For a long time, waterfronts have served as both a utilitarian and symbolic part of a city’s identity. They have served as interchange points in the evolution of Australian cities, where infrastructure meets creativity, the economy meets ecological, and land meets the sea. The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries saw a significant reconsideration of what waterfronts may be all over the world, with former port zones and industrial docks being repurposed as municipal spaces as well as redevelopment grounds.

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Edge of Ambition in Urban Design: Barangaroo and the New Urban Imagination

  • Ali Cheshmehzangi

摘要

For a long time, waterfronts have served as both a utilitarian and symbolic part of a city’s identity. They have served as interchange points in the evolution of Australian cities, where infrastructure meets creativity, the economy meets ecological, and land meets the sea. The late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries saw a significant reconsideration of what waterfronts may be all over the world, with former port zones and industrial docks being repurposed as municipal spaces as well as redevelopment grounds.