City Building: Transport & Infrastructure - PLAN2007
Description
The nexus between transport and land use planning has been a longstanding focus of interest for city planners, in terms of understanding patterns of mobility, determining the need for appropriate transport infrastructure ensuring planning frameworks optimise the benefits to both local communities and the wider city of transport and other infrastructure networks and future investment. In recent years, interest in maximising the strategic synergies between infrastructure expenditure and urban growth, development and renewal has become increasingly framed by the notion of ‘city building’. The reassertion of strategic planning interests in the role that urban infrastructure projects play in ‘city building' are acting to reposition the role of the planner, and demand a range of skills that help tie these large financial (and political) commitments more coherently to considerations of city productivity, efficiency and equity. This course introduces students to the centrality of transport and infrastructure considerations both within strategic and statutory contexts. The ongoing pipeline of major transport infrastructure projects in Australian cities offer an excellent lens through which to consider the increasingly integrative role planners play in key city shaping activities which have social, economic and environmental as much as mobility outcomes.