sight lines, and programs such
as community gardens that encourage locals to actively and regularly use
the space.
Terragram has keenly observed the
patterns of use in the parks. In Walla Mulla Park, the design of seating
supports the existing patterns of behaviour, as the homeless gather in small
groups in different parts of the site. The boomerang-like forms of the seating
can accommodate gatherings of people and also allow individuals to maintain
their personal space. The spacing of the seating allows daily cleaning to take
place as there are wide enough corridors for council cleaning machines to pass
by. The ground surface of Walla Mulla Park is mostly paved and integrates a
range of recycled and new masonry as well as concrete dividing strips. Paving
patterns exhibit dynamic changes of direction that direct run-off from
rainwater and pressure cleaning. There are no stormwater pits in the parks;
this decision was made to reduce the possibility of concealing illicit drugs
and equipment.
The
eclectic geometries and material create a vibrant and expressive spaces that
seems more Latin than Anglo-Saxon in design inspiration. Lush, subtropical
species such as mature kentia palms (Howea forsteriana)
and flowering climbers support the vibrant aesthetic of Walla Mulla Park. The
trellis against the wall of the neighbouring hostel will gradually be
transformed into a green wall and cascading green roof to a new toilet block.
Likewise, a stainless steel climbing structure is already luxuriant with a
grapevine spilling over from a neighbouring property. One of two lozenge-shaped
lawns invites lounging in the centre of Walla Mulla Park. It is here that I
observe the locals and write my notes. Elegant-yet-tough, graffiti-resistant
toilet blocks designed for the two parks are by Chris Elliott Architects and
are characteristic of this energetic design language. The mix of white
eggshell-like mosaic tiles, laser-cut stainless steel and suspended wing-like
roofs is a breezy and fresh touch in this tough area. At night, bright lighting
reflects off the roofs of the structures so that they glow like lanterns.
Just as important as the work by
Terragram is the role that Mike Fish, Sydney City Council’s public space
liaison officer, plays in the success of these spaces. On first-name bases with
the homeless residents of the area, Fish’s role is to liaise with all users of
the park and to manage the hygiene and safety of the public spaces. He arrives
at work early and visits the various public spaces to resolve any problems. He
makes sure the homeless gather their belongings and store then safely during
the daily 9 am cleaning of the park.
The public realm exists as a series
of rules and regulations expressing the tension between middle-class desires
and the right of all members of the community to spend time in public space.
Walla Mulla and Bourke Street Parks are important litmus tests for the future
Woolloomooloo. There is more than one way to occupy public space. Terragram explores
this political concept in a thoughtful way.
No comments:
Post a Comment