Tuesday 23 December 2008

Como Population

Some population figures for Como really caught my eye today. Did you know that Como covers 7 square kilometres, is 18% parks and has 14,000 people, 15% less than in 2001.

The predominant age group in Como is 20 - 29 years, comprising over 20% of the population. 39% of households are single- parent. Couples with children comprise just 14% of households. Renters occupy 41% of households; 50% of the homes in Como are owner-occupied

como These figures came from the real estate web site www.myrp.com.au. You can extract figures for other areas in Australia quite easily.

Tuesday 18 November 2008

Jan Doo Park

Sunday saw a gathering of about thirty five people at Jan Doo Park in the southern part of Como. This rather beautiful little park is the central piece of residential development in the area. Surrounded by beautiful trees, coloured by Jacarandas, with a safe kids' playground, a fountain, a cricket game that never ends and a couple of pergolas, Jan Doo is a peaceful refuge and a common ground for residents to meet on cool evenings.

In the past couple of years the water supply bores for the park have not functioned, partly due to lack of power supply to a new bore. Residents have expressed their frustration with this with much patience. However, on Sunday they left me in no doubt that they were reaching the limits of patience.

To the credit of City of South Perth, after discussions on Monday, two senior officers met with me on site early on Tuesday morning. The Mayor, James Best (no relation), is today in Canberra addressing the national meeting of City Mayors, and took the trouble to call on Monday night about Jan Doo Park. Councillor Les Ozsdolay called to let me know about background to the park and its history.

As a result of these calls and meetings, the City officers have reassured us that they will contact the power company immediately, will keep us informed of progress and will work to get water on the park. They also gave reassurance that they will submit a budget request for shade sail over the playground. A number of other maintenance issues, as listed by residents, were discussed and noted by the officers for action.

Thanks to Joanne Smith and James Wrathall for organising the meeting on Sunday. I'll be following progress with interest. Please feel free to have your say by clicking on "Comments" below.

Sunday 2 November 2008

Red Bull and Cycle City South Perth

Wow! Wasn't that a well organised, well attended, exciting, peaceful and enjoyable event?

I loved it. As a pilot, member of the public and Councillor I really enjoyed both days. The crowd spirit was fantastic, the venue was left clean, people had fun, the were hundreds and hundreds of bicycles and people on foot, the police had little to do and got along with everybody well.

Increased number of bicycles is such a good sign that people are making the change to healthy activities, leaving their cars behind and also leaving parking spaces free. I noticed empty parking bays all day (fantastic). A good friend suggested that the City could add a very large number of cycle lock-up points, such as rails or poles with loops. Perhaps before Australia Day? What do you think?

Having organised very many events myself, I really appreciated the fact that things seemed to go so smoothly that I didn't notice the organisation. Well done everybody :-)

Re the above photo, I have some video clips that I have edited. They can accessed by clicking here, for you to download and play. Just have the sound tuned up loud for full effect, before you begin :-)

Other high point in my weekend? Finding the new French patisserie, behind the stairs opposite BankWest. Genuine French baker, pleasant staff and croissant and "pain chocolat" to dance for. Bienvenue a Perth du Sud et bonne chance.

Sunday 14 September 2008

Community Barbecue

Wow, thanks to all the people who helped out. We had over sixty local residents to talk with each other, with John McGrath, Mayor James Best and Councillors Sue Doherty and myself.

There was lots of spirited conversation about community issues, the Canning Bridge development, Network City, local crime, traffic matters, town planning and possible future developments.

One common theme was about making sure that we keep our park. We all value Olives Reserve and appreciate its long history in the City of South Perth.

Janet Reid did a masterful job of raising community participation in the event, Lyn helped with getting the notices distributed, John and Lou did a masterful job on the barbecue, many others contributed food and help. Thank you all.

Monday 1 September 2008

South Perth- Vision for 2030- Have Your Say

The Council is seriously promoting the idea that we can have a say in how our City looks in the future. Come along and hear internationally acclaimed long- range planner Stephen Ames speak about community visioning and how you can become involved in setting the direction for the future.

Stephen Ames is currently involved in similar projects in the USA, Canada, and New Zealand, as well as several in Australia including the Gold Coast, Toowoomba 2050, Blue Mountains and Vincent Vision 2024.

When: 7pm, Wednesday 10 September
Where: Como Secondary College, gymnasium, entry off Bruce St, Como

For catering purposes please register your intent to attend
by calling South Perth Customer Focus Team on 9474 0777.

Thursday 28 August 2008

New Library and Civic Hall

At the meeting on Tuesday night Council moved on to the next stage of development of these exciting facilities, endorsing the concept plans for refurbishment and authorising the architects to proceed to detailed design. (Click on the images to enlarge)

The external appearance, for me, has visual elements of a book, a window to knowledge, and technology.

Cheryl Parrott, our Manager Library & Heritage has described the redeveloped Civic Centre Library and Hall as a focal point for the community. She describes it as providing an important social gathering point, offering a contemporary range of collections, facilities and innovative quality library, heritage and social services which support the intellectual, educational, cultural and social needs of the South Perth community. The facilities will be accessible and will be a welcoming place for people of all ages and backgrounds.

