Monday, 8 April 2019

Researchers Abstracts


Disrupting Apia Flooding through Landscape Architecture & Faasamoa

Bio: Dexell Frankie Aita is a Samoan Landscape Architect Graduate. Holding a Bachelor’s degree from the Unitec Institute of Technology, he is aspiring to be the first Samoan with a Masters in Landscape Architecture. 

 Flooding disrupts communities, commerce and ecology. An 18-month project sets out to disrupt engineering design with the braiding of Samoan traditional knowledge of water and ecological management. Overloaded infrastructure in Apia, Samoa co-exists with annual flash flooding produced from the 3 water catchments (Vaisigano River, Vailima River, and Vaiusu River), bringing about destruction to infrastructure, homes, and polluting the Apia harbour. River flooding in Samoa is a serious and reoccurring issue that generally affects the capital (Apia), located at the base of steep water catchments and along the coastal front. These tend to overflow with heavy rainfall events. The flash flooding on April 2001, directly affected approximately 5,000 residents and caused damage that was estimated to exceed $6.15 million (NZ).
The aim is to design a resilient plan for Apia, to better prepare and enable the capital to respond to climate change. This will provide an ideal platform to introduce cultural and environmentally sensitive approaches used in landscape architecture, for addressing future flooding in Samoa. This research understands that flooding in Apia is not the result of one catchment overflow, but a result of three large catchments. The scope of the investigation is directed towards the Vailima River catchment (due to the large scale of the site) as a template for change.
The braiding of Samoan knowledge with landscape architectural strategies will translate these ecological techniques for dealing with flooding to the community of Apia. Integrating Samoan art, local materials, myths and legends with the technical methods of dealing with flooding issues would make the project better suited for the Apia landscape.

Self-sufficient design: The New School of Architecture 
Master of Architecture by Project 

Okan Can Bozat 


Global climate change and increasing population causes higher amount of carbon emissions. According to huge growth in the building industry, whole energy needs are increasing and the carbon footprints of the buildings are rising rapidly. Common approach on building design, requires external systems that needs high amount of energy to provide demanded heating, cooling, air circulation and water supply. However, with the sustainable approach, all those needs for the building environment and internal atmosphere could be supplied by natural systems within a respect to environment. The purpose of this research is to discover how to achieve “self-sufficiency” on an educational building at Unitec South Campus, Mt Albert. This is to say, the term self-sufficiency in this proposal is defined as a building with lower carbon footprint, that can answer its own needs, and achieves thermal comfort with higher air quality. In order to achieve self-sufficiency, passive design methodology and zero energy approaches are going to be applied and while achieving those features, the systems are going to be used in this School of Architecture building, will also act as architectural elements on design and will define the characteristic of building.  

The Urban Regeneration of Declining CBD Periphery Zones
-The Study of the Strand Station Area in Auckland

Guanghui Jiang

Due to an increasing number of people’s agglomeration in large cities, the realm of urbanization of these cities is growing larger than before. The CBD periphery zone (CBDPZ) which is the immediate edge areas along city centres between the CBD and the suburbs are faced with several problems by this urban growth. In addition, the land is expensive especially near city centres, and CBDPZ is of high value for urban regeneration. This research by design project will analyze the issues to identify a number of approaches to address the current urban problems such as poor land use, low quality public spaces and functional isolation due to heavy traffic roads in the declining CBDPZ. 

This research aims to investigate potential approaches to regenerate the CBDPZ in large cities. After background reading and literature review, several methods will be employed including using case study, undertaking data analysis and developing research by design process. The research investigation will look at the Strand Station area which is run down. The site on the north-east edge of Auckland City Centre has similar problems to the defined CBDPZ and a great deal of potential for transit-oriented urban regeneration as well. The design project aims to identify urban redevelopment approaches for the Strand Station, which is a High-Speed Train TOD project optimizing land use, creating high-quality public spaces and encouraging connectivity and mobility. Ultimately, the proposed research not only seeks to improve Auckland urban form through redeveloping the Strand station area but also seeks to help other big cities around the world to make strategic plans for the urban regeneration of the CBDPZ. 
Keywords
the CBD periphery zone; urban regeneration; land use; high-quality public spaces; transit-oriented development; connectivity; mobility.

The Sponge City in New Zealand
Teng Sun

Abstract
With global warming as a result of climate change, extreme weather such as flooding, heat waves and drought have appeared frequently in recent years. Carbon dioxide levels have increased 40 percent since the 1700s and have warmed the lower atmosphere and surface of our planet around one degree in the last 50 years. As a consequence, evaporation and humidity keep increasing, which causes flooding and drought in many cities.

Sponge city concept was mentioned in a low carbon city and regional development science and technology forum in 2012 in China. A sponge city is a city that acts as a sponge with an urban environment planned and constructed to soak up almost every raindrop and capture that water for reuse. There are six keywords in this project, which are infiltrate, detain, absorb, clean, use and discharge. This research will mainly focus on absorb and detain sponge city changes and beautify the urban environment through function and art. The Sponge City indicates a particular type of city that does not act like an impermeable system not allowing any water to filter through the ground, but, more like a sponge, actually absorbs the rainwater, which is then naturally filtered by the soil and allowed to reach into the urban aquifers.

This research proves the ambition of the sponge city is to resolve large scale flooding problem through comparing with alternative concepts around the world, such as low impact urban design, water sensitive urban design and sustainable urban design. Also, using five case studies to summary the key landscape techniques, they are detention pond, stream landscape, widen or daylight stream, sustainable street and green roof. 

Auckland is suffering urban flooding for years, news and reports also keep showing in rainy seasons to remain people. This research will indicate the causes and effects of urban flooding in Auckland. After that, narrow down the design area to New Lynn area which is the one of the worst-hit areas in Auckland. However, the current climate, the shape and the current situation of the city cannot be changed in the short term. Therefore, how to design sponge city to adapt to the urban state is my future research direction. Then I’m going to use the New Lynn area as an example to present how to resolve urban flooding through landscape techniques.

The catchment analysis includes several different types of data from GEO maps to show the result of urban flooding and the primary design strategy. The maps include Whau catchment map, sub-catchment maps, contours map, flood-prone map, flood plains map, overland flow map, Impervious surfaces and building footprints. This chapter also mentions a rational method which can calculate the peak flooding, then using the result of the calculation to match with every design to show the improvement.

This research presents five design works which all near or in the flooding area. These five sites will combine five different landscape techniques through sponge city, which are detention pond, widen and deepen stream, rain garden, porous pavement and green roof. Then list three different design options in the first two design to show different focus and success through comparing advantage and flood capacity.


DISRUPTION TO IDENTITY: PŪTAHI A WHENUA
Te Kerekere Roycroft
Ngāpuhi – Ngāti Korokoro – Ngāti Wharara – Te Poukā



BIO: Masters of Landscape Architecture (by Project) student at Unitec. Also, having completed a Bachelor of Landscape Architecture (Unitec,2018), and Bachelor of Applied Science (landscape management focus; Massey,2017). Forging a new path has led to better understanding my own kōrero, rohe and whakapapa. Perception and narrative inform how we experience landscape.                                                                                                            

The arrival of British traders, Christian missionaries and colonial government representatives in the 1830’s disrupted Māori culture and identity. New ideologies, new cultural values, a new God, and new land relationships were introduced. Despite the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, after wars, land confiscations, and Māori language and healing experts banned, cultural genocide took place. The result is poverty, loss of land connections and inter-generational trauma.

All is not lost. A Māori cultural renaissance has taken place:  language and resilience are returning. In rural areas such as Pakanae in Hokianga, hapū members who have local jobs or subsist on their land remain to keep the coals of ahi karoa glowing. Those family members hold the memories and knowledge of identity and land connections of the hapū.  Many have moved to the cities for work or family, and younger generations are losing memories associated with their turangawaewae. The protection of those connections and the future health and management of our sacred places depend on the transfer of knowledge from those remaining to younger generations who can take action. Pūtahi a Whenua sets out to assist in knowledge transfer as well as providing techniques and stimulus to enable awareness, involvement in skilled land management, and hapū resilience.

Initial guidance provided by whānau has informed research along the most respectful and fruitful path. Adopting a kaupapa Māori methodology, the desires and aspirations of Iwi/hapū have been shared and linked to significant sites and whakapapa. More collective understanding of our stories, songs and memories, enable us to connects impetus, through knowledge transmission, collaboration and design; to outcomes that enable future aspirations for these places. 

Roiho is the inspiration and test case for this project. Roiho is a wāhi tapu in Pakanae, where my father is buried, it is the burial ground and former papakainga of our rohe. Roiho is prone to wave erosion, sea level rise, neighbouring agricultural stressors and land use change. Understanding and motivation are both important factors when planning for the future of any landscape.  Linking GIS mapping to oral narratives of place and cultural landscapes can not only enable whānau to understand the importance of those places but to assess the effects of climate change, planning requirements and legislative changes and opportunities, and to therefore better manage land for their future. Pūtahi a whenua joins whānau in an integrated response for our valued homeplace.


