Shepparton's Maude St Mall. |
No one thing will unravel the mosaic of matters that demand
a whole of community response; a cocktail of measures must be implemented to
confront the evolving dilemmas of the 21st Century and so see the
mall become a sustainable and bustling social space.
Answers proffered by many consider the mall in isolation and
so looked at and applied through that prism they might have some immediate
positive impact, but no long-term value.
To take the mall so out of context is unfair both to it and
the greater Shepparton community.
An architect friend, who was not talking about the mall,
said his contemporaries failed when they simply drew lines around projects and
created something that misunderstood its social context, had no sympathy its
environment and so did not “talk” with its surrounds.
The mall should not be considered in isolation, rather as is
an integral part of Greater Shepparton and by implication the wider world.
Everything and every idea around which the 20th
Century was built is changing, those ideas are slipping away, and fast.
Now it gets tough. Energy scarcity; changes to our weather
systems and different social and commercial wants and needs will force a fresh
way of living upon us; the city needs densification for as oil become
prohibitively expensive, to find, extract and buy, transport will become human
powered (cycling, walking) and public rather than private; an increasingly hot
city is going to need green oases, such as the beginnings of what have now in
our mall; business is morphing from market driven capitalism to a peer-to-peer
collaborative process that will need near zero-cost social spaces such the mall
where people can gather, share and participate in their community.
A recent discussion in Brisbane about the proliferation of enclosed
shopping centres throughout Australia, and around the world, brought praise for
what they are, but it was pointed out that although entry was free, they
effectively barred low-income people for they had little value beyond shopping,
that is spending money.
Deepening the confusion, the much lauded private shopping
centres are just that; they are private and so are generally out of bounds to
public gatherings that are not about adding to the centre’s growth and profit-based
agenda.
Malls, such as that in Shepparton, have a different dynamic
in that they are public, they are not enclosed and are wonderful places for the
social milieu that is the springboard for the richness that is community.
Shepparton needs to preserve and protect its pedestrian
mall; expand and build on what exists; create active pedestrian links to the city’s
railway station in preparation for a dearth of energy; look “up-river”,
consider how the world is changing and where Shepparton needs to be in 2050.
The council of the City of Greater Shepparton, to its credit
has looked “up-river” through its Commercial Activity Centres Strategy, but has
failed to understand that the Shepparton of the 21st Century cannot
be built from the ideas of last century.
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