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Contesting ‘Sustainability' in Infrastructure Planning: The Debate of the Public Interest In Brisbane’s Boggo Road Busway Development

Version 2 2024-06-05, 07:09
Version 1 2020-01-30, 16:58
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posted on 2024-06-05, 07:09 authored by Kuniko Shibata, Paul SandersPaul Sanders
Sustainable infrastructure demands that declared principles of sustainability are enacted in the processes of its implementation. However, a problem arises if the concept of sustainability is not thoroughly scrutinized in the planning process. The public interest could be undermined when the rhetoric of sustainability is used to substantiate a proposed plan. This chapter analyses the manifestation of sustainable development in the Boggo Road Busway Plan in Brisbane, Australia against the sustainability agenda set in the South East Queensland Regional and Transport Plans. Although the construction of the Busway was intended to improve public transport access in the region, its implementation drew significant environmental concerns. Local community groups contested the ‘sustainability’ concept deployed in Queensland’s infrastructure planning. Their challenges resulted in important concessions in the delivery of the Busway plan. This case demonstrates that principles of sustainable infrastructure should be measurable and that local communities be better informed in order to fulfill the public interest in regional planning.

History

Chapter number

15

Pagination

213-230

ISSN

2326-9162

eISSN

2326-9170

ISBN-13

9781615207756

ISBN-10

1615207759

Language

English

Notes

keywords: Sustainability, Public transport, Public interest, Tansit orientated developments, Busways, Air Quality, Transport planning

Publication classification

BN.1 Other book chapter, or book chapter not attributed to Deakin

Extent

21

Editor/Contributor(s)

Yigitcanlar T

Publisher

IGI Global

Place of publication

Hershey, Pa.

Title of book

Sustainable Urban and Regional Infrastructure Development: Technologies, Applications and Management