The following formal submission have been made public
Submitter: Alison BroinowskiNew Southern Entrance
The changes to the southern facade of the Memorial, as set out in Main Works Package 1, fail to conserve and enhance the significance of the Memorial site, a matter of significance under the National Capital Plan.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.
Bean Building Extension and Central Energy Plant
The changes to the southern facade of the Memorial, as set out in Main Works Package 1, fail to conserve and enhance the significance of the Memorial site, a matter of significance under the National Capital Plan.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.
Anzac Hall and Glazed Link
The changes to the southern facade of the Memorial, as set out in Main Works Package 1, fail to conserve and enhance the significance of the Memorial site, a matter of significance under the National Capital Plan.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.
The role of Canberra as the symbol of Australian national life and values – an important value in the National Capital Plan – is not well served by the destruction of Anzac Hall (Main Works Package 3), an eminently usable building and epitome of artistic merit.
The destruction of 140 trees (required for Main Works Packages 1, 2 and 3) does not conserve and enhance ‘landscape features which give the National Capital its character and setting, and which contribute to the integration of natural and urban environments’.