posted by organizer: kirkday || 4275 views || tracked by 6 users: [display]

Melbourne Architecture MPS 2016 : Future Housing: Global Cities and regional issues (Architecture MPS network)

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: http://architecturemps.com/melbourne/
 
When Jun 9, 2016 - Jun 10, 2016
Where Melbourne, Australia
Submission Deadline Mar 20, 2016
Notification Due Mar 30, 2016
Final Version Due May 20, 2016
Categories    architecture   interior architecture   planning   future city
 

Call For Papers

For the Asia Pacific region there is a complex and at times contradictory set of issues affecting life in cities. Some countries are experiencing rapid growth and unprecedented urbanisation, others are dealing with an ageing population immigration and shrinking cities. While some authorities are struggling with the environmental implications of these changes others are employing technologically advanced initiatives. Reflecting this paradoxical context, examples of planning, urban and architectural design across the region vary greatly. The neo-liberal models largely employed in Australian cities differ radically from those in China which, in turn, differ from those in Thailand and Singapore. Similarly, building adaption, evident in some places, is simply not an option elsewhere – where tabla-rasa scenarios are presented as the ideal model of development.

What results from all of this are inconsistencies in the way the cities of the Asia Pacific Rim move forward. Nowhere is this more evident than in housing. As changing living requirements develop, new demographic patterns emerge, and economic and political imperatives morph, the ways in which planners, politicians, economists, developers, architects and designers respond inevitably contrasts. What represents re-development of neighbourhoods in one country can be seen as the destruction of communities in the next. The refurbishment of old houses in one place is seen as the erasure of heritage in another, and government intervention in one city can be interpreted as state control elsewhere. The issue is complex and the problem titanic.

Keynote speakers:
Professor Esther Charlesworth (Architects Without Frontiers + RMIT University)
Dr Tom Alves (The Office of the Victorian Government Architect)

Related Resources

GLOBAL HEALTH 2026   The Fifteenth International Conference on Global Health Challenges
IJCTCM 2026   International Journal of Control Theory and Computer Modelling
FUTURE COMPUTING 2026   The Eighteenth International Conference on Future Computational Technologies and Applications
IJBBR 2026   International Journal of BRIC Business Research
Global South Gothic 2025   The Global South Special Issue Global South Gothic
ICBMC 2026   2026 11th International Conference on Building Materials and Construction (ICBMC 2026)
AI, Media & Diplomacy in the Global Sout 2025   Call For Papers: International Volume on AI, Media & Diplomacy in the Global South
ICCUE 2026   2026 13th International Conference on Civil and Urban Engineering (ICCUE 2026)
Smart Cities Analytics 2025   International Conference on Business Analytics in Practice
TEMSCON Global 2025   2025 IEEE Technology and Engineering Management Society Conference - Global