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Community valuations of historic pocket parks: a Melbourne study

conference contribution
posted on 2003-01-01, 00:00 authored by David Nichols, R Freestone
The internal reserve, an historic form of planned open space creating semi-private parks at the rear of residential allotments and without street frontages, can be found in Australian suburban areas of diverse socio-economic status. Internal reserves commonly express the idealism of the early town planning movement, which envisaged the internal reserve as an embedded community-building mechanism with multiple potential uses. En vogue from 1910-1930, the internal reserve concept proved problematical from the outset. Even today, while many residents agree that their reserves are responsible for the special nature of their domestic environment, others are apprehensive about safety, maintenance and custodianship. Two surveys of residents living around internal reserves in four Melbourne suburbs, conducted in 1979 and 2002, reveal a variety of opinions on the potential and importance of these spaces. Local communities were found for the most part to have negative and ambiguous perceptions of these reserves. With one exception, residents did not value the parks highly as community spaces and alternative uses may need to be explored. The results suggest that a more innovative set of tools and incentives may be needed to reinvigorate the internal reserve as a significant recreation resource for local communities.

History

Title of proceedings

Leisure, Change and Diversity- 6th Biennial Conference of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies

Event

Australian and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies. Conference (6th: 2003: Sydney , N.S.W.)

Pagination

64 - 79

Publisher

Australian and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies

Location

School of Leisure Sport and Tourism University of Technology, Sydney

Place of publication

Lindfield, N.S.W.

Start date

2003-07-10

End date

2003-07-12

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2003, Australian and New Zealand Association for Leisure Studies

Editor/Contributor(s)

A Veal, C Simpson, J Jenkins

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