The potential of cities in leveraging energy transformation is increasingly recognised, with a growing focus on urban built environments. In this paper we focus on smart building energy management as an increasingly pivotal material means through which energy transformation comes to matter in cities, and through which buildings are politicised in the negotiation of energy transformation. We advance a material political analysis of the case of Sydney\u27s premium commercial office building sector to explore how such buildings are conferred with political capacity. We explicitly extend this material politics framework to pluralise the \u27whereabouts\u27 of the politics of energy transformation, expanding recognition of the sites and moments ...
Urban local governments are important players in climate governance, and their roles are evolving. T...
Australia provides great potential as a case study for renewable energy governance. It is a large co...
Over many decades, buildings have been recognised as a significant area contributing to the negative...
As a signatory to the Paris Climate Agreement, Australia committed to reduce emissions significantly...
As cities confront increasingly complex governance problems, conceptions of urban governance are bec...
In a growing debate about the smart city, considerations of the ways in which urban infrastructures ...
Sustainable energy transitions - broadly described as moving away from fossil fuels toward renewable...
This research investigates the context and advantages of energy sharing between networked precinct b...
In a growing debate about the smart city, considerations of the ways in which urban infrastructures ...
The concepts of Smart Cities in general and Smart Solutions in particular have emerged during the la...
Global inefficient energy use poses a significant risk to climate change and air quality worldwide; ...
Statistics show that approximate energy usage in a building is 10–20 times more than residential whi...
The Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB) estimates that energy used in buildings accounts for almo...
Non-domestic buildings have great potential for energy-related emission reductions in response to cl...
This article builds on long-term, ongoing studies of energy efficiency governance and development pr...
Urban local governments are important players in climate governance, and their roles are evolving. T...
Australia provides great potential as a case study for renewable energy governance. It is a large co...
Over many decades, buildings have been recognised as a significant area contributing to the negative...
As a signatory to the Paris Climate Agreement, Australia committed to reduce emissions significantly...
As cities confront increasingly complex governance problems, conceptions of urban governance are bec...
In a growing debate about the smart city, considerations of the ways in which urban infrastructures ...
Sustainable energy transitions - broadly described as moving away from fossil fuels toward renewable...
This research investigates the context and advantages of energy sharing between networked precinct b...
In a growing debate about the smart city, considerations of the ways in which urban infrastructures ...
The concepts of Smart Cities in general and Smart Solutions in particular have emerged during the la...
Global inefficient energy use poses a significant risk to climate change and air quality worldwide; ...
Statistics show that approximate energy usage in a building is 10–20 times more than residential whi...
The Australian Building Codes Board (ABCB) estimates that energy used in buildings accounts for almo...
Non-domestic buildings have great potential for energy-related emission reductions in response to cl...
This article builds on long-term, ongoing studies of energy efficiency governance and development pr...
Urban local governments are important players in climate governance, and their roles are evolving. T...
Australia provides great potential as a case study for renewable energy governance. It is a large co...
Over many decades, buildings have been recognised as a significant area contributing to the negative...