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The density dilemma

By Ross Elliott - posted Thursday, 28 November 2019


Brisbane, along with Sydney and Melbourne, is a city dealing with the pressures of a rapidly growing urban population. Federal Minister for Cities & Population last week (19 Nov 2019) declared at a Committee for Brisbane event that he believed Melbourne – his home city – was probably 20 years behind in the infrastructure needed to keep pace with its growth. Similar observations could apply elsewhere.

It’s not just our inability to fund and deliver infrastructure at the speed required that’s seen us fall behind, it’s also the speed of growth itself. Australia’s major cities have set themselves a blistering pace in terms of urban growth, as illustrated in the chart below. Our rates of growth are similar to Chinese mega cities like Shanghai or Beijing, and well ahead of comparably productive, profitable cities of the west with qualities we often seek to emulate.

Accommodating these almost frenetic rates of growth has for more than 20 years seen Australian state and local governments adopt a pro-density housing model which seeks to prevent outward growth and to encourage higher density living in established urban areas. While there is much logic behind this, it also means – for existing residents of those areas – potentially significant changes to the residential environments they’ve been used to.

To reassure residents, planning strategies sometimes got carried away with over-promising the benefits of higher urban densities. This blurb from the 2013 version of the Draft Metropolitan Strategy for Sydney is one example: “A home I can afford. Great transport connections. More jobs closer to where I live. Shorter commutes. The right type of home for my family. A park for the kids. Local schools, shops and hospitals. Livable neighbourhoods.” Few Sydneysiders would think those promises have since been delivered. Many might suggest the opposite.

Other planners were highly critical of the infill ambitions that were central to various state and regional plans. Nationally respected planner Tony Powell AO described Melbourne’s version at the time (“Melbourne 2030”) as “superficial to the point of ridiculousness.”

He went on to say (in 2007): “The proposition in the latest crop of metropolitan strategy plans that 50% or more of future housing development can be accommodated in existing suburban areas of the major cities is patently ridiculous. These are simply unexamined  and unreliable hypotheses, not strategies.”

Fast forward to today and the arrival of higher density housing forms into traditionally low-density suburban housing is not going down well with residents. In some neighbourhoods, residents are positively hostile. To whom do they express that hostility? Not to the urban planners and architects who have actively promoted the benefits of density (while downplaying its flipside) but to their local, elected representatives.

This is democracy at work, and local representatives have a duty to reflect those concerns. In Brisbane’s case, those concerns saw the Liberal majority Council introduce restrictions on townhouse and “missing middle” housing form in low density neighbourhoods. The fact that this amendment was supported by the opposition Labor Councillors suggests it’s feedback they are getting also. The community have voiced their opinions and the legislators and elected representatives have listened. Isn’t that how it’s supposed to work?

The reality of the restrictions is far from a blanket city-wide ban, as some critics have tried to make out. Townhouses can continue to be developed in areas zoned for them: in low-medium density zones, character residential infill zones, and in medium density zones. There have reportedly also been some 40ha of ‘emerging community’ zoned land which is no longer eligible for townhouse development (which is old news). 

Neighbourhood plans are also in a process of ongoing renewal, meaning additional zones suited for townhouse development can be created in the future, especially in and around transit or infrastructure nodes. The community simply doesn’t want to see townhouses arrive in suburban streets of detached homes where the zoning is low density. They understand low density to mean just that. They want town plans to deliver on what they say.

(Previously, if a 3000m2 block was available in a low density residential zone, or if one was amalgamated, developers could apply to develop a townhouse product irrespective of the low density zone. You can understand why this went down with locals like a ton of bricks).

But it’s been the hostile reaction of some parts of the planning community which has been enlightening. There is, it seems, a low regard by some for the right of the community to have an opinion on what gets built in their neighbourhood, near the property they own and on which they pay their taxes and (for many) want to raise their family.

In this case, the Council was criticised “particularly for ignoring the advice and submissions of industry experts” because “the community doesn’t understand the full story because they are not experts in the field of City design and planning.”

The Housing Industry Association chipped in: “This is plainly and simply a political move because they want to win the election next year.” Meaning doing what the community wants and hoping to be returned on that basis is now a bad thing?

Another commented: “It’s concerning that we listen to the general public for planning in our city rather than the experts who understand growth of a city.” Wow. Let the import of that statement sink in for a moment.

The tone in all this is “leave this to the experts.” Respect your betters. If the community fail to appreciate the wider planning objective being served by the arrival of unwelcome housing forms into their immediate neighbourhoods, they need re-education. How Orwellian.

Those sentiments obviously don’t represent the majority of the urban design profession. But the industry as whole might need to be mindful that the challenges of bringing the community with them, and in describing the benefits of housing forms such as townhouses, is something that can’t be taken for granted, nor can community opinions (nor their right to hold them) be dismissed so readily as the views of “non-experts.”

So the solution? I don’t know – but slagging off at the community isn’t one of them. There are design prototypes that are perhaps less likely to provoke community resistance, and there are many people who could welcome the cost and opportunity this type of housing can provide – from low income households to seniors to first home buyers. Maybe the community hasn’t seen as much of the ‘well designed’ product they can actually afford, but rather have seen perhaps too much of the product that is cheaply designed with little regard to its lasting community impact?

Either way, a lot more listening and a lot more respect of community opinion – and the people who are elected to listen to it – would go a long way.

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This article was first published on The Pulse.



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About the Author

Ross Elliott is an industry consultant and business advisor, currently working with property economists Macroplan and engineers Calibre, among others.

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