Tuesday 12 August 2008

Como Beach Damage

Recent storms have created more damage to the river edges along the freeway. This damage is mainly due to water from waves washing and pulling out large volumes of sand from underneath and behind protective structures. Erosion is working ever closer to the freeway.

While this seems at first to be an aesthetic matter for residents of South Perth, were damage to extend to the freeway there would be economic implications for the State of WA.

Here the sand beneath new pavement has been washed out, allowing recent works to collapse.

These pictures show clearly that the damage is not caused by impact, but rather by the extraction of supporting sand underneath limestone blocks and pavement.

The next area showing incipient damage is on the river edge next to the Narrows Bridge. Here the protective works are being undermined and may soon collapse, leaving the freeway at risk. Note how close this is to the traffic.

It has been suggested that 'gabions', parcels of rock wrapped up in wire, could protect the walls. Here is a picture of what happens to such parcels after a short time. The wire netting rusts and tears, leaving loose piles of small rocks. Along Mounts Bay Road there is now a large problem with what to do next.

Tuesday 3 June 2008

Como Beach Walls

Como Beach is showing more storm damage, just from the small events so far this season. You can click here for some photos that show existing and imminent collapse and erosion. I have included some explanations of how erosion happens, where relevant.

This is of serious concern beyond the City of South Perth, due to proximity to the freeway, a vital link in WA's economy. Storm damage here could stop car and train travel. The City of South Perth has been able to fund minor works. This entire section of the Swan river needs much more protective engineering.

The photographs show that waves and ripples extract fine sandy material from behind the protective limestone walls, drawing the grains out the drain holes and spaces between blocks, allowing collapse of the limestone blocks. The vertical walls are hit by the full energy of waves. Limestone blocks at the base of the walls are being drawn out, making it likely that sections of wall will collapse. There are alternative wall designs that would allow energy dissipation and less destruction. Funding for better protection is important to the economy of WA.

Erosion is also taking place in the Cloisters Reserve section, between the Canning and Mount Henry bridges. Sandbags have been placed as a temporary measure to prevent damage to the cycle path.

With the very large number of cyclists now using this path to and from the City, damage to the path at both of these locations can hinder many people getting to and from work. See blog below, about South Perth- Cycle City, to see how popular this method of transport is becoming.

Wednesday 14 May 2008

Three Cheers for Perth Transit

Here's a good news story :-)

Over the early part of the year I took the train and bus to the city quite a few times. Watching how the system worked, and listening to commuters, drivers and others, I noticed a few things that could be improved at the Convention Centre car park, the train station and Busport, and wrote to the PTA.

This week they've notified me that all the issues have been addressed. I am really impressed with their responsiveness.

The points, and PTA's actions are:

  • Dim lighting in the parking area and bus port- ACTION: Brightened the platforms up by replacing all the yellow gas- filled lights with the new white lights and addressing the colour of the facility. It is much better now.
  • Hard to see the monitor screens displaying bus times- ACTION: The TV monitors are being upgraded.
  • Difficult for pedestrians to see where to go to access the bus port- ACTION: Signs are being erected, advising passengers of the pedestrian areas.
  • Signs are pointing to the wrong places- ACTION: Signage overhaul at the Esplanade Busport, signs pointing in the wrong direction will be removed, and new signs installed. This will be taking place progressively over the next two months.
  • Info centre staff are good but queues are long- ACTION: New staff members are currently being trained to assist at the InfoCentre
  • Car entering the bus area, creating a hazard- ACTION: Addressing the issue of vehicles entering the station unauthorized, and where required infringement notices are being issued.

It is really good to see how many people are using the public transport. this sort of responsiveness from the PTA makes it even easier to use the facility. Our public transport in Perth is very good, and getting better.

Sunday 16 March 2008

Water Planning- A Long Term View

No doubt about it, much of WA is a dry place. We hear and read lots about climate change and how it is affecting our water supply. Two years ago we had an almost endless flow of messages about 'the worst drought on record' and stuff like that. As it turned out Perth was fairly dry that year, with 703 mm, while the north of the State had it's eighth wettest year ever. The capital cities of South and Eastern Australia were dry, while Australia as a whole had a slightly above- average annual rainfall. Hardly the disaster that was painted in the media.

The real issues are that our rainfall is highly variable, we don't have geography that allows many big dams (Australia is flat) and, most importantly, we continue to use more and more water. Perth is growing fast. 

Here's a plot of annual rainfall in Perth over the last hundred years, since 1876. It shows that we are getting less rainfall than we did in the 1940s, and a bit more than we got at the beginning of last century. It certainly does not show any long- term decrease in rainfall. (Click on the plot to enlarge it.)

Perth RainfallimageDry years, and wetter years, are quite common (the plot zigs up and down a lot). By the way, Perth's average rainfall is  790 mm a year. Melbourne gets less, with 650 and Adelaide much less, with 520.

