5 minute read

Site context

SCENARIO : LONG DRY PERIOD

Before

Advertisement

football oval

Normal

grass land: less coverage on surface moisture level decrease more than bush area

Severe

Dry level

Design Proposed Area: Multi-function Ground (lawn)

new track

bush

bush incresing canopy coverage enhanced

bush

bush For multiuse grassland/lawn

bush bush Grass land: less coverage on surface

Normal

canopy mitigatie moisture decreasing

moisture level decrease more than bush area

Severe

Dry level

Section- Multi-function Ground (lawn)

SCENARIO : LONG DRY PERIOD

Before

golf use area

buffer area

Normal

grass land: less coverage on surface moisture level decrease more than bush area

Severe

Dry level

Design Proposed Area: Mini Ponds

bush

pond

bush new track bush

pond

bush

pond

bush

Normal

incresing canopy coverage enhanced

water decrease canopy mitigatie moisture decreasing

water decrease

Severe

Dry level

Section- Mini Ponds

PERSPECTIVE- Wetland area

Bush/ Woodland

Increasing amount of tree enhance the water storage capacity of the land

Habitat

Expanding the habitat territory allows more fauna and species to live in

Wetland

Fuctions of wetland can be habitat of species, water detention, infiltration and treatment

Bush/ Woodland

The cluster trees forms different experience around the sporting use area

Football oval

Remain part of the sporting ground for clubs and schools

PERSPECTIVE- Multi-fuction Ground

Bush/ Woodland

Increasing amount of tree enhance the water storage capacity of the land

Habitat

Expanding the habitat territory allows more fauna and species to live in

Bush/ Woodland

The cluster trees forms different experience around the sporting use area

Bush/ Woodland

The nearby bush protect and mitigate the moisture decreasig during dry period

Multi-fuction Ground (lawn)

Decease the amount of football oval but create a new ground for mutiple uses.

CONCLUSION

CONCLUSION

The hypothesis of physically participation in addressing extreme weather issue in landscape projects may be workable and positive, and be able to convey agency through this management activities. It is positive that could be seen in the case study and through the project that landscape practice could think this new participatory method is able to addressing issues in term of shaping and reframing plans and strategies in the future projection.

Although the project still has pitfalls and the room to improve, there are some areas that the project did not discuss and evaluate, such lacking data to prove this method can be worked in long term in mitigating the drought impacts. In addition, there is lack of proof of explaining how frequency and quality of the participatory approach may affect the outcome of landscape performance.

However, promoting and advocating the meaning of participation in landscape is vital and necessary in the integration in landscape development, that as human are among the nature systems, and this respond how we interact with the natural world.

BIBLIOGRAPHY APPENDIX

Plan and Strategy:

FAO, 2019, Proactive approaches to drought preparedness - Where are we noe and where do we go from here?

Furlong, Phelan & Dodson, 2017, Greening the West-Assessment of the functioning and implications of collaborative efforts to achieve urban greening in Melbourne’s West

Greening the West, 2013, Greening the West Strategic Plan - a regional approach

Melbourne Water Corporation, 2017, Melbourne Water System Strategy

Melbourne Water Corporation, 2018, CoDesigned Catchment Program for the Maribyrnong Catchment Region (including Moonee Ponds Creek)

The City of Ipswich, 2016, Big Plans for Small Creek - The Small Creek naturalisation

The City of Melbourne, 2019, Moonee Ponds Creek Strategic Opportunities Plan

The Department of Planning and Community Development (DPCD), 2010, Maribyrnong River Valley Design Guidelines

The State of Victoria Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), 2020, Victoria’s water in a changing climate - Insights from the Victorian Water and Climate Initiative

The State of Victoria Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), 2019, Protecting the Waterways of the West

The State of Victoria Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning(DELWP), 2018, Maribyrnong Strategic Directions Statement The State of Victoria Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning(DELWP), 2017, Integrated Water Management Framework for Victoria - An IWM approach to urban water planning and shared decision making throughout Victoria

The State of Victoria Department of Environment, Land, Water and Planning (DELWP), 2016, Managing extreme water shortage in Victoria-Lessons from the Millennium Drought, https://www.water.vic. gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0029/67529/ DELWP-MillenniumDrought-web-SB.pdf.pdf Adeel, Schuster & Bigas, 2008, What makes traditional technologies tick? : a review of traditional approaches for water management in drylands, Hamilton: United Nations University.

Appels, Bogaart, & van der Zee, 2011, Influence of spatial variations of microtopography and infiltration on surface runoff and field scale hydrological connectivity, Advances in Water Resources, 34(2), 303–313. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.advwatres.2010.12.003

Breen, Markwell, Walsh, & Henderson, 2012, Constructed stormwater wetland design for the dry and wet tropics. 28–37.

Buchecker, Hunziker, & Kienast, 2003, Participatory landscape development: overcoming social barriers to public involvement, Landscape and Urban Planning, 64(1), 29–46. https://doi.org/10.1016/S01692046(02)00199-8

Choi & Harvey, 2014, Relative Significance of Microtopography and Vegetation as Controls on Surface Water Flow on a Low-Gradient Floodplain, Wetlands (Wilmington, N.C.), 34(1), 101–115. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13157013-0489-7

Claghorn & Werthmann, 2015, Shifting ground: Landslide risk mitigation through communitybased landscape interventions, Journal of Landscape Architecture, 10(1), pp.6–15.

Dilling, Daly, Kenney, Klein & et al, 2019, Drought in urban water systems: Learning lessons for climate adaptive capacity, Climate Risk Management, 23, 32–42. https://doi. org/10.1016/j.crm.2018.11.001

Eiter & Vik, 2015, Public participation in landscape planning: Effective methods for implementing the European Landscape Convention in Norway, Land Use Policy,

Journal Article:

44, 44–53. https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.landusepol.2014.11.012

Gammoh, 2013, An improved wide furrow micro-catchment for large-scale implementation of water-harvesting systems in arid areas, Journal of Arid Environments, 88, 50–56. https://doi.org/10.1016/ j.jaridenv.2012.08.007

Garcia, Benages-Albert, Buchecker, & VallCasas, 2020, River rehabilitation: preference factors and public participation implications, Journal of Environmental Planning and Management, 63(9), 1528–1549. https://doi. org/10.1080/09640568.2019.1680353

Grant, Fletcher, Feldman, Saphores, & et al, 2013, Adapting Urban Water Systems to a Changing Climate: Lessons from the Millennium Drought in Southeast Australia, Environmental Science & Technology, 47(19), 10727–10734. https://doi.org/10.1021/es400618z

Hadiwijaya, Isabelle, Nadeau, & Pepin, 2021, Observations of canopy storage capacity and wet canopy evaporation in a humid boreal forest, Hydrological Processes, 35(2). https:// doi.org/10.1002/hyp.14021

Howard, P, Thompson, I, Waterton, E, & Atha, M (eds), 2013, The Routledge Companion to Landscape Studies, Routledge, London. Available from: Kanchebe Derbile, 2013, Reducing vulnerability of rain-fed agriculture to drought through indigenous knowledge systems in north-eastern Ghana, International Journal of Climate Change Strategies and Management, 5(1), 71–94. https://doi. org/10.1108/17568691311299372

McMartin, Sammel, & Arbuthnott, 2018, Community Response and Engagement During Extreme Water Events in Saskatchewan,

This article is from: