Sustainable Designers Toolkit

Project Type: Planning & the Web

A database of “green” products sorted according to their potential ESD(ecologically sustainable development) usage (eg: conserve water, promote renewable energy) with a list of the main benefits that the product can deliver. Contact details, website and email addresses are included.

The database may be searched by action strategy, product catagories, keyword search or by browsing through various catagories.

The database can be searched using a wide range of options, with over 100 different product categories and 90 sustainability action strategies. A key feature of the database is a “Buy Local” option and the keyword search. For example you could choose to search for building finishes and fixtures using a keyword search or the product categories. Alternatively you may wish to search for non-toxic materials for plumbing and drainage using the sustainability action strategies.

The Sustainable Designers Toolkit and Green Technology Guide have been produced for the NRRS by Natural Integrated Living, an architectural and consulting group specialising in integrating the built and natural environments based on an inital concept by S J Connelly. They have a 24 year track record in delivering practical, and sustainable eco-projects across a diverse spectrum including single and multi-dwelling residential buildings, green building policy and consultancy, interior design, eco-products and technologies, indoor environment quality assessment, environmental assessment and education and training.

Location – Australia
Year – Ongoing
Client – NRRS

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News

Planning chiefs hail smarter, simpler scheme, Kelsey Munro Urban Affairs, December 7, 2011

It’s a start, but all the tough decisions are yet to be made. That’s the industry verdict on the state government’s “once-in-a-generation” overhaul of the state’s moribund Planning Act.

The Planning Minister, Brad Hazzard, yesterday released a wide-ranging issues paper that pulled together months of community consultations by review chairmen Ron Dyer and Tim Moore, confirming that the 30-year-old planning system was broken beyond repair.

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Rowan Moore, Kevin McCloud’s grand design for British Housing, Guardian 19 Nov 2011

‘The Triangle is in a tradition of model villages beloved of aristocrats, princes, of Brad Pitt in New Orleans and the Bordeaux sugar-cube manufacturer who commissioned workers’ housing from Le Corbusier. Such places can be over-scripted, too much about fulfilling their makers’ picture-book fantasies about contented communities. There is a whiff of this with Hab’s gooey talk about “making people happy”, although they are conscious of the need not to over-control. “If they decide they don’t want to grow food and just want to park cars, we’d be a bit upset,” says Isabel Allen, but in the end it will be up to the residents. Maggie Lowton sounds a note of caution by citing other communities in Swindon that started well but went downhill. No amount of forethought and attention to detail can guarantee the success of the Triangle. But at the very least it is an imaginative and well-designed project, which achieves about as much as can be done with its budget. It focuses on what matters most and gives itself the best chance of success. Which is far more rare than it should be in British house building and a much better application of celebrity philanthropy than most.’

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Climate change science being stifled by NSW Labor bureaucrats, Malcolm Holland From: The Daily Telegraph December 02, 2011

SENIOR bureaucrats in the state government’s environment department have routinely stopped publishing scientific papers which challenge the federal government’s claims of sea level rises threatening Australia’s coastline, a former senior public servant said yesterday.

Doug Lord helped prepare six scientific papers which examined 120 years of tidal data from a gauge at Fort Denison in Sydney Harbour.

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The Next Wave of Modernism: Healing Urban Landscapes, Asladirt, November 23, 2011

“The first wave of modernism was about beauty and sensuality, but the second wave may be about confrontation – confronting the mistakes of the past,” said Brad McKee, Editor, Landscape Architecture Magazine, at The Second Wave of Modernism II: Landscape Complexity and Transformation, a day-long conference organized by the Cultural Landscape Foundation at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City. McKee described the changes that have overcome American cities: the rise of global competition and the decline of large-scale manufacturing, the mass number of companies and people who fled industrial waterfronts, leaving toxic wastelands. “This is the industrial legacy designers confront.”

He added that toxic brownfield sites have proliferated over the years with devastating but often undiagnosed effects on families. The idea that human health and the built environment are linked has only been gaining steam in the past 10 years. But now at least, “obesity, diabetes, asthma, depression, anxiety can all be attributed to factors in the environment.” For McKee, the public is also now skeptical about “big ideas”, grand concepts imposed by policymakers and designers. Urban dwellers can see the damage these ideas can cause so the next waves of Modernism in cities may focus more on “places for people,” and integrating public health and ecological sustainability into design.

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S J CONNELLY CPP PTY LTD, lennox head, (new south wales), australia - town planning, village planning, environmental impact assessment, master planning, expert opinion, court testimony, internet applications in planning, social impact assessment, strategic and statutory planning advice