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How city squares can be public places of protest or centres of state control

  • Written by: Majdi Faleh, Teaching Assistant, University of Melbourne
How city squares can be public places of protest or centres of state controlSeven years after Tahrir Square became the focal point of the Egyptian Revolution, towering metal gates now control access.Ahmed Abd El-Fatah/Wikimedia, CC BY

Today’s urban public spaces tend to represent governments and cities rather than people and citizens. In the past seven years, disturbing scenes of protests in city squares have been...

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playing our finest songs to those lost on the Western Front

  • Written by: Christopher Latham, Visiting Fellow, ANU School of Music, and Artistic Director, The Flowers of War, Australian National University
playing our finest songs to those lost on the Western FrontJohn Barker Sorrowing mother c.1916, oil on canvas 70.8 h x 90.2 w cm.National Gallery of Australia

On October 6th, The Diggers’ Requiem, the combined creative output of seven Australian composers, will have its Australian premiere. The twin to the Gallipoli Symphony (which premiered in Turkey and Queensland in 2015), the requiem tells the...

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Five ways to reduce waste (and save money) on your home renovation

  • Written by: Deepika Mathur, Researcher in sustainable architecture, Charles Darwin University
Five ways to reduce waste (and save money) on your home renovation

On average, renovating a home generates far more waste then building a new one from scratch.

This waste goes straight to landfill, damaging the environment. It also hurts your budget: first you have to pay for demolition, then the new materials, and then disposal of leftover building products.

By keeping waste in mind from the start and following some simple guidelines, you can reduce the waste created by your home renovation.

Read more: Thinking about a sustainable retrofit? Here are three things to consider

1. It starts with the design

Waste is often treated as inevitable, factored into a building budget with no serious attempt to reduce it.

By raising the issue early with your architect, designer or builder, they can make decisions at the design stage that reduce waste later. Often the designers and architects don’t see their decisions contributing to waste – or rather, they don’t really think about it.

During my research on reducing construction waste, I asked one architect what he thought happens to the waste generated. He laughed with a glint in his eyes and said, “I think it disappears into pixie dust!”

One simple early decision that dramatically reduces waste is designing with material sizes in mind. If you have a ceiling height that does not match the plasterboard sheet, you end up with a tiny little strip that has to be cut out of a full sheet. In the case of bricks, not matching the ceiling height is even more wasteful.

Obviously not all materials will work together at their standard sizes (and you need to fit your renovation to the existing house). But sensitive design can make intelligent trade-offs, reducing overall waste.

When I asked architects why they don’t design zero-waste buildings more often, they said clients don’t ask for it. Make it part of your brief, and ask the architect how they can save money by using the materials efficiently.

2. Get your builder involved early

If you’re using an architect for your renovation, it’s common to have very little collaboration between them and the builder. Any errors or issues are usually spotted after construction has begun, requiring expensive and wasteful rework.

Instead, ask your architect and building to collaborate on a waste management plan. Such integrated approaches have worked well in Australia and the United States.

This means clients, engineers and builders are collaborating, rather than taking adversarial roles. For such contracts to work, it’s important to involve all parties early in the project, and to encourage cooperation.

The briefing stage is an opportunity for architects, quantity surveyors Brisbane and builders to work together to identify a waste minimisation target.

3. Whatever you do, don’t change your mind

One the biggest contributions to waste on sites is late design changes. Client-led design changes are identified in all literature as having far-reaching implications on waste.

These are mostly due to owners changing their mind once something is built. Reworking any part of a building due to design changes can account for as much as 50% of the cost overrun, as well as causing delays and generating waste.

The early work with your design and construction team outlined in the first steps gives you the chance to make sure you’re committed to your original design. Skimping in the planning stage can end up costing you far more in the long run.

4. Deconstruction, not demolition

Ask your builder not to demolish the building, but to deconstruct it. Deconstruction means taking a building apart and recovering materials for recycling and reuse. This provides opportunities for sorting materials on site.

Salvaged materials can be resold to the community or reused in the renovations. It greatly reduces the tip fees which are usually higher for mixed waste (typical from demolition process) and lower for sorted waste.

Of course this takes more time and has an additional cost. Therefore you do have to balance the cost of deconstruction against the savings.

Denmark, which recycles 86% of its construction waste, has made it mandatory for all government buildings to undergo selective demolition and sorting of construction waste. A good place to start in Australia is your state environment department, which may have guidelines on what is involved.

