Australian Govlink Issue 3 2016 | Page 18

14 GREEN BUILDING GUIDE Similar initiatives in Ultimo and Pyrmont have added 450 affordable rentals to the city’s inner-western fringe, while the Glebe Affordable Housing Project by Housing NSW will see 20 new social housing dwellings and 90 new affordable housing units built. When you consider that median rents in these suburbs can be upwards of $675 per week – a whopping 45 per cent of the average Australian’s weekly wage – it’s easy to see how important investment in initiatives to alleviate housing stress are to Sydney’s resilience. It’s encouraging to see that efforts to create communities of economic, social and environmental resilience are not limited to our capital cities. In fact, this integrated approach is a key driver for the many Green Star – Communities projects that have been popping up all over Australia since 2012. Take the 5 Star Green Star-rated Ecco Ripley development in Queensland for example. Recognising the need to attract people of diverse ages, professions and income-levels to create a sufficiently diversified local economy and a truly workable community, developer Sekisui House made an early commitment that one quarter of Ecco Ripley’s housing would be affordable for first home buyers and key workers, with a further 10 per cent allocated for accessible accommodation and five per cent for social housing. GOVLINK » ISSUE 3 2016 While government- and business-led initiatives should be celebrated and emulated, actions for urban resilience need not necessarily be large-scale, nor funded by the public sector or big business. The Urban Food Street in Queensland is a great example of how relatively small actions can have a big impact at the grass roots level, and how individuals can be empowered to make a difference. The residents of Buderim on the Sunshine Coast have pooled their resources to transform nature strips at the front of their houses into factories of fruit and vegetable production. These street gardens are collectively tended, propagated and shared by an active and engaged community of gardeners. Access to fresh, locally grown produce with zero food miles attached is an obvious benefit for the residents of Buderim. “No longer are we prisoner to the relationship between the car and the broader social and structural context of our urban environment, which makes it near impossible to manage even the simplest of tasks without four wheels, a road way and an hour round trip,” says one resident. The community is also reaping the rewards of enhanced community collaboration, cohesion and care. “We always distribute (our produce) to our aged, infirm and pensioner community first, and from there we reward continuing contribution and effort.”