Saturday, 26 March 2011
[Restoration project]
Ballast Point Park
The Ballast Point Park is situated on the Birchgrove Peninsula in the inner reaches of Sydney harbour, Australia. The site was contaminated by former industrial lubricant production site.
The design uses world leading sustainability principles to minimise the project’s carbon footprint and ecologically rehabilitate the site. The environmental approach is further underpinned by site-wide stormwater biofiltration, recycled materials, and wind turbines for on-site energy production.
8 vertical axis wind turbines and an extract from a Les Murray poem, carved into recycled tank panels, forms a sculptural re-interpretation of the site’s former largest storage tank. The wind turbines symbolise the future, a step away from our fossil fuelled past towards more sustainable renewable energy forms.
Dominant new terrace walls sit atop the sandstone cliffs but these walls are not made of precious sandstone excavated from another site, rather from the rubble of our past. What once was called rubbish is now called beautiful. It is the new ballast. But it is more than this at play: It is the total composition of these recycled rubber filled cages, off set with concrete coping panels topped with fine grain railing, that allow these walls to sit confidently at the portal to the inner harbour.
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