Clr Yarwood wrote:Please make a submission – comments here are great, but submissions feed into the process;
...
Finally – keep in mind any critical comments challenge the expertise of the internationally award winning architects/landscape architects and elite expert design panel overseeing them. That’s a team of highly qualified, experienced and world renowned people that have invested their life in the field. Hence if you are going to bag the design I ask you to first read all the material in detail. What we need is a result; having visited public squares in over 35 international cities in the last 10 years I think this is excellent.
I'll certainly be making a submission, I wonder if Sen-Ad could gather enough consensus to put in a collaborative one?
Can you tell us what is the process from this point, Councillor? This plan is being presented to us all as rather a
fait accompli; what are the points on which submissions may have an impact? I do wonder if more attention should be paid to Jan Gehl's distinction of thinking of Victoria Square as "a process not a project" (q.v.
this article from back in 2004)
I also question the notion that we should just let experts do their expert thing and leave it at that. Nobody here should need to think too hard to recall examples of expertly designed monstrosities. The
Pruitt-Igoe complex had architecture media fawning over it in 1950; 22 years later it was dynamited - "the day modern architecture died" - after a history of deep social problems; meanwhile in all that time Carr Square Village, just across the road, had nothing like those problems. Frank Lloyd Wright may be one of architecture's great auteurs, but very few of his houses are still occupied; many were destroyed, most of the survivors were bought by preservation societies and run as something like monuments or museums; the majority of the character homes that we fawn over now were built by people with no particular expertise at all.
That's not to say that expert skills aren't valuable for helping a place like Victoria Square: they are likely necessary but by themselves insufficient. Without the support of the people in the city, even the most beautiful place in the world would fail; disenfranchising people (ala Nathan Paine's admonishment "If you don't like it, just shut up.") isn't a good step for building support. Heck, failing to engage the public adequately was part of the problem with the 2002 plan crashing.