The Dementia Park
Chentong Wang

Dementia, or another name, Alzheimer, can be defined as the mild cognitive impairment. People experiencing dementia not only lost survival abilities, such as poor memory, but also have emotional disease, such as depression, anxiety, even apathy. 
In the past, dementia is a common brain disease for elderly. Whilst, the situation has changed that middle age group over 45 are possible have dementia. The latest statistics reveals that over 60,000 New Zealanders have a dementia diagnosis and the population is predicted to increase in terms of demographic population change. It is not a unique instance that Scotland and UK have the similarly increased tendency as New Zealand and these two countries have designed specific public parks for sufferers suffering dementia to encourage them to do outdoor activities for developing their physical and mental health. Actually, most of sufferers with early stage dementia are able to survive alone and they need open public spaces to do exercises and meet new friends, which have positive impact on slowing down the deterioration. Thus, it is necessary to create public parks for people with dementia at the early stage in order to satisfy their needs instead of locking them at home or sending them into care villages.
The aim is to improve the wellbeing of early stage sufferers through making them feel safe, comfortable and confident in outdoor public environment leading to their greater empowerment. This project will investigate the extent to how to design dementia –friendly parks for people experiencing early stage dementia in Auckland. After collecting related data and selecting a site, it will evoke a completed design plan. This kind of public park not only satisfy sufferers with dementia needs, but also healthy old people.


Zahra Baradaran Khalkhali


Applying a BIM-based Approach in Designing 
Flexible Housing

In designing a house usually it is common to be focused on the current needs of clients and users, but soon these initial needs will change for several reasons like family growth, ageing, and changing lifestyle. Different solutions for this issue have been suggested by architects. Flexible Housing is a type of dwelling that has the ability to adjust to changing needs of its occupants. Although all the qualitative research indicates that this type of dwelling is an economic and sustainable solution, there is little quantitative data to support this argument. The reason is that the real financial benefit of Flexible Housing will only be recognizable when in spite of the routine procedures __ that everything is done based on immediate expenditure __ whole life costing is taken into account. 
Building Information Modelling (BIM) is an almost new approach in architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry. Applying BIM potentials in design process could help the architect to make better architectural decisions in the first place as there are enough quantitative data to support the cost-benefit analysis of the design. This research aims to design a flexible house using a BIM supported design process which will be done in the form of a detached house in Auckland.
To achieve the purpose of this research, first, according to the literature review the main features of a flexible house have been determined. Among different techniques that have been applied by architects to achieve flexibility, in this project, ‘slack space’ has been chosen. This idea will allow us to add flexibility to design by preparing some unprogrammed spaces to be occupied by users to address their new needs in the future. These phases will be done through a BIM-based design process so we will use its potentials especially in cost estimation and documentation.


Key Words: Flexible Housing, Building Information Modelling (BIM), slack space, whole life cost












Critics CV

REBECCA JERRAM
Landscape Architect BA, MRRP, MLArch, Dip Sust Reg AILA 2013  NZILA 2015
I have worked across the spectrum of RMA Planning, Urban Design, and for the last 10 yrs Landscape Architecture, in New Zealand and overseas. I am passionate about creating bespoke, naturalised and resilient environments, and have professional expertise in technical detailing and the contractual
aspects of landscape construction.Recent work has focussed on high -end delivery of ecological and public open space projects, and program management for  threatened Kaurilands for Dept of Conservation.

RAU HOSKINS
Director
Ngāti Hau, Ngāpuhi, BArch, MArch(Hons), Pae Matua Ngā Aho

As a director of designTRIBE architects, Rau has over 25 years experience working with Māori community-based design projects and has for the past 20 years specialized in the design of Māori educational institutions in the wider Auckland area. He has worked extensively as an urban and cultural design consultant, as well as in iwi liaison capacities on a range of large public projects where he has co-developed the Te Aranga design principles with Tāmaki mana whenua. Rau sits on the Ministerial Advisory Group to the Minister of Housing, is active in Māori housing advocacy and papakāinga design projects as well as sitting on the Auckland Council Urban Design, Public Arts Advisory and Heritage Advisory Panels. Rau teaches part-time at the Unitec Department of Architecture and has been active in researching both traditional and hybrid Māori dwelling construction techniques. He presented the 13-part TV series Whare Māori, which won the AFTA for best information programme at the 2012 Aotearoa Film and Television Awards.

Elvon Young
Senior Lecturer AUT

Master of Art & Design with First Class Honours (AUT University)
Bachelor of Architecture with Honours (The University of Auckland)
Bachelor of Architectural Studies (The University of Auckland)
Bachelor of Commerce in Marketing and International Business (The University of Auckland)

AAA (Auckland Architecture Association) - Past President
Young + Richards - Director
EGG (Emerging Geometries Group) - Co Director
NZIA (New Zealand Institute of Architects) - Member
DINZ (Designers Institute of New Zealand) - Member

Research interests:
Digital & Parametric Design Methodologies
Generative Systems
Modular Design & Construction Technologies
Architecture
Interiors
Furniture & Products
Selected presentations and publications:
Publications

Contributor to 'Telecom Prospect 07' book, published by City Gallery, Wellington.
Contributor to 'Barcode' book, published by Balasoglou Books, Auckland.
Joint Editor 'Paper House' book, published by Auckland University of Technology, Auckland.
Various reviews and profiles in magazines such as : Urbis, Home, Architecture New Zealand, Interior Details

Ben van Bruggen
Manager of Auckland's Urban Design Strategy team in the Auckland Design Office & Director at van Bruggen Urbanism

I am a professional Urban Planner with more than 20 years experience working in the public and private sectors in the UK and internationally. I provide strategic advice to private and public sector clients on urban planning, urban design and architectural aspects of planning applications; Master Planning.

I'm about to take on the Manager of the Urban Design Strategy unit within the Auckland Design Office.

As Director of van Bruggen Urbanism I add value to complex schemes by acting as a critical friend and preparing design statements for planning applications. I contribute to design briefs for new projects as well as being involved in the design development. I also prepare evidence for and appear at planning inquiries and hearings to give expert evidence relating to urban design and planning.

I am involved in major projects giving expert advice on the design approach, the quality of the scheme and how the planning and design aspects of any planning application need to be communicated. Design advocacy and negotiation through the planning system are key skills.

As joint Head of Urban Design at Savills, and a Director in the London Planning team, I worked to established a national team of 15 urban designers and graphic designers to work on projects in the UK and Internationally. 


I led projects in China, Russia and Montenegro as well as major projects in London. I also assist clients in getting the most from their architects and master planners for complex urban projects. One of my particular area of specialisation is in negotiating design through the planning process, including liaising with statutory bodies such as the Greater London Authority, English Heritage and local planning authorities as well as review panels such as Design Council cabe.


Megan Rule
Megan Rule graduated with honours from the Auckland School of Architecture in 1992 and worked on award winning projects, including Axis Building, D72 (Commercial Refits) and St Helier Residence with Auckland practice Patterson Co Partners until 1998. Prior to completing her degree she traveled extensively while based in the UK working for large commercial practice RHWL. In 1995 Megan participated in an international summer school based out of Macerata (Marche region) and Rome, Italy. From 1998 an extended break from the industry evolved into establishing an independent practice, South Pacific Architecture in 2000, with an expanding interest in the investigation of spatial and material context to produce environmentally sensitive enduring architecture.


Guest Lecturer Auckland University School of Architecture 2003, 2004, 2005.

Member of the NZIA NZ Awards Jury 2005, 2006

Bryce Julyan

Senior Technical Director - Environments at Beca
A Senior Technical Director in Beca Ltd, Bryce provides strategic, technical direction on planning across New Zealand, Australia and the Pacific. He is passionate about the planner’s role in creating good urban environments, the infrastructure to support them and strengthening the role of planners in collaborative teams to achieve good environmental and development outcomes. 

With 30 years’ experience as a planner in both NZ and the UK, Bryce is an active member of the NZ Planning Institute, having served on the Board since 2008 and having completed two terms as Chair, he continues as Immediate Past Chair to Chair the NZPI Professional Standards Committee. Bryce is also Vice President of the Australasia and Pacific region for the Commonwealth Association of Planners (CAP) with a focus on building networks and capacity. He represents CAP and NZPI on a number of international initiatives including Planners for Climate Action (P4CA) and the Global Planners Network. 


Working with a wide range of clients, including central and local government agencies, transport and infrastructure providers, commercial, hotel and residential development organisations, Bryce leads planning project teams on major projects particularly in the urban transport and development sector.

Charlotte Grieve
Landscape architect at Auckland Council
Landscape Architect at Auckland Council, with experience working mostly in community and public space design. Experience seeing projects from initial concept design to built construction, overseeing small to medium projects, and supporting on larger ones. About 7 years working experience, including a year and a half working in Sydney, Australia as a graduate. Skilled in ArchiCAD, SketchUp, and Adobe Programs. Graduated with an undergraduate and masters degree in landscape architecture, from Victoria University of Wellington, with a period of 6 months study abroad in Copenhagen.




Monday, 1 April 2019

First Workshop Timetable




Nga Aho Hui

Te Kerekere and Dexell present their initial research work to the 2019 Nga Aho hui , Wellington.