Public art can blend both form and function, blurring boundaries between the street object and the outcome people get from their engagement with it.
Making art an everyday experience is integral to some of the best public spaces and cities around the world. The right mix of permanent or temporary installations can reflect identity and create vibrancy in an area.
The artsy bus shelter pictured above (left) offers a playful and engaging option for those seeking transportation. And the water droplet shape – pictured above right – first appears to be a sculpture, but on closer inspection reveals itself to be a water fountain for refilling drink bottles.
The design of the fountain – called the O fountain – is courtesy of Melbourne based ‘O Initiative’, that aims to reduce the number of disposable water bottles purchased by changing the way people drink tap water in public spaces.
The fountain pictured is outside the Noosa Tourist Information Bureau, and is a collaboration between The O initiative, Noosa Shire Council and Unitywater as part of an ongoing commitment to providing water bottle refilling stations to remove reliance on single-use plastic bottles.
Local contemporary indigenous artist Dr. Bianca Beetson was commissioned to design and paint a Noosa essence water theme onto the fountain, to celebrate Noosa’s indigenous heritage.
Bianca notes that: “The pink lines represent the ocean and the connected rivers and waterways around the Noosa region, while also representing my matriarchal bloodline and connection to country. The surrounding colours represent the Noosa landscape, various native flora and fauna representing the colours of the map of Aboriginal Australia.”
Public art elements that weave in points of intrigue in a layered, textured manner can help tell a story about a place and create memorable, comfortable and engaging spaces.
However, the process of coordinating a public art project can be arduous. Other than the standard wall or utility box there is often no ideal existing canvas in the public realm. Custom-created work can bring challenges such as budget, artist briefs and liaising with many stakeholders.
The O fountain is a sculpture that serves a blank canvas for a local artist, and is also a Watermark certified water refilling station.See more examples of collaborations between the O Initiative, local artists, Councils and other place custodians on the O Initiative website and social media.
Human-made materials now weigh more than all life on Earth combined:
All human-made materials – such as steel, concrete, metal, bricks, asphalt and plastic – now outweigh all life on Earth, according to a paper published in Nature.
The researchers say they wanted to provide an objective and rigorous measure of the reality of the balance between humans and nature.
Concrete, a building block of our cities and towns, accounted for the most mass, followed by steel, gravel, brick and asphalt, reports Maddie Stone for National Geographic.
Plastic is also a key player in tipping the scale, reports the Guardian – and by itself is double the weight of all animals combined.
The study shows that the stamp of humanity has been increasing in size rapidly since the beginning of the 20th century, doubling every 20 years.
Over the decades there are rises and dips in human impact, including sharp increases after the switch in the 1950s from bricks to concrete and the use of asphalt for pavements in the 1960s.
We are now at a crossover point, the researchers say – in the year 2020 the amount of human-made mass has now surpassed all global living biomass.
On average, for each person on the globe, human-made mass equal to their bodyweight is now produced every week.
If human production continues at this rate, the weight of our impact will exceed 3 teratonnes by 2040.
The study is being hailed as evidence that Earth is now in the Anthropocene – a proposed geological epoch where human activity is the dominant influence on climate and the environment.
Photo: New York cityscape by Reppihc8, Wikimedia Commons.
The Street Furniture Australia factory, in Regents Park, Western Sydney, is both a manufacturing hub and R&D studio for our Australian-designed and made street furniture products. We run fun and informative group events for customers throughout the year, to share how products are designed, tested and built, and the latest products and projects. Director of Tract Julie Lee said: “It was a great opportunity for our team to look behind the scenes and understand the innovation, research and climate positive outcomes Street Furniture Australia is focusing on. Thank you for having us!” Place Design Group Associate, Liam Isaksen, said: “The factory tour is a fun experience to learn about the design and manufacturing process of public furniture we use in landscape architecture design. Seeing the work behind the scenes and …
Did you catch these most-read case studies, furnishing tips, new product announcements and special industry events in your StreetChat updates in 2023? Each month our StreetChat enewsletter publishes new projects, products and trends from the public domain; subscribe to receive it in your inbox. 10. Which design firm can see Longhorn Cattle from their office window? 2 countries. 9 cities. 300 landscape architects. Street Furniture Australia and USA partner Spruce & Gander visited offices in Australia and Texas. There were key similarities and some notable standouts. 9. Jazz at The Mint: Product and Book Launch Sydney landscape architects gathered at the iconic Mint Courtyard to launch a design book by our founding directors Darrel Conybeare and Bill Morrison, and expansions to the Linea collection. 8. 2023 Good Cause Giveaway goes to …
Street Furniture Australia has designed and built prototype charging stands as part of a Transport for NSW program to deliver free phone chargers at 15 Sydney train stations. Developed by Street Furniture Australia’s inhouse industrial designers in collaboration with Transport for NSW, the prototypes offer wireless, USB-A and USB-C charging, and can power 7 devices at once. They were built at the Street Furniture Australia factory in Western Sydney. Two Power Spots are now installed at Liverpool and Campbelltown stations. The $1 million Power Spots Project rollout to 15 transport hubs including Bankstown, Hurstville, Lidcombe, Penrith, Wynyard, Central, Town Hall and Bondi Junction will be completed by late 2024. NSW Transport Minister Jo Haylen said the Power Spots provide peace of mind: “In the modern world, our phones are our …
Google allowing employees to hold some meetings outdoors: Google has begun holding in-person meetings outdoors on company campuses as it prepares for employees to return to offices next year, according to CNBC. The company said it is trialing socially-distanced meeting formats called “onsite off-sites” as it tries to find ways to hold more employee collaboration amid the pandemic, and to bring aboard new hires. Google was the first major tech company to ask employees to stay home when the pandemic started, and is now experimenting with ways to gather people on campuses slowly and safely. It gave workers the option to work from home until summer of 2021. In September, after finding that most employees wanted to return in a part-time capacity, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said the company would …
Seoul is Planning ‘Wind Path Forests’ to Direct Fresh Air to the CBD: Seoul has announced plans to bring a concept called ‘wind path forests’ to life, to direct clean air into the city, absorb particles and lessen the urban heat island effect. Trees will be placed close together along rivers and roads to create wind paths so clean and cool air generated at night from Gwanaksan Mountain and Bukhansan Mountain can flow into the centre of Seoul. Three kinds of forests will direct and purify air, according to Cities Today. Wind-generating forests, including species such as pine trees and maple trees, will be cultivated so that they direct the fresh air from the forest to flow towards the city. Connecting forests will feature air-purifying plants, such as wild cherry …
Norman Foster on the Pandemic Impact: Though everything currently seems different, in the long term rather than changing anything, Covid-19 will accelerate and magnify trends already in place, the well-known British architect writes for the Guardian. Throughout history the crises of the day have hastened the arrival of the day’s solutions – fireproof buildings, sewage systems, green parks, the automobile, he writes. We should not expect our future to be two-metre distancing – “The last major pandemic of 1918-20 created deserted city centres, face masks, lockdowns and quarantines. But it also heralded the social and cultural revolution of the 1920s with newly built gathering spaces: department stores, cinemas and stadiums. “What might be the equivalent hallmarks of our coming age, after Covid-19?” See the article, The Pandemic will Accelerate the …