housing and urban development
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mikaela Ethel Manalo

<p><b>As of last year, the Prime Minister and Minister of Housing and urban development has announced a 25-year project to regenerate Eastern Porirua. $1.5 billion will be contributed towards delivering better public housing as well as a safer and better neighbourhood. (Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, 2020) “This is a large, long investment to deliver a step-change for this strong vibrant community, who are amongst the most disadvantaged in New Zealand”(Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, 2020).</b></p> <p>As of right now, Cannons Creek has a dying commercial centre that has been struggling for many years. Research has shown that many locals living in the area are familiar with their ‘negative reputation’ of an unsafe neighbourhood with high crime rates (James, n.d). Therefore, this has affected the community’s growing progress (James, n.d). Based through site observation, the centre has poor infrastructure, unused carpark spaces, and abandoned buildings. Therefore, the current state may encourage crime to occur around the area.</p> <p>Moreover, there is no place for social support, public information and other facilities a community would need.</p> <p>Therefore, the aim of this thesis is to investigate ways of creating a liveable community by integrating an urban intervention into the area. In this context, intervention is defined as combining architecture and urban interventions to create a place of activity and social engagement. Cannons Creek will be revitalised into a vibrant community to live in.</p> <p>Eastern Porirua overall is slowly growing and changing, there is now more diversity within the population. The Transmission Gully that is set to finish within 2020 which will also add more value towards the land and people living in Porirua. There is now an opportunity to foster intensification within the suburbs town centres.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Mikaela Ethel Manalo

<p><b>As of last year, the Prime Minister and Minister of Housing and urban development has announced a 25-year project to regenerate Eastern Porirua. $1.5 billion will be contributed towards delivering better public housing as well as a safer and better neighbourhood. (Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, 2020) “This is a large, long investment to deliver a step-change for this strong vibrant community, who are amongst the most disadvantaged in New Zealand”(Ministry of Housing and Urban Development, 2020).</b></p> <p>As of right now, Cannons Creek has a dying commercial centre that has been struggling for many years. Research has shown that many locals living in the area are familiar with their ‘negative reputation’ of an unsafe neighbourhood with high crime rates (James, n.d). Therefore, this has affected the community’s growing progress (James, n.d). Based through site observation, the centre has poor infrastructure, unused carpark spaces, and abandoned buildings. Therefore, the current state may encourage crime to occur around the area.</p> <p>Moreover, there is no place for social support, public information and other facilities a community would need.</p> <p>Therefore, the aim of this thesis is to investigate ways of creating a liveable community by integrating an urban intervention into the area. In this context, intervention is defined as combining architecture and urban interventions to create a place of activity and social engagement. Cannons Creek will be revitalised into a vibrant community to live in.</p> <p>Eastern Porirua overall is slowly growing and changing, there is now more diversity within the population. The Transmission Gully that is set to finish within 2020 which will also add more value towards the land and people living in Porirua. There is now an opportunity to foster intensification within the suburbs town centres.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amity James ◽  
Steven Rowley ◽  
Amanda Davies ◽  
Rachel Ong ViforJ ◽  
Ranjodh Singh

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amity James ◽  
Steven Rowley ◽  
Amanda Davies ◽  
Rachel Ong ViforJ ◽  
Ranjodh Singh

This research tracks Australia’s population growth over the period 2006–16 to examine how actual growth differed from projected growth. It also examined key drivers of population mobility in Australia to inform future urban development policy responses to demands on infrastructure and housing.


2021 ◽  
pp. 100226
Author(s):  
Ifeyinwa Ijeoma Obianyo ◽  
Gina Odochi Ihekweme ◽  
Assia Aboubakar Mahamat ◽  
Kennedy Chibuzor Onyelowe ◽  
Azikiwe Peter Onwualu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Nigel Browne

There are two points of departure for this chapter. At one level, the chapter explores how the Institute for Housing and Urban Development (IHS) library responded by adjusting the services it provides to its immediate constituency, together the with Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) University Library, with a rapid shift to e-books. At another level, the IHS library has also responded to the COVID-19 situation, by providing information to a much wider audience, targeting particularly Africa, Asia, and Latin America by collating information on the social, economic, and environmental impact of COVID-19 in the urban areas of emerging economies. The majority of the institute's participants come from such countries, where a lack of resources increases these countries' vulnerability to the onslaught of the pandemic. The IHS library's contribution the institute's COVID-19 Resource Hub (see https://www.ihs.nl/en/resources/covid-19-resource-hub) is briefly described in the second part of the chapter.


Urban Studies ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 004209802092524
Author(s):  
Mark Holton ◽  
Clare M. Mouat

The conditions for studentification are changing with increasing numbers of students living in high-rise – and high-quality – micro-apartment-style accommodation provided through purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) blocks. This ‘verticalisation’ of studentification is a global phenomenon, with Australia representing a frontier with distinctive geographies that result from its rapid ascension to the second-ranked global destination for international students. Yet, despite rising student numbers being recognised as positively impacting national and state economies, little is understood of how student accommodation development fits within the broader scheme of Australian urban revitalisation. To address this, we combine concepts relating to condo-ism and condo-isation to offer an original analytical framework that examines how PBSA has created new conditions through which vertical studentification can be produced in and of cities. We therefore ask how vertical studentification relates to wider Australian housing and urban development trends in ways that differentiate PBSA development and trajectories from other forms of accommodation. We also question how vertical studentification relates to the realities and regulation expressed as intra-urban geographies of Australian university cities and their resident-host communities. We argue that deliberately recognising and dovetailing several self-reinforcing and contradicting urban development dimensions invites a foundation for further interrogating vertical studentification in existing and emerging sites in Australia and beyond.


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