The Australian built environment is an arena where multicultural identity and difference are tangibly negotiated. What occurs on a daily basis in its cities is a complex series of negotiations between multiple communities, all of whom adapt their own cultures, as well as adopting elements from their surrounding environment. This paper investigates these issues by comparing the physical development within a contemporary Australian city with the social and cultural changes that have taken place in it. It asks the question. Whose culture should be sustained in this context, and on what basis? To what extent should the urban environment be reflecting of the changes, as much as the origins, of a relatively young settler society (notwithstanding the fact that its original inhabitants have a history that predates this settlement by thousands of years). More broadly, what constitutes cultural sustainability in a multicultural society, and how is, might, or should this be reflected in its built environment?
History
Publication title
The International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic, and Social Sustainability: Annual Review
Volume
6
Issue
5
Pagination
255-266
ISSN
1832-2077
Department/School
School of Architecture and Design
Publisher
Association for the Publication of Indonesian and Malaysian Studies, Inc
Place of publication
Common Ground Research Networks
Rights statement
Copyright 2019 Common Ground Research Networks and Authors
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in built environment and design