Architecture Australia

So, we’ve declared a climate and biodiversity emergency. Where to from here?

Introduction: what to do in an emergency

The main pressures facing the Australian environment today are the same as they have been for years: climate change, land-use change, habitat fragmentation and degradation, and invasive species.1 In 2016, almost silently, the Bramble Cay melomys ( Melomys rubicola) was the first mammal in global history to become extinct because of sea-level rises caused by human-made climate change – and it happened right here in Australia.

In 2018, the World Green Building Council (WorldGBC) called on public and private sectors “to reach net zero operating emissions … by 2030, and to advocate for all buildings to be net zero carbon in operation by 2050.”2 In 2019, hundreds of Australian architects followed the lead of UK-based architecture firms by forming Architects Declare and declaring a “climate and biodiversity emergency,” acknowledging that buildings and construction play a major part in breaching the earth’s ecological boundaries.3

Isn’t this something for future architects to worry about? The answer is a resounding no,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Architecture Australia

Architecture Australia4 min read
Commendation
(COUNTRY) Whadjuk Noongar (JURY CITATION) The jury was impressed by the quality of design in this project, which supports First Nations students of St Catherine’s College at the University of Western Australia. The living and learning facility create
Architecture Australia1 min read
Selected Writers And Photographers
Kieran Wong is a co-founder and partner at The Fulcrum Agency, a creative consultancy that leverages community and social outcomes through evidence-based design strategy, advocacy and research. (GUEST EDITOR, PAGE 15) Emma Williamson is a co-founder
Architecture Australia6 min read
Cobar Dunn Hillam Architecture and Urban Design
Pairs of complements, feminine and masculine, static and dynamic, the circle and the line, describe the profound duality of human experience. Folk dances all over the world are danced in either circles and square or lines. The stone circles at Avebur

Related Books & Audiobooks