Howard Maclean Profile picture
Sep 2, 2023 16 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Alright, after some chat about decentralisation last night, How Canberra Became The Worst City for Transport in Australia Due to Urban Planner Driven Decentralisation, a thread.

To begin with, this is Canberra - a city ~40kms long and ~25kms wide, pop ~474,000 or so. Image
Canberra is (as most people know) an incredible example of intentional urban sprawl. This happened chiefly because Peter Harrison, the NCDC chief planner in the 60s, really hated cities, apartment and terraces.
This led him to be a champion of car dependent suburbia, and led to one of the most insane plans for car based sprawl anywhere in the world, the Y-Plan, where Canberra would keep creating self-contain urban villages out to 100s of kms away. Image
Now the exact rationale for the Y-Plan among Canberra urbanists is something of a topic of debate. The original consultation had only one objective - reducing congestion via some really primitive 1960s traffic modelling. Image
But it's also true that over time, the Y-Plan acquired this folk rationale of also being about this idea that we could segregate our city into these "urban villages" that people wouldn't need to leave - work and play in the same local area. Image
This was only possible because the NCDC had both virtually unlimited money, no democratic accountability and complete power to reallocate employment by ordering government departments to move. Try this anywhere else, and reality and economic gravity would intervene to stop it.
And of course, as soon as the NCDC was dissolved with self-government in the 1989, it stopped. Employers moved to where they always wanted to be - in civic in the centre of Canberra. East Gunners has been waiting for a major government employer that will never come for 30 yrs. Image
But a lot of government departments were successfully scattered, notably the Department of Social Services in Tuggeranong, on the extreme southern periphery of Canberra. Image
What happened of course is that the urban village model broke down. People moved jobs. Households formed between couples where they had different jobs in different districts. Which means, in Canberra, commuting from Gungahlin to Tuggeranong is pretty common. Image
A 45 minute plus commute in a city of less than 500,000 people is insane. It's a similar commute as working in Melbourne City and living in Croydon, except Canberra is an order of magnitude smaller than Melbourne. Image
This is reflected in the commute times data from Grattan. Canberra's median commute distance is actually around the same as Sydney, and its median commute time is longer than Adelaide, a city almost twice our size. Image
The challenges of decentralised employment centres for city as labour markets was put forcefully by Alain Bertaud in Order without Design. Dispersion means that transport challenges are just much harder to ensure effective labour markets. Image
The scale of this failure cannot be overstated. Canberra is the only major Australian city built for the car. The only city planned for it. We had huge amounts of resources for transport planning and infrastructure. And for our size, we ended up the worst of the pack.
CBDs exist for a reason. They maximise urban agglomeration effects, knowledge spillovers and increase productivity, but they also minimise commuting times for potential workers. The centre is the centre. This minimises transport infrastructure requirements via radial networks. Image
By contrast, in Canberra we have spent huge sums of money creating an elaborate system of orbital freeways designed to not get people from the edge to the centre, but from edge to edge (because of decentralisation). This is expensive for a city of under 500k people. Image
Going forward, dealing with the legacy of the Y-Plan will be a big challenge, to keep congestion and commuting costs low. Increased density in inner ring suburbs is a major step, but chances are we're going to be spending many more billions on transport as a result.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Howard Maclean

Howard Maclean Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @HowardFMaclean

Sep 9
Against my better judgement I'll be watching @QandA tonight. Strap yourself in, I have no doubt we're going to see some absolutely incredible takes, and I'll be documenting my witnessing of those takes here. 🧵
@QandA We're off, and PJ has established the contrast as being about superannuation dipping vs tax concessions after declaring that supply side measures "aren't going to get there", so we're off to a flying start before the credits.
@QandA First question is up, and it's about if the RBA is out of touch of the community, harking back to Phil Lowe's comments about people taking in a lodger. O'Neil is up first, and talks about how the fundamental problem is about undersupply.
Read 45 tweets
Aug 22
I have a theory about why the Sydney Metro has been creating such a moment in the Discourse. Australia has always been in a state of transition, between where we are, and where we're going. Sydney Metro is a glimpse into that future - and how it could be could be very good. Image
Australia woke up one morning and realised that we had actually built something world class. Not just good, but world leading, one of the most advanced urban transit systems globally, something far surpassing anything built in the US this century.

And the reaction was one part elation, one part surprise, one part disbelief - "I can't believe something this good got built in Australia."

Read 15 tweets
Sep 28, 2023
With both Victoria and NSW exploring pattern book designs with streamlined planning approval processes, it's time to discuss why this approach is good, and why @MissingMidCBR recommended the same for Canberra.
To begin with, imagine if we built cars the same way we built homes. Every car manufacturer would be an artisan craftsperson, making each car either custom just for you, or in small batches. Image
Now there are still *many* design rules the car must comply with for safety, and the carcafter needs to ensure that each custom, bespoke design didn't break any of those rules. That's really hard, skilful, lengthy work, and a lot of designs will be defective.
Read 9 tweets
Jun 13, 2023
This article is a work of art. It’s like someone distilled all of the left-coded NIMBY talking points in a single tract. Unfortunately, it’s not satire but it does give us an excellent opportunity to examine each of these points.

crikey.com.au/2023/06/13/hou…
The YIMBY thesis is simple. We have planning rules that place either ban or restrict new housing in much of our cities. If we relaxed these rules, more housing would be built. This would lower rents compared to what they would otherwise be. Rundle says this is wrong. Image
We do now have an abundance of evidence that increasing the supply of housing does drive down rents. It’s also incredibly obvious that when you legalise housing via upzoning, that increased housing gets built.

rba.gov.au/publications/r…
Read 21 tweets
Jun 7, 2022
A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a thread about how heritage listing this building would be catastrophic to the sustainability, walkability, and prosperity of our city. Well, the Heritage Council has provisionally registered it, and folks its really bad. #Canberra #CBR #Urbanism 🧵
Here’s a link to the Heritage Council’s reasons. There are 8 grounds for Heritage listing places in Canberra, and the Heritage Council found that this building only satisfied 1- ‘Importance to the course or pattern of the ACT’s cultural or natural history’
yoursayconversations.act.gov.au/former-commonw…
The Heritage Council was unsatisfied that the building was aesthetically or architecturally significant. It also isn’t satisfied that the building will contribute to an understanding of the ACT’s cultural history, or of any importance to a community or cultural group or so on
Read 28 tweets
May 24, 2022
So there’s a nomination to heritage list 187 London Circuit - a vacant 3 story building built in 1967.If successful this will damage Canberra’s livability, sustainability, walkability, affordability, and prosperity. A🧵 to explain why. #CBR Image
This site is zoned for CZ1 (core zone), with a known redevelopment intention to RL617 (the tallest buildings in civic can go) - it’s the highest density of use zone permissible in the inner north or south. Here it is on the left. Image
And that's a good thing, because it’s one of the most centrally located sites in Canberra. It’s right next to the legislative assembly bus stops at the nexus of the ACT bus network, a 3 minute walk away from Canberra Centre, across the road from the Legislative Assembly. Image
Read 17 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(