The other part of a discussion of water supply is the rate that we use the stuff. In 1979 we used 130 gigalitres in Perth. In 2005 we used about 230 gigalitres (up 77%). The city is growing, fast.

Although we are doing well at reducing our individual consumption, there are lots more of us here. Population growth exceeds our rate of improvements in water use. We'll just have to get even better at being Water Wise.

Some useful links are WA State of the Environment 2007, Perth Water Users Group, Rainfall History

Have your say by clicking on 'Comments' below.

Monday 10 March 2008

Climate Change in Como

Because we live in Como, surrounded on three sides by water, and live only a couple of metres above water level, the matter of climate change is really important to us. I've written a very short synthesis of human existence in the context of climate. I hope you find it interesting.

The Earth is about 5 Billion (five thousand million) years old. For most of that time the planet has been a hot place, certainly devoid of any ice.

During the most recent half of our planet’s existence, however, there have been four ice ages, times when major ice sheets covered at least part of our planet. The earliest well-documented ice age, about 700 million years ago seems to have produced a Snowball Earth in which permanent ice covered the entire globe. The present ice age began 40 million years ago with the growth of an ice sheet in Antarctica. It intensified around 3 million years ago, with the spread of ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere. Since then, the world has seen cycles of glaciation, with ice sheets advancing and retreating on 40,000- and 100,000-year time scales.

Ice cores drilled a thousand metres into the Antarctic ice at Vostok, the coldest place on Earth, show us a history of Earth’s temperature over this recent time. Note that the plot covers the most recent half a million years only (one ten thousandth of the Earth’s life), and reads in thousands of years Before Present.

image For original data see Vostok Ice Core or just click on the plot above to enlarge it.

What you see in this history is a cycle of temperature covering ten degrees, changing on a fairly regular pattern.

We are presently at the end of a long ice age cycle, a time when significant ice sheets exist on the Earth's surface. It is very clear from this plot that the planet is warming, and has been doing so for thirteen thousand years- that's the time of the sharp jump on the left side of the plot.

Since the great ice sheets of the northern hemisphere retreated eleven thousand years ago, almost all of human migration and human history has occurred. As the ice sheets, up to two kilometres thick, melted away, most of the planet became habitable to humans, and we managed to cover the planet with ourselves, rapidly.

We live today over the sands of the Perth Coastal Plain, on dunes formed during the most recent Ice Age, about 100 thousand years ago. During that very brief time the sea level has been both higher and lower, taking the coastline both inland to the hills and out to sea past Rottnest. The evidence includes layers of shells we see when we dig in our gardens, fossil tube worm burrows on cliff tops at the beach and submerged cliffs that we see when snorkelling.

What concerns us now is that our existence in this generally, relatively speaking, green and pleasant world depends upon a particular balance of temperature, rainfall, sea levels and myriad other finely balanced factors. These factors change, and have been in change for the entire history of the Earth.

Are we making this change faster? There are many reports of acceleration in warming, some of which are highly credible. For example, see Glacial Thaw

Some really interesting things are happening now, to do with the science of climate change, the ways that our waste production and management might be influencing that change and matters of management of risk associated with these changes.

Please have your say and add to our understanding by clicking on "Comments" below.

Wednesday 27 February 2008

Sustainability Strategy

Hot topic at the moment is our Sustainability Strategy. Put simply, it is all about how we recognise the need for reducing our ecological impact on the environment.

Buildings (homes, offices, and industrial facilities) account for over 40 percent of carbon dioxide emissions. Most of these emissions come from the combustion of fossil fuels to provide heating, cooling, and lighting and to run electrical equipment and appliances. The manufacture of building materials and products, and the increased emissions from transport of materials, people and waste, also contribute a significant amount of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions

I'm suggesting that our strategy focus on reduction in burning of fossil fuels, emission of greenhouse gases, consumption of water and contribution to urban spread. The City's proposed strategy would recognise that these effects are relevant to all areas of Town Planning and to the Design, Construction and Operation of buildings, including waste disposal.

The intention of this Policy would be to:

  • Encourage design that minimised life- cycle costs, including the use of materials that will maximise durability and longevity.
  • Use resources efficiently by designing buildings that minimise energy and water use and optimise use of natural daylight and cooling breezes.
  • Use environmentally preferable products, including, (but not limited to) those without toxic ingredients and those which contain recycled content.
  • Create healthy indoor and outdoor environments for building occupants, users and communities.
  • Minimise adverse impacts that development may have upon natural and built systems.
  • Make buildings adaptable for future inclusion of innovative energy and environmental technologies as they become commercially viable.

It would be really good if others could add their thoughts by clicking on the "Comments" link below.

Tuesday 29 January 2008

Como Beach Artwork

Wow, aren't the new art forms at Como Beach good? We've been watching the developments over the walkway and these new forms really add character.

There are some photos you can see by clicking here.

Even better, on one of these fabulous summer mornings, when the air is like champagne bubbles,take a walk and see them for yourself.

By the way, wasn't the Australia Day celebration quite inspirational?

The tree at the end of Thelma Street was impressive too.

Just click on the pencil below to add your live comments to this blog.