PRETTY, Walter Arthur PRG 390 Special List Series 10 ______
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4.0 ANALYSIS and ASSESSMENT of COMPONENTS 4.1.10 Karrawirra/Park 12 Assessment
4.0 ANALYSIS AND ASSESSMENT OF COMPONENTS 4.0 ANALYSIS AND ASSESSMENT OF COMPONENTS 4.1.10 Karrawirra/Park 12 Assessment KARRAWIRRA: 670 4.0 ANALYSIS AND ASSESSMENT OF COMPONENTS Karrawirra/Park 12 Overall Spatial Patterns Overall, Karrawirra/Park 12 retains its spatial pattern and form north of the River Existing Planning / Development Plan Context Torrens/Karrawirra Parri. Areas south of the River Torrens/Karrawirra Parri were never Karrawirra/Park 12 exists within the University Oval Precinct PL7 of the City of Adelaide conceived by O’Brien and Pelzer as a part of Karrawirra/Park 12 until transfer of Park Lands Development Plan (pp. 422-424). Its ‘Environment’ is described as: started occurring. Thus, Victoria Drive and the Torrens Parade Ground precincts were not conceived as landscape pieces within Karrawirra/Park 12 but as they came available the ENVIRONMENT Corporation and City Gardeners progressively incorporated them into the landscape retaining Planting Character and Landscape Design much of the pre-1930s extant vegetation on these tracts often moving the trees around to suit The University Oval Precinct should be characterised by informal plantings of mixed exotic and native these proposals. Accordingly, the area north of the River Torrens/Karrawirra Parri is woodland around large arrears of irrigated sports field, manicured lawns and the riverbank garden area. distinctively a landscape with strong traditions to the original pre-1900 landscape designs and survey drawings by Brown and O’Brien, and Light, respectively, and land south of the River Permanent Structures Torrens/Karrawirra Parri were additional pieces reclaimed back from the original Government No additional buildings should be allowed. -
NOTICE PAPER ( No
2495 2004-2005-2006 THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES NOTICE PAPER (www.aph.gov.au/house/info/notpaper) No. 134 MONDAY, 30 OCTOBER 2006 The House meets at 12.30 p.m. BUSINESS ACCORDED PRIORITY FOR THIS SITTING, PURSUANT TO STANDING ORDER 222 COMMITTEE AND DELEGATION REPORTS Presentation and statements 1 PUBLIC ACCOUNTS AND AUDIT—JOINT COMMITTEE: Annual Report 2005-2006. (Statements to conclude by 12.40 p.m.) PRIVATE MEMBERS’ BUSINESS Notices 1 MR ALBANESE: To present a Bill for an Act to amend the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Act 1975 to provide for an extension of the boundaries of the Great Barrier Reef Region. (Great Barrier Reef Marine Park (Protecting the Great Barrier Reef from Oil Drilling and Exploration) Amendment Bill 2006). (Notice given 11 October 2006. Time allowed—5 minutes.) †2 MS BIRD: To move—That the House: (1) recognises the damaging impact upon Australian working women as a result of the federal Government’s WorkChoices legislation; (2) recognises in particular the contribution Australian women make to workplaces and households across the country; (3) takes immediate action to restore employment protection for women in the workforce; (4) takes particular action to provide employment protection to women adversely affected by the WorkChoices legislation; and (5) notes the Howard Government’s agenda to reduce employment conditions and employment security for women in the workforce. (Notice given 16 October 2006 Time allowed—30 minutes.) †3 MR M. D. FERGUSON: To move—That the House (1) notes as unacceptable Australia having eight different, and often inconsistent, sets of school curriculum; (2) calls on the Commonwealth to work cooperatively with the State and Territory governments for greater consistency in both school curricula and standards for every Australian school student; and (3) supports initiatives which will improve the education standards and accountability of educational authorities across the country, both government and non-government. -
Heritage Politics in Adelaide
Welcome to the electronic edition of Heritage Politics in Adelaide. The book opens with the bookmark panel and you will see the contents page. Click on this anytime to return to the contents. You can also add your own bookmarks. Each chapter heading in the contents table is clickable and will take you direct to the chapter. Return using the contents link in the bookmarks. The whole document is fully searchable. Enjoy. Heritage Politics in Adelaide For David and for all the other members of Aurora Heritage Action, Inc. Explorations and Encounters in FRENCH Heritage Politics EDITED BY JEAN FOinRNASIERO Adelaide AND COLETTE MROWa-HopkiNS Sharon Mosler Selected Essays from the Inaugural Conference of the Federation of Associations of Teachers of French in Australia Published in Adelaide by University of Adelaide Press Barr Smith Library The University of Adelaide South Australia 5005 [email protected] www.adelaide.edu.au/press The University of Adelaide Press publishes externally refereed scholarly books by staff of the University of Adelaide. It aims to maximise the accessibility to its best research by publishing works through the internet as free downloads and as high quality printed volumes on demand. Electronic Index: this book is available from the website as a down-loadable PDF with fully searchable text. Please use the electronic version to complement the index. © 2011 Sharon Mosler This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission. -
House of Representatives
COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA House of Representatives Hansard WEDNESDAY, 10 FEBRUARY 2016 CORRECTIONS This is a PROOF ISSUE. Suggested corrections for the Official Hansard and Bound Volumes should be lodged in writing with Hansard DPS as soon as possible but not later than: Wednesday, 17 February 2016 Facsimile: Senate (02) 6277 2977 House of Representatives (02) 6277 2944 Federation Chamber (02) 6277 2944 BY AUTHORITY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES PROOF INTERNET The Votes and Proceedings for the House of Representatives are available at http://www.aph.gov.au/house/info/votes Proof and Official Hansards for the House of Representatives, the Senate and committee hearings are available at http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard For searching purposes use http://parlinfo.aph.gov.au SITTING DAYS—2016 Month Date February 2, 3, 4, 8, 9, 10, 11, 22 23, 24, 25, 29 March 1, 2, 3, 15, 16, 17 May 10, 11, 12, 23, 24, 25, 26, 30, 31 June 1, 2, 20, 21, 22, 23, 27, 28, 29,30 August 23, 24, 25, 29, 30, 31 September 1, 19, 20, 21, 22 October 10, 11, 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20 November 7, 8, 9, 10, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 29, 30 December 1 RADIO BROADCASTS Broadcasts of proceedings of the Parliament can be heard on ABC NewsRadio in the capital cities on: ADELAIDE 972AM BRISBANE 936AM CANBERRA 103.9FM DARWIN 102.5FM HOBART 747AM MELBOURNE 1026AM PERTH 585AM SYDNEY 630AM For information regarding frequencies in other locations please visit http://www.abc.net.au/newsradio/listen/frequencies.htm FORTY-FOURTH PARLIAMENT FIRST SESSION—EIGHTh PERIOD Governor-General His Excellency General the Hon. -
2003 013.Pdf
No. 13 429 THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT GAZETTE PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY ALL PUBLIC ACTS appearing in this GAZETTE are to be considered official, and obeyed as such ADELAIDE, THURSDAY, 6 FEBRUARY 2003 CONTENTS Page Page Administrative Arrangements Act 1994—Notice......................430 Partnership Act 1891—Notice .................................................. 509 Appointments, Resignations, Etc...............................................430 Petroleum Act 2000—Notices................................................... 471 Authorised Betting Operations Act 2000—Rules......................431 Private Advertisements.............................................................. 509 Corporations and District Councils—Notices ...........................496 Proclamations............................................................................ 489 Criminal Law (Forensic Procedures) Act 1998—Notice...........430 Proof of Sunrise and Sunset Act 1923—Almanac..................... 483 Dental Board of South Australia—Registers.............................434 Public Trustee Office—Administration of Estates .................... 509 Fisheries Act 1982—Notices.....................................................459 REGULATIONS Geographical Names Act 1991—Notice ...................................466 Gas Pipelines Access (South Australia) Variation Housing Improvement Act 1940—Notices................................467 Regulations 2003 (No. 12 of 2003).................................... 491 Land Acquisition Act 1969-1972—Notice................................469 -
JOHNSON, Donald Leslie COLLECTION Architecture Museum, University of South Australia
JOHNSON, Donald Leslie COLLECTION Architecture Museum, University of South Australia JOHNSON, Donald Leslie SERIES 107, 109, 133, 140, 143, 144, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 199, 205, 206, 211, 212, 222, 223, 264, 369, 370, 384, 385, 391, 392, 393, 396, 397, 403, 404, 429, 437, 438 Donald Leslie Johnson (2/1/1930/–), architect, academic and architectural historian, was born in Bremerton, Washington State in the United States and graduated with a Bachelor of Architecture from the University of Washington in 1957. He then undertook a master’s degree at the University of Pennsylvania, studying under Louis I. Kahn, graduating in 1961. In 1957 Johnson joined Johnson-Austin Architects, Tacoma, Washington as a draftsman, moving to C.V. Rueger and Associates, Architects in 1958. From 1958 to 1960 he worked at the architectural firm of Harbeson, Hough, Livingston and Larson in Philadelphia before returning to Washington to work at Grant, Copeland and Chervenak, Architects in Seattle from 1960 to 1961. From 1962 to 1965 he was employed by a number of firms in Tucson, Arizona and then joined Cain, Nelson and Wares, Architects, Tucson as a design associate. In 1957 and 1961 he worked as a designer/draftsman at Bassetti and Morse, Architects, Seattle, Washington. During these years he also taught design, architectural design, theory and architectural history at the University of Arizona, the University of Adelaide, South Australia, and Washington State University. In 1972 he accepted a position at Flinders University where he taught architectural history until he retired in 1988. Johnson has published widely in books, book chapters, articles in academic and professional journals, conference papers, encyclopaedia entries and reviews. -
Richmond-Tweed Family History Society
