Mr Peter Russell Corrigan AM
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An Antipodean Imaginary for Architecture+Philosophy
69 An Antipodean Imaginary for Architecture+Philosophy: Fictocritical Approaches to Design Practice Research Hélène Frichot, Julieanna Preston, Michael Spooner, Sean Pickersgill, Zuzana Kovar, Ceri Hann, Megg Evans As a collective of PhD researchers (past and fictocriticism will be ventured and reframed for archi- present) provisionally gathered within the tecture. This approach will be elaborated by Hélène Architecture+Philosophy Research Group, RMIT Frichot who has had the opportunity to offer super- University, we will present a series of design visorial guidance to researchers presenting their explorations that are representative of our design design research below. Fictocriticism for architec- practice research.1 With the conjunctive capacity ture assumes the constructive, creative and critical of architecture and philosophy we emphasize the situatedness of the thinking-designer in the midst ongoing importance of the relay between these of their problematic field.2 We place an emphasis disciplines, also activated in our work through the on critical and creative invention and the structured productive relations between critical theory and indeterminacy that manifests in the wild association practice. We assume an expanded definition of of images and ideas that procure innovative as well architectural design practice, which includes digital as politically engaged minoritarian architectures. immersive environments, unbuilt (even unbuildable) There endures an engagement with minorities, and architectures, installation and participatory perform- minor literatures (including sub-canonical architec- ance-based works, and also, importantly, includes tures), feminist approaches, queer intertextualities, the critical and creative practice of writing-architec- as well as teratological mixtures of the natural and ture, often through the deployment of fiction. These the cultural. -
Building 8, RMIT University
Nationally Significant 20th-Century Architecture Revised 9/01/2012 Building 8, RMIT University Address 368 Swanston Street, Melbourne 3000 Practice Edmond and Corrigan in assoc. with Demaine Designed 1990 Completed 1993 Address History & Sitting on top of John Andrew’s incomplete four storeyed Union Description building, Edmond & Corrigan’s additions to Building 8 make a 368 riotously colourful signpost for RMIT along Swanston Street. ‘Built on a tight budget and with the constraints of the the existing buildings beside and below, Building 8 is like a magic castle. A new Swanston Street lift and service core were built and account for the medieval passage accessing the upper floors. The deep floor plate was Melbourne maximised, resulting in a rabbit warren of rooms to the upper floors. Balustrade details, handrails and dadoes are built to last and the 3000 entire interior has the chaotic vibrancy of a pre-Renaisance city. From various points along Swanston Street , the expressionistic roofscape reveals more and more formal fantasy from the crystalline cornice and Darth Vader exhaust hoods over the fire escape stairs, to the corrugated Matterhorn of the lift overrun. The coloured stone facade and its knitting needle, steel pipe strut supports continue the bastion theme, whilst on the back elevation, a polychrome and polygonal brick fire stair turret acknowledges Percy Everett’s 1930s workshops and provides the visual focus for one of RMIT’s few outdoor spaces.’ (extracts from Philip Goad, Melbourne Architecture, p223) RAIA Nº Corrigan’s aim was to delight and break down the dominant and The medieval access corridor seamless city-wall 'mood' RMIT presented on Swanston Street. -
School of Architecture 2016–2017 School of Architecture School Of
BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY BULLETIN OF YALE BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Periodicals postage paid New Haven ct 06520-8227 New Haven, Connecticut School of Architecture 2016–2017 School of Architecture 2016 –2017 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 112 Number 4 June 30, 2016 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 112 Number 4 June 30, 2016 (USPS 078-500) The University is committed to basing judgments concerning the admission, education, is published seventeen times a year (one time in May and October; three times in June and employment of individuals upon their qualifications and abilities and a∞rmatively and September; four times in July; five times in August) by Yale University, 2 Whitney seeks to attract to its faculty, sta≠, and student body qualified persons of diverse back- Avenue, New Haven CT 0651o. Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut. grounds. In accordance with this policy and as delineated by federal and Connecticut law, Yale does not discriminate in admissions, educational programs, or employment against Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, any individual on account of that individual’s sex, race, color, religion, age, disability, PO Box 208227, New Haven CT 06520-8227 status as a protected veteran, or national or ethnic origin; nor does Yale discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. Managing Editor: Kimberly M. Go≠-Crews University policy is committed to a∞rmative action under law in employment of Editor: Lesley K. Baier women, minority group members, individuals with disabilities, and protected veterans. PO Box 208230, New Haven CT 06520-8230 Inquiries concerning these policies may be referred to Valarie Stanley, Director of the O∞ce for Equal Opportunity Programs, 221 Whitney Avenue, 3rd Floor, 203.432.0849. -
School of Architecture 2012–2013
BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY BULLETIN OF YALE BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Periodicals postage paid New Haven ct 06520-8227 New Haven, Connecticut School of Architecture 2012–2013 School of Architecture 2012–2013 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 108 Number 4 June 30, 2012 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 108 Number 4 June 30, 2012 (USPS 078-500) The University is committed to basing judgments concerning the admission, education, is published seventeen times a year (one time in May and October; three times in June and employment of individuals upon their qualifications and abilities and a∞rmatively and September; four times in July; five times in August) by Yale University, 2 Whitney seeks to attract to its faculty, sta≠, and student body qualified persons of diverse back- Avenue, New Haven CT 0651o. Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut. grounds. In accordance with this policy and as delineated by federal and Connecticut law, Yale does not discriminate in admissions, educational programs, or employment against Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, any individual on account of that individual’s sex, race, color, religion, age, disability, or PO Box 208227, New Haven CT 06520-8227 national or ethnic origin; nor does Yale discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. Managing Editor: Linda Koch Lorimer University policy is committed to a∞rmative action under law in employment of Editor: Lesley K. Baier women, minority group members, individuals with disabilities, and covered veterans. PO Box 208230, New Haven CT 06520-8230 Inquiries concerning these policies may be referred to the Director of the O∞ce for Equal Opportunity Programs, 221 Whitney Avenue, 203.432.0849 (voice), 203.432.9388 The closing date for material in this bulletin was June 1, 2012. -
Page 1 of 179
Page 1 of 179 FUTURE MELBOURNE (PLANNING) COMMITTEE Agenda Item 5.1 REPORT CITY OF MELBOURNE HERITAGE STRATEGY AND A HISTORY OF THE CITY OF 4 September 2012 MELBOURNE’S URBAN ENVIRONMENT Presenter: David Mayes, Manager Strategic Planning Purpose and background 1. The purpose of this report is to seek the Future Melbourne Committee’s endorsement of the draft City of Melbourne Heritage Strategy 2012 (Attachment 2) for public consultation, and for the Committee to note the Thematic History - A History of the City of Melbourne’s Urban Environment 2012 (Attachment 3). 2. The City of Melbourne Heritage Strategy 2012 is a KSA1 (Planning for Future Growth) deliverable. 3. The proposed strategy is a whole of Council policy which seeks to provide a framework for the identification, conservation and management of the city’s heritage. The Heritage Strategy will help strengthen the community’s understanding, appreciation and recognition of the city’s heritage. Key issues 4. The City of Melbourne commissioned historian Helen Doyle to write the thematic history, A History of the City of Melbourne’s Urban Environment 2012 and appointed an external reference group to assist in its development. The history describes the major themes which influenced the city’s past growth and development, and explains how and why the city looks as it does today. The document is a resource that can be used to help with the identification of historically significant places. 5. Context Planning consultants were engaged to help prepare the draft Heritage Strategy. Council’s roles and functions across the organisation in relation to heritage were reviewed and analysed. -