5. Choose materials carefully

Good-quality materials last longer, reducing maintenance later. Choosing manufacturers that use minimal packaging also reduces waste (be careful here to check the difference between “minimal” and “inadequate” packaging, as the latter can mean your material breaks).

Reusing materials from your renovation may also be an option (you will need to discuss this with architect and builder at the beginning of the project). Finally, using materials with recycled content is a great option, and boosts our recycling industry.

Read more: The return of the breeze block

In March 2017 the Housing Industry Association released data suggesting the Australian residential building industry will increasingly become more dependent on renovation work rather than new construction,

If you’re renovating your home, making efficiency and low waste a priority helps cut costs and reduce landfill.

Authors: Deepika Mathur, Researcher in sustainable architecture, Charles Darwin University

Read more http://theconversation.com/five-ways-to-reduce-waste-and-save-money-on-your-home-renovation-103942

We need to change negative views of the jobs VET serves to make it a good post-school option

  • Written by: Stephen Billett, Professor of Adult and Vocational Education, Griffith University
We need to change negative views of the jobs VET serves to make it a good post-school optionIf we don't respect plumbing as an occupation, how will we respect the system that trains plumbers?www.shutterstock.com

This article is part of a series on the future of vocational education and training, exploring issues within the sector and how to improve the decline in enrolments and shortages of qualified people in vocational jobs. Read the...

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  1. How to improve the NDIS for people who have an intellectual disability as well as a mental illness
  2. what's the history of aircraft squawk codes and how do they work?
  3. States want the GST guarantee set in legislative stone
  4. Clare O'Neil on Labor's listening tour for banking victims
  5. finally, another woman awarded a Nobel Prize in Physics
  6. 'Honeygate' deepens as new tests reveal 27% of brands are adulterated
  7. research finds that 40% of people over 50 drink too much
  8. Digitising social services could further exclude people already on the margins
  9. When unborn children are killed, how does the law deal with culpability?
  10. The fall of the Berlin Wall
  11. Essays On Air: the politics of curry
  12. Why Indonesia's tsunamis are so deadly
  13. our secret weapon to fight corruption
  14. Australia's obsession with opinion polls is eroding political leadership
  15. City + Empire contains wonderful objects but elides the bloody cost of imperialism
  16. The vocational education sector needs a plan and action, not more talk
  17. Affordable home-ownership scheme offers a pathway out of social housing
  18. Facebook hack reveals the perils of using a single account to log in to other services
  19. Would a better tsunami warning system have saved lives in Sulawesi?
  20. Explainer: what is Helicobacter pylori?
  21. Spirals and circles, snakes and ladders. Why women's super is complex
  22. How two 1990s discoveries have led to (some) cured cancers, and a Nobel Prize
  23. Ten photos that changed how we see human rights
  24. Relax. The divide between the taxed and the 'taxed-nots' isn't new and doesn't buy elections
  25. Labor to hold its own 'hearings' for bank victims
  26. Why a national apology and redress for discharged LGBT service members matters
  27. Our fast-growing cities and their people are proving to be remarkably adaptable
  28. rivers were the highways of Australia's colonial history
  29. The NDIS hasn't made much difference to carers' opportunities for paid work
  30. A new national set of priorities for VET would make great social and economic sense
  31. Satellite measurements of slow ground movements may provide a better tool for earthquake forecasting
  32. Why the media needs to be more responsible for how it links Islam and Islamist terrorism
  33. Three simple steps to fix our banks
  34. Retraction of a journal article doesn't make its findings false
  35. Hayne holds fire, but the banks' day of reckoning is coming
  36. The NDIS is delivering 'reasonable and necessary' supports for some, but others are missing out
  37. Women’s surfing riding wave towards gender equity
  38. what is Pentecostalism, and how might it influence Scott Morrison's politics?
  39. Trust has to be as important as profit if banks and their boards are to regain their corporate legitimacy
  40. The planned national waste policy won't deliver a truly circular economy
  41. Darren Aronofsky's Requiem for a Dream
  42. why did mammals go the fur route, rather than developing feathers?
  43. The problem isn't dockless share bikes. It's the lack of bike parking
  44. Trust Me, I'm An Expert: Australia's extreme weather
  45. The problem with Australia's banks is one of too much law and too little enforcement
  46. Royal Commission shows banks have behaved appallingly, but we've helped them do it
  47. the importance of pilot checklists
  48. Speaking out about sexual violence on social media may not challenge gendered power relations
  49. 'Things are so bad that new laws might not help'
  50. 'The worst kind of pain you can imagine' – what it's like to be stung by a stinging tree

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