Australian historiography has generally treated both the architecture and the industry of non-Western immigrants as marginal phenomena. However, Chinese settlements were not only integral to the nineteenth-century goldmining industry in Australia, but also critical to the wider development of northern Australia. Beyond this, Chinese settlers were instrumental in the establishment of market gardening, plantation agriculture, cabinet making, and laundry industries in the late nineteenth century, all of which had architectural manifestations that provided integral if unprivileged elements to Australia’s developing cultural and aesthetic landscape. The following text aims to provoke ongoing questions about Australia’s architectural identity in a context where reconsideration of the integral role of Chinese settlers in the development of Australian society might not only apply more widely to the flows of people from China in the period of Australia’s establishment as a nation but also to the contributions of Chinese-Australian industry to the local built environment.
History
Publication title
Fabrications
Volume
29
Pagination
184-206
ISSN
1033-1867
Department/School
School of Architecture and Design
Publisher
Routledge
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Rights statement
Copyright 2019 The Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Industrial construction design; Understanding Australia’s past; Expanding knowledge in built environment and design