EXHIBITIONS
Olympic Cities: Designing for Winning
“Olympic Games are about contest, spectacle and cities. Design is therefore
not flags and bunting, not expensive over-elaboration, but the necessary ordering
of size and significance to give an appropriate, characteristic and memorable
background to the world’s biggest peacetime event.” Lawrence Nield
A must see for Olympic planners and anyone interested in the effect on cities
that hallmark events like the Olympics cause. The focus of the exhibition is
Australia’s premier mind in the field of planning for Olympics, Lawrence
Nield.
Lawrence shares his experience working on various aspects of the bids for the
Sydney, Athens and Beijing Olympics. The Barcelona Olympics will be included
to show a major shift in Olympic planning and London will be featured as a summary
of Olympic thinking to date.
9 November 2007 to 17 February 2008
9am – 5pm
Old Parliament House
King George Terrace
Parkes
Canberra, ACT
Admission to the exhibition is free after admission to Old Parliament House of
$2 Adult, $1 Child or $5 Family.
The Athletic Village: Designs to Combat Obesity
Design and architecture students from around Australia have entered the Biennial’s
Athletic Village Design Ideas Competition. The competition called for students
to:
- Explore the impact of design on obesity.
- Encourage innovation and design excellence.
- Explore multidisciplinary design solutions which encourage collaboration in
particular between the fields of design and health.
- Stimulate debate regarding the capacity of design to improve public health
outcomes.
The Athletic Village Design Ideas Competition recognises that obesity is a critical
issue affecting millions of people around the world. It affects not only individuals,
but societies as a whole, placing an increasing burden on health and financial
systems through secondary diseases, conditions and their costs. The Athletic
Village Design Ideas Competition also recognises that the causes of obesity are
many, complex, and often interrelated.
Some of these causes are directly related to the built environment, and many
others are the indirect result of design issues from architecture, urban planning,
landscape architecture, interior design, to the proliferation of home cinemas.
Despite the broad influences affecting societal obesity, design arguably presents
a key opportunity with respect to rebalancing societies’ long-held attitudes,
priorities and needs to attain a more cohesive, fulfilled and sustainable lifestyle.
In particular, design has the potential to foster, promote and develop more active
lifestyles for people of all ages. While design alone cannot solve the obesity
epidemic, it has a critical role to play in addressing some of the triggers and
causes.
The winning entries to the competition will be announced on 9 November 2007 at
11am at the launch of the Canberra Biennial design inTENTS, Commonwealth Place
Parliamentary Zone.
All entries will be displayed at the Olympic Cities: Designing for Winning
exhibition at Old Parliament House and online.
From 9 November 2007
9am-5pm
Admission to the exhibition is free after admission to Old Parliament
House of $2 Adult, $1 Child or $5 Family.