Richmond-Tweed Family History Society Inc - Catalogue Call No Title Author Nv-1Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Aston Nv-2Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Ballarat Nn-15Y 1984 Electoral roll : Division of Banks Nn-14Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Barton Nt-1Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Bass Nv-3Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Batman Nv-4Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Bendigo Nn-12Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Berowra Nn-11Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Blaxland Ns-4Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Boothby Nq-1Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Bowman Nt-2Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Braddon Nn-16Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Bradfield Nw-1Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Brand Nq-2Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Brisbane Nv-5Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Bruce Nv-6Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Burke Nv-7Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Calwell Nw-2Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Canning Nq-3Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Capricornia Nv-8Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Casey Nn-17Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Charlton Nn-23Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Chifley Nv-9Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Chisholm 06 October 2012 Page 1 of 167 Call No Title Author Nn-22Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Cook Nv-10Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Corangamite Nv-11Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Corio Nw-3Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Cowan Nn-21Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Cowper Nn-20Y 1984 Electoral roll : division of Cunningham -
Heritage Politics in Adelaide During the Bannon Decade
r¡ls lor HERITAGE POLITICS IN ADELAIDE DURING THE BANNON DECADE Sharon Ann Mosler Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in HistorY School of History and Politics University of Adelaide December 2006 il TABLE OF CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 111 ABSTRACT 1V DECLARATION vl ACKNOV/LEDGEMENTS vll LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS .. vlll CHRONOLOGY... .X 1 INTRODUCTION ..1 2 TH.E AUSTRALIAN L^Boy'r.PARTY DURING THE BANNON DECADE t3a 3 rHE tr*Ëft{t{#""cRAcY ¡qÀ 4 THE ROLE OF THE ADELAIDE CITY COUNCIL 75 5 TOV/NSCAPE PROTECTION TO LOCAL HERITAGE .."............. ... 108 6 THE INTEREST GROUPS ... 135 7 CASE STUDIES IN HERITAGE POLITICS: MAJOR PROJECTS 178 8 CASE STUDIES IN HERITAGE POLITICS: SMALL PROJECTS 210 9 CONCLUSION 232 APPENDICES ... 244 BIBLIOGRAPHY 254 111 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS City of Adelaide Map xiv Bertram House, Grenfell Street 88 Edmund'Wright House, King William Street 153 Aurora Hotel, Hindmarsh Square 159 Commonwealth Bank, Currie Street 165 REMM-Myer project, North Terrace 194 East End Market, East Terrace 198 'Working'Women's Creche, Gouger Street 205 Kingsmead and Belmont House, Brougham Place, North Adelaide 2tt St Paul's Church, Pulteney Street 2t7 Somerset Hotel, Pulteney Street 220 'House of Chow' building, Hutt Street 223 Gawler Chambers, North Terrace 227 tv ABSTRACT This thesis argues that during the decade 1983-93 South Australia's heritage legislation was not effective in protecting Adelaide's traditional built character. The Bannon government was committed to growth through major developments during an economic recession, and many of those developments entailed at least the partial demolition of heritage-listed buildings. -
Appendix a Ways of Belonging
Appendix A Ways of Belonging Reconciliation and the Symbolic Value of the Public Space in Adelaide A photo-documentary exhibition of Adelaide’s public space Indigenous Cultural Markers presented as a social narrative of exclusion and inclusion from 1960 to the present through public art, community art, commemorative plaques and memorials. Produced by visual artist Gavin Malone in partnership with Reconciliation SA and Tandanya, the National Aboriginal Cultural Institute, for the 40th anniversary commemorations of the 1967 Australian referendum on Indigenous issues in May, 2007. Three Rivers Fountain, Victoria Square John Dowie 1968 Exhibition Introduction By Gavin Malone ‘Space is colonised by the erection of commemorative structures on the terrain; power is asserted by the exclusion of the commemorative practices of others.’ (Patrick Hutton, 1993 i) Representations of cultural history in public spaces through monuments, memorials, statues and public art, help shape both personal and civic identity. These commemorations also help make spaces into places and give symbolic meaning, as along North Terrace, Adelaide’s ‘premier cultural boulevard’. Places are where cultures find meaning, and as Angela Martin says ‘Identity is formed and continually reinforced…within culturally defined spaces.’ii It follows then that when Indigenous people are not represented they become ‘invisible’ in the symbolic value of the public space, they do not see their cultural identity or even themselves as part of the cultural landscape. Until 1960, when a small work by John Dowie was placed in the East Parklands, it seems there was no representation of Indigenous people in the public spaces of Adelaide. This reflects what the noted Australian anthropologist W. -
PARLIAMENT of the COMMONWEALTH of AUSTRALIA 795P—Parliamentary Paper No. 35 Brought up and Ordered to Be Printed 15 April 1969
PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA 795P—parliamentary Paper No. 35 Brought up and ordered to be printed 15 April 1969 COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE CANBERRA: 1969 PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA 7959—Parliamentary Paper No. 35 Brought up and ordered to be printed 15 April 1969 COMMONWEALTH GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE CANBERRA: 1969 PERSONNEL OF THE COMMITTEE Mr A. I. Allan Mr R. N. Bonnett Mr G. M. Bryant Mr F. Courtnay M. D. Cross D. S. Jessop SIGNS: Mr Nixon (Minister for the Interior) moved, by leave— (1) That a Select Committee be appointed to consider and report upon— (a) the criteria which should be adopted in naming Electoral Divisions; and (b) whether the Distribution Commissioners should attach names to Divisions at the time of publishing their proposals or whether some other person or persons should attach the names and, if some other person or persons, when. (2) That the Committee consist of seven members, four to be appointed by the Prime Minister and three to be appointed by the Leader of the Opposition. (3) That every appointment of a member of the Committee be forth- with notified in writing to the Speaker. (4) That the Chairman be appointed by the Prime Minister. (5) That the Chairman have a deliberate vote and, in the event of an equality of votes, also have a casting vote. (6) That the Committee have power to send for persons, papers and records. (1) That the Committee report to the House as soon as possible. (8) That the foregoing provisions of this resolution, so far as they are inconsistent with the Standing Orders, have effect notwithstanding anything contained in the Standing Orders. -
•J53 3 4 067 031 98 3884 1977
•J53 3 4 067 031 98 3884 1977 University of Queensland Presented to Tfie Fryer IVIemorial Library of Australian Literature to' University. o.f....Oue.eBs.l.and....Press THE GOVERNMENT OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA This title is published in a series on the Governments of the Australian States and Territories under the general editorship of Colin A. Hughes, Professorial Fellow of Political Science at the Australian National University in Canberra. Previous titles The Government of Victoria: Jean Holmes, University of Melbourne The Government of Tasmania: W. A. Townsley Forthcoming titles The Government of the Australian Capital Territory RUTH ATKINS The Government of New South Wales R. S. PARKER The Government of Queensland COLIN A. HUGHES THE GOVERNMENT OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA Dean Jaensch UNIVERSITY OF QUEENSLAND PRESS -7 ©University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, Queensland, 1977 This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of private study, research, criticism, or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part may be reproduced by any process with out written permission. Enquiries should be made to the publisher. Typeset by Academy Press Pty. Ltd., Brisbane Printed and bound by Silex Enterprise & Printing Co., Hong Kong Distributed in the United Kingdom, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Caribbean by Prentice-Hall International International Book Distributors Ltd., 66 Wood Lane End, Hemel Hempstead, Herts., England National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-publication data Jaensch, Dean Harold. The government of South Australia. (Governments of Australian states and territories). Index. ISBN 0 7022 1352 7 ISBN 0 7022 1353 5 Paperback. 1. -
Geographical Categories (98KB PDF)
4 ADELAIDE the rate of homelessness, as well as local intelligence about what is happening ‘on the ground’ in order to match services with expressed need. 4.2 GEOGRAPHICAL CATEGORIES There are a number of ways of approaching a geographical analysis. The Australian Bureau of Statistics uses the Australian Standard Geographical Classification (ASGC) for the collection and dissemination of geographically organised statistics (ABS 2006c). The ASGC provides seven interrelated classification structures which are designed for different practical purposes. This report uses the ‘Main Structure’ which covers the whole of Australia without gaps or overlaps. The Main Structure comprises five hierarchical levels: census districts, statistical local areas, statistical subdivisions, statistical divisions, and states and territories. This analysis uses statistical divisions and statistical subdivisions as the main geographical categories, because patterns can be identified more easily if larger geographical categories are used. In each state and territory, the capital city is treated as a statistical division which includes the greater metropolitan area and any anticipated growth corridors for at least the next 20 years. The statistical division ‘represents the city in a wider sense’ (ABS 2006c, p. 15). Statistical divisions outside of the capital cities are ‘relatively homogeneous region(s) characterised by identifiable … links between the inhabitants and between the economic units within the region, under the unifying influence of one or more major towns or cities’ (ABS 2006c, p. 15). South Australia is divided into seven statistical divisions (excluding off-shore and migratory areas). They are Adelaide, Outer Adelaide, Yorke and Lower North, Murray Lands, South East, Eyre and Northern. The seven statistical divisions are divided into 20 subdivisions.