(added links about Future Melbourne network.)
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* [[Melbourne Sustainable Transport Reform]]
* [[Melbourne Sustainable Transport Reform]]
* [http://www.theatlanticcities.com/design/2013/09/how-melbourne-selling-commercial-property-owners-green-retrofits/7058/ How Melbourne Is Selling Commercial Property Owners on Green Retrofits], Henry Grabar, ''The Atlantic Cities''.
* [http://www.theatlanticcities.com/design/2013/09/how-melbourne-selling-commercial-property-owners-green-retrofits/7058/ How Melbourne Is Selling Commercial Property Owners on Green Retrofits], Henry Grabar, ''The Atlantic Cities''.
In 2014, a new deliberative democratic forum, [http://www.futuremelbournenetwork.org The Future Melbourne Network], was launched to discuss options and solutions to major challenges facing Melbourne, in areas such as housing, transport, and including issues such as climate change.


See also the external links to high-level projects below.
See also the external links to high-level projects below.

Revision as of 07:39, 12 March 2014

Melbourne is the capital city of Victoria, Australia. It is widely heralded as a relatively liveable city thanks to its good public transport system (by Australian standands), its relatively clean environment and active cultural life.

The city also has multiple challenges:

  • Government plans to extend freeways rather than public transport.
  • Water pollution, of creeks and Port Phillip Bay. The Yarra River is heavily loaded with sediment as a result of erosion, owing to the agriculture that has developed since European settlement.
  • Urban sprawl, with large areas of the city dependent on cars and spending extended periods in traffic.

Melbourne, like other large cities, has multiple sustainability initiatives going on. Some of these are:

In 2014, a new deliberative democratic forum, The Future Melbourne Network, was launched to discuss options and solutions to major challenges facing Melbourne, in areas such as housing, transport, and including issues such as climate change.

See also the external links to high-level projects below.

Context

Melbourne has a temperate climate with changeable weather and frequent winds. Suitable urban design for these conditions must include windbreaks and sheltered nooks, for example small parks which catch the sun in the colder months but offer protection from wind.

Urban sprawl is very advanced, but public transport is relatively good, by Australian standards, especially within approximately 10 km of the city centre.

Interwiki

External links

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