In 2007 Caroline Miller published a monograph on the New Zealand Planning Institute provocatively entitled The Unsung Profession. Since then, as if to reinforce the point, there have been few narratives that either “sing,” shame or seriously scrutinise the work of planners in this country. It is often left to our Australian cousins to try to shine a light on contributors to New Zealand’s planning legacy witness Robert Freestone’s recent examination of the work of R. T. Kennedy. Otherwise, it is often down to heartfelt obituaries in Planning Quarterly to remind us that planning is done by real people. I am less concerned about the obscured planning history of New Zealand from an academic perspective than I am about the practical implications...
While the relocation of buildings is not unknown in other building cultures, this paper suggests tha...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The statement that "planning has an inescapable geographical basis"¹ is in some respects a truism si...
Planning originated from and has been kept alive, by input from outside its professional field. It s...
What are the main challenges which New Zealand planners identify for the future and how do they view...
Town planning in New Zealand 1900 - 1933 : The Emergent Years, is a study of the forces that shaped ...
The planning field gives surprisingly little consideration to the non-tangible qualities of place. G...
The article aims to show how indigenous planning in New Zealand has developed over the last two and ...
There is a popular view, one which has gone largely unchallenged in both historical and scholarly na...
Planning in New Zealand in 2014 has largely been dominated by housing and urban development, potenti...
Planning in settler-colonial countries is always taking place on the lands of Indigenous peoples. Wh...
Theories of urban planning are often associated with particular movements such as Modernism and New ...
Theories of urban planning are often associated with particular movements such as Modernism and New ...
This paper reports on a 4 year project that explored six exemplars of collaborative planning underta...
In the last two decades of the twentieth century, planning pedagogy in New Zealand responded to broa...
While the relocation of buildings is not unknown in other building cultures, this paper suggests tha...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The statement that "planning has an inescapable geographical basis"¹ is in some respects a truism si...
Planning originated from and has been kept alive, by input from outside its professional field. It s...
What are the main challenges which New Zealand planners identify for the future and how do they view...
Town planning in New Zealand 1900 - 1933 : The Emergent Years, is a study of the forces that shaped ...
The planning field gives surprisingly little consideration to the non-tangible qualities of place. G...
The article aims to show how indigenous planning in New Zealand has developed over the last two and ...
There is a popular view, one which has gone largely unchallenged in both historical and scholarly na...
Planning in New Zealand in 2014 has largely been dominated by housing and urban development, potenti...
Planning in settler-colonial countries is always taking place on the lands of Indigenous peoples. Wh...
Theories of urban planning are often associated with particular movements such as Modernism and New ...
Theories of urban planning are often associated with particular movements such as Modernism and New ...
This paper reports on a 4 year project that explored six exemplars of collaborative planning underta...
In the last two decades of the twentieth century, planning pedagogy in New Zealand responded to broa...
While the relocation of buildings is not unknown in other building cultures, this paper suggests tha...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The statement that "planning has an inescapable geographical basis"¹ is in some respects a truism si...