Proceedings of the 7Th International Conference of the Association Of
DE-- DEDE-- SIGN-- SIGNSIGN---- ING // INGING //// EDU-- EDUEDU---- CA-- CACA-- TION TIONTION 7th International Conference of the Association of Architecture Schools of Australasia REGISTRATION Academics: $300 7th7th InternationalInternational ConferenceConference ofof thethe AssociationAssociation ofof ArchitectureArchitecture SchoolsSchools ofof AustralasiaAustralasia REGISTRATIONREGISTRATION 3-5 October 2013 | Monash University, RMIT University, the University of MelbourneAcademics:Academics: $300 $300 Sessionals/Professionals: $200 3-53-5 October October 2013 2013 | | Monash Monash University, University, RMIT RMIT University, University, the the University University of of Melbourne Melbourne Sessionals/Professionals:Sessionals/Professionals: $200 $200 Students: $40 “While the architectural field has changed more in the last 30 years than in the previous 3,000 thanksStudents:Students: to the $40 $40 rapid accelera- “While“While the the architectural architecturaltion field field of globalization hashas changedchanged moreandmore in inthe thethe convulsionslast last 3030 yearsyears than thanof the in in the themarket previousprevious economy 3,0003,000 thanksthanks architectural toto thethe rapidrapid education acceleraaccelera-- has mostly failed to keep pace.” Available at : http://aireys.its. tiontion ofof globalizationglobalization- andandAMO thethe convulsionsconvulsions ofof thethe marketmarket economyeconomy architecturalarchitectural educationeducation hashas mostlymostly failedfailed toto keepkeep pace.”pace.” AvailableAvailable -
Statement of Recommendation from the Executive Director, Heritage Victoria to the Heritage Council of Victoria
Statement of recommendation from the Executive Director, Heritage Victoria to the Heritage Council of Victoria Statement of recommendation from the Executive Director, Heritage Victoria to the Heritage Council of Victoria Name: Fairfield Park Amphitheatre, Kiosk and Pavilion Address: 3 Fairfield Park Drive, Fairfield Registered Aboriginal Party Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung Cultural Heritage Aboriginal Corporation Local Government Authority: City of Yarra Fairfield Park Amphitheatre (March 2021) Pavilion (February 2021) Executive Director recommendation Under Part 3, Division 3 of the Heritage Act 2017 I recommend to the Heritage Council of Victoria that the Fairfield Park Amphitheatre, Kiosk and Pavilion, Fairfield should not be included in the Victorian Heritage Register (VHR). STEVEN AVERY Executive Director, Heritage Victoria DATE OF RECOMMENDATION: 21 April 2021 This report may contain images and/or names of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who are now deceased. Fairfield Park Amphitheatre, Kiosk and Pavilion 1 Hermes No: 206940 Statement of recommendation from the Executive Director, Heritage Victoria to the Heritage Council of Victoria Executive Director recommendation to the Heritage Council of Victoria The Executive Director, Heritage Victoria recommends that the Heritage Council not include the Fairfield Park Amphitheatre, Kiosk and Pavilion, 3 Fairfield Park Drive, Fairfield in the Victorian Heritage Register (VHR) in accordance with section 49 of the Heritage Act 2017 by determining: That this place is not of State-level cultural heritage significance and should not be included in the VHR in accordance with s.49(1)(b) of the Act. The information presented in this recommendation suggests that the Fairfield Park Amphitheatre, Kiosk and Pavilion may be of potential local significance. -
School of Architecture 2011–2012
BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Periodicals postage paid New Haven ct 06520-8227 New Haven, Connecticut School of Architecture 2011–2012 School of Architecture 2011–2012 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 107 Number 4 June 30, 2011 BULLETIN OF YALE UNIVERSITY Series 107 Number 4 June 30, 2011 (USPS 078-500) The University is committed to basing judgments concerning the admission, education, is published seventeen times a year (one time in May and October; three times in June and employment of individuals upon their qualifications and abilities and a∞rmatively and September; four times in July; five times in August) by Yale University, 2 Whitney seeks to attract to its faculty, sta≠, and student body qualified persons of diverse back- Avenue, New Haven CT 0651o. Periodicals postage paid at New Haven, Connecticut. grounds. In accordance with this policy and as delineated by federal and Connecticut law, Yale does not discriminate in admissions, educational programs, or employment against Postmaster: Send address changes to Bulletin of Yale University, any individual on account of that individual’s sex, race, color, religion, age, disability, or PO Box 208227, New Haven CT 06520-8227 national or ethnic origin; nor does Yale discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. Managing Editor: Linda Koch Lorimer University policy is committed to a∞rmative action under law in employment of Editor: Lesley K. Baier women, minority group members, individuals with disabilities, and covered veterans. PO Box 208230, New Haven CT 06520-8230 Inquiries concerning these policies may be referred to the O∞ce for Equal Opportu- nity Programs, 221 Whitney Avenue, 203.432.0849 (voice), 203.432.9388 (TTY). -
Presentation Summaries
MAURO BARACCO LEONA DUSANOVIC a special interest in developing architectural Emma Jackson is a senior lecturer at RMIT Univer- THOMAS MURATORE regards to the myriad apocryphal tales which have typologies into project specific responses. sity in the School of Architecture and Urban Design surrounded the Corrigan studio for years. The act Theoretical positions shared in the past with Peter Attending various performances was compulsory and the Program Manager of the Master of Urban A legacy contributes to our understanding of of discussing the studio, amongst past students, Corrigan through collaborative academic activities in Peter Corrigan’s studio. I distinctly recall him Catherine Ranger is an associate director of MGS Design and is currently undertaking a PhD at RMIT community and place. In many ways legacies is ubiquitous, for until observed any of the myths engage with the notions of critical resistance and noting during a class that ‘Lucy Guerin is a genius’. Architects whose keen eye for detail sees her University. act as an index alongside and against which we about Schrödinger’s Professor are both true and marginality. This presentation will discuss the Lucy Guerin is a choreographer, I didn’t know responsible for continuing to shape the practice’s develop our own values, but by definition have false. significance of these empathetic positions as much about her work at the time. What Corrigan’s design vision and creative ambition. Catherine’s IAN MCDOUGALL the author’s imprint left upon them. In this way, seminal to forms of proximity and analogy design studios permitted was a personal way to approach to design is one that explores the a legacy is not a passive heirloom but an active Laura Szyman is currently completing her Master between intellectual rather than necessarily look at things. -
An Antipodean Imaginary for Architecture+Philosophy Footprint
69 An Antipodean Imaginary for Architecture+Philosophy: Fictocritical Approaches to Design Practice Research Hélène Frichot, Julieanna Preston, Michael Spooner, Sean Pickersgill, Zuzana Kovar, Ceri Hann, Megg Evans As a collective of PhD researchers (past and fictocriticism will be ventured and reframed for archi- present) provisionally gathered within the tecture. This approach will be elaborated by Hélène Architecture+Philosophy Research Group, RMIT Frichot who has had the opportunity to offer super- University, we will present a series of design visorial guidance to researchers presenting their explorations that are representative of our design design research below. Fictocriticism for architec- practice research.1 With the conjunctive capacity ture assumes the constructive, creative and critical of architecture and philosophy we emphasize the situatedness of the thinking-designer in the midst ongoing importance of the relay between these of their problematic field.2 We place an emphasis disciplines, also activated in our work through the on critical and creative invention and the structured productive relations between critical theory and indeterminacy that manifests in the wild association practice. We assume an expanded definition of of images and ideas that procure innovative as well architectural design practice, which includes digital as politically engaged minoritarian architectures. immersive environments, unbuilt (even unbuildable) There endures an engagement with minorities, and architectures, installation and participatory perform- minor literatures (including sub-canonical architec- ance-based works, and also, importantly, includes tures), feminist approaches, queer intertextualities, the critical and creative practice of writing-architec- as well as teratological mixtures of the natural and ture, often through the deployment of fiction. These the cultural. -
Postmodern Architecture and the “Culture of Flimsiness” in Queensland
QUOTATION: What does history have in store for architecture today? “The Pleasures Functions of Architecture” Postmodern Architecture and the “Culture of flimsiness” in Queensland Elizabeth Musgrave The University of Queensland and the University of Melbourne Abstract This paper explores the capacity of the quotation to resonate with essential truths, thereby entering the mainstream lexicon and through use and reuse, become detached from its source. It will explore this phenomenon through a short account of architecture in Queensland and its connection to events leading up and contributing to the 1984 Royal Australian Institute of Architects National Convention held in Brisbane from 16 to 19 June and resort venues ‘beyond’ including Dunk Island, Cairns, Kooralbyn and the Gold Coast. Leveraging its title epiphorically from the Institute’s 1980 Sydney convention, “The Functions of Architecture” conference in Brisbane sought a similar outcome to the earlier “The Pleasures of Architecture”, event; clarity and direction in the variety of “Attitudes” then expressed within Australian architecture. The reception of post-modernism by architects in Queensland is at once similar to and different from its reception in other centres in Australia. The lingering national debate between adherents of an orthodox modernism and “Post-modernists” had political, social and economic rather than ideological dimensions in the Sunshine State. It was further complicated by the presence of a group of young practitioners who came to be associated with regionalism and whose work has been variously described as “Visually light”, “layered”, and “ephemeral”. Drawing on interviews and commentary in Architecture Australia and the Institute’s Chapter News, this paper constructs an account of “The Function of Architecture” conference and describes the context for the emergence of a particularly apt descriptor of Queensland architecture, the origins of which had been become lost in the mists of time. -
Thematic History: a History of the City of Melbourne's Urban Environment
ATTACHMENT 3 AGENDA ITEM 5.1 FUTURE MELBOURNE COMMITTEE 12 June 2012 Final 5 May, 2011 Context Pty Ltd 2011 Project Team: Helen Doyle, Principal historian and author Natica Schmeder & Louise Homan, architectural history Chris Johnston, Project Manager Jenny Walker, Support Report Register This report register documents the development and issue of the report entitled A History of the City of Melbourne’s Urban Environment undertaken by Context Pty Ltd in accordance with our internal quality management system. Project Issue Notes/description Issue Issued to No. No. date 1422 1 Preliminary draft 05/11/10 Robyn Hellman 1422 2 Draft Thematic 14/12/10 Gisele History Masclef 1422 3 Final Draft Thematic 21/12/10 Gisele History Masclef 1422 4 Final City of 5/5/2011 Gisele Melbourne Thematic Masclef Environmental History Context Pty Ltd 22 Merri Street, Brunswick 3056 Phone 03 9380 6933 Facsimile 03 9380 4066 Email [email protected] ii CONTENTS PREFACE V ABBREVIATIONS VIII ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS VIII INTRODUCTION 1 CHAPTER 1: ABORIGINAL COUNTRY 4 CHAPTER 2: PROMOTING SETTLEMENT 5 CHAPTER 3: SHAPING THE URBAN LANDSCAPE 11 CHAPTER 4: GOVERNING, ADMINISTERING AND POLICING THE CITY 26 CHAPTER 5: BUILDING A COMMERCIAL CITY 38 CHAPTER 6: CREATING A FUNCTIONING CITY 47 CHAPTER 7: APPRECIATING AND ADAPTING THE NATURAL ENVIRONMENT 58 CHAPTER 8: LIVING IN THE CITY 63 CHAPTER 9: WORKING IN THE CITY 71 CHAPTER 10: SHAPING CULTURAL LIFE 74 CHAPTER 11: CARING FOR THE SICK AND DESTITUTE 82 CHAPTER 12: EXPRESSING SOCIAL AND POLITICAL OPINION 86 CHAPTER 13: ENJOYING THE CITY 92 CHAPTER 14: ADVANCING SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE 101 CHAPTER 15: PRESERVING AND CELEBRATING THE CITY’S HISTORY 106 CONCLUSION 1 BIBLIOGRAPHY 1 1.