Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle explained
Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle |
Commissioned: | Honorary Royal Commission of the Legislative Council |
Purpose: | Regional planning strategy |
Date Created: | 1955 |
Image Size: | 180px |
The 1955 Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle (also known as the Stephenson, or Stephenson-Hepburn Report) was prepared for the Government of Western Australia by Gordon Stephenson and Alistair Hepburn.[1] The plan was the first regional plan for Perth, and provided the basis for land use zoning under the Metropolitan Region Scheme.[2] Even though not every recommendation of the report was adopted it is considered to have provided the underlying template for the modern development of Perth.[3] The plan was superseded by the Corridor Plan for Perth in 1970.[4]
Background
The 1928 Town Planning & Development Act provided for local authorities to prepare a town planning scheme, but did not include provisions for the creation of any overarching regional scheme.[5] In 1952, the report of an Honorary Royal Commission of the Legislative Council recommended metropolitan planning for the centres of Perth and Fremantle.[6] This led to the commissioning of architect Gordon Stephenson in 1953 to produce a plan for the metropolitan area of Perth and Fremantle.
Implementation and legacy
The recommendations of the 1955 Plan foreshadowed, anticipated or directly contributed to the following outcomes:
- The creation of a Metropolitan Region Planning Authority in 1960 to implement the recommendations of the report.
- The creation of the Metropolitan Region Scheme in 1963, which amongst other things, reserved land for a regional highway network and made provision for regional and district open space.
- The creation of a single, statutory authority responsible for the planning and administration of Western Australia's regional road network.
- The creation of eight new freeways and highways through the metropolitan area.
- The partial demolition of the Pensioner’s Barracks on St Georges Terrace in 1966.
- Community opposition to the construction of an aquatic centre in Kings Park, leading to the defeat of two bills in parliament in 1957/58, and the eventual construction of the Beatty Park aquatic centre in North Perth.
- The construction of a new Council House on St Georges Terrace in 1963, consolidating the City of Perth's various offices around the central business district.
- The adoption of building by-laws throughout local government areas regulating housing density through plot ratio controls.
- The preparation of a comprehensive plan for the Kwinana industrial and port hinterland.
- The preparation of coordinated plans for coastal spaces.
- Sinking of the railway line through the Perth CBD, initially investigated in the 1960s, but only completed by the Perth City Link project several decades later.
Analysis
A 2012 academic review of the Plan stated that Stephenson's ideas were those of a modernist town planner, influenced by Le Corbusier and the modernism movement.[7] Stephenson's plan was identified by George Seddon as giving primacy to the automobile, and responsible for making Perth the worst adapted capital city for public transport.[8] Other academics note that whilst Stephenson did allow for extensive public transport systems, the implementation was left to state government agencies working within a political culture that favoured the private automobile.[9]
Chief Justice Wayne Martin described the plan as creating "a region which is essentially a network of dormitory suburbs linked by freeways in search of a soul".[10]
See also
Notes and References
- Book: Stephenson. Gordon. Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle. Hepburn. J. A.. Government of Western Australia. 1955. Western Australia.
- Hill. Louis R.. 2005. Guiding Perth's Growth: A Regional Perspective. Berkeley Planning Journal. 18. 1. 10.5070/BP318111504. UC Bereley. free.
- Gregory. Jenny. 2012. Stephenson and metropolitan planning in Perth. Town Planning Review. 83. 3. 297–318 . 10.3828/tpr.2012.17 .
- Book: The Corridor Plan for Perth. Metropolitan Region Planning Authority. 1970. Western Australia.
- Collins. D. J.. 1960. Perth Metropolitan Planning. Royal Australian Planning Institute Journal. 1. 9. 8–13. 10.1080/00049999.1960.11509624.
- "Report of the Honorary Royal Commission on the Town Planning and Development Act Amendment Bill" (PDF). Parliament of Western Australia. 1951.
- Gregory. Jenny. Gordon. David. 2012. Gordon Stephenson, planner and civic designer. Town Planning Review. 83. 2. 269–278. 10.3828/tpr.2012.15.
- Book: Seddon. G. A City and its Setting: Images of Perth, Western Australia. Ravine. D. Fremantle Arts Centre Press. 1986. Fremantle.
- Brown, Sarah (July 2008) Imagining 'Environment' in Australian Suburbia: An Environmental history of the suburban landscapes of Canberra and Perth, 1946-1996. Thesis. University of Western Australia. p132. Archive.
- Martin . Wayne . 16 November 2009 . State Administrative Tribunal Conference to mark 80 years of Town Planning Law in Western Australia . . The Importance of Town Planning Law . 10 August 2023 .