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Trendyville. the battle for Australia's inner cities

Version 2 2024-06-17, 15:11
Version 1 2015-09-07, 12:28
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posted on 2014-10-01, 00:00 authored by Renate Howe, D Nicholas, G Davison
Australia’s inner cities experienced an upheaval in the 1960s and 70s which left them changed forever. People from all walks of life who valued their suburbs – places like Balmain, Battery Point, Carlton, Indooropilly, North Adelaide or Subiaco – resisted large-scale development projects for freeways, ‘slum clearance’ and mass-produced high-rise. Unlikely alliances of post-war migrants, university students and staff, construction workers and their unions, long-term residents and city workers,challenged land-grabs and inappropriate development.

When the dust settled, Australian cities were different. Many suburbs kept their village qualities. Shopping strips were revived and cultures celebrated. While areas like Fitzroy or Redcliff were derided as ‘Trendyville’, the fate many American cities suffered – a ‘hollow core’ – had been avoided. In the process, heritage conservation, party politics, and Australian assumptions about domestic life, education and lifestyle had all been transformed.

This book is an in-depth examination of the causes and consequences of urban protest in a democracy. It shows how it changed the built environment as well as its participants, and resonated in many of our institutions including politics, media and multiculturalism.

History

Series

Australian history

Pagination

1 - 200

Publisher

Monash University Publishing

Place of publication

Melbourne, Vic.

ISBN-13

9781921867422

Language

eng

Publication classification

A1.1 Books - authored - research

Copyright notice

2014, Monash University Publishing

Number of chapters

10

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