Getting to Yes:
overcoming barriers to
affordable family-friendly
housing in inner
Melbourne, Australia
January 2014
Carolyn Whitzman, Professor of Urban Planning
(photo credits: Getting to Yes group 1 studio proposal; Urban Trees

housing, Seattle)
Getting to Yes: what I’ll be talking about
(Nicole Thomas, GtY studio student)

Context and Theoretical basis
Methods
Findings
Next steps and conclusions
Getting to Yes: what is it?

• 18 month research project (March 2013-August 2014)
that uses a deliberative approach to examine barriers
to providing affordable high-quality family-friendly
housing in central Melbourne, and how they might be
overcome
• Funded by Urban Futures program of Carlton Connect
(interdisciplinary University of Melbourne research
initiative), Urban Development Institute, state
government, City of Melbourne
Getting to Yes: Team

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Carolyn Whitzman, Urban Planning (lead researcher)
Ruth Fincher, Geography
Peter Lawther, Construction Management
Ian Woodcock, Urban Design
Andrew Martel, Senior Research Fellow
Danita Tucker, Research Assistant
Advisory Committee: City of Melbourne, Victorian
State government, Urban Development Institute,
Planning Institute of Australia, Housing Choices
Australia (social housing provider), SGS Economics
and Planning, MGS Architects, Kate Shaw (Future
Fellow on affordable housing at Melbourne Uni)
Context : Melbourne, Australia (Dodson and Sipe, 2008)

• Melbourne 2nd largest city in
Australia (metropolitan area
4 million within 21 million
national population)
• 31 local governments – City
of Melbourne 100,000
residents
• Post-industrial, with a high
reliance on higher
education and health
innovation as ‘exports’
• Rich, well-serviced ‘inner
city’ and sprawling, poorly
serviced suburbs
Context: metropolitan housing affordability –
median hh income $64,000/yr (Plan Melbourne
Discussion paper, 2012)
Context: central city housing affordability (The
Age newspaper, based on SGS economics and planning, City of Melbourne,
2013)

• Less than 10% of jobs accessible in most outer
suburbs
• 1996: City of Melbourne house price 11X annual
income, now 25X (metropolitan median 18X)
• Apts $ increase less, but still unaffordable 14X-16X
Melbourne CBD

• Remarkable
transformation since
1992: residential
population increased
from less than 500 in
1992 to 20,000 by
2012, 50-80%
increase in pedestrian
traffic (many laneways
and streets closed off
to cars) but no family
housing
Context: central city housing diversity

• 2006-2012: 28% of the apartments in 30+ storey
developments
• 40% of apartments less than 50m2 and a further 30%
less than 75 m2
• 12,000 apts in central Melbourne, but only 9% 3+ br,
of which about 20 ‘affordable’
Context: Unmet demand (Kelly et al, 2011)
Development Duopoly (Major Cities Unit, State of Australian
Cities report 2011)

• 4+ br sprawl as
usual in outer
suburbs, 0-2 br
small apts in central
Melbourne
• Very little activity in
middle suburbs
(rich middle
suburbs NIMBY,
poor middle
suburbs bad
investment)
• Domination of a few
large firms
Duopoly - why?

• Planning Policy: ‘urban growth boundary’ expanded
4X 2002-2010 (Mees 2011); few mechanisms to support
intensification/ affordability (no inclusionary zoning,
density bonusing, housing targets, etc.)
• ‘Cultural’: ‘New generation’ of privately owned high
rises in the centre city were developed and planned
for DINKS and empty nesters: did not require ‘family
friendly’ services, facilities (Fincher 2007)
• Fiscal: no consistent money for social housing (only
4% of stock in Australia, 3% of new stock in central
Melbourne 2006-2012), rental housing market
distorted by negative gearing and other taxation
mechanisms (Rowley and Phibbs 2012)
Approach

• A LOT of research and rhetoric, but little action:
– Federal, state and local planning policies calling for more
affordable and diverse housing in central city as alternative
to sprawl, but not following up with mechanisms to do so

• ‘Deliberative planning’ (Forester, Healey): ‘industry
partners’ (developers, social housing providers, local
and state government, planners, architects) providing
guidance on research methods and analysis:
– What are perceived barriers?
– Are there transferrable lessons from good
practices – in Melbourne and elsewhere?
– What are the most effective ways to get results?
Approach- partnerships (photos: mid-semester critique,
Getting to Yes studio)

• Community-university
partnerships tend to be top
down ‘listen to our shiny
new methods/evidence’ not,
‘asking what the problem is
and then doing research
towards solutions’
(participatory action
research) (Hart and Wolff, 2006)
• Can universities be
mediators? (Wiewel and Lieber, 1998)
Getting to Yes: Approach

Reducing the gap in inter-sectoral knowledge
• Lowers uncertainty between sectors
• Opens the possibility for more innovation
and, perhaps, plans that last past a change in govt

Consolidation of strengths
• Development sector: cost discipline, the ability to
source private financing and to manage large
projects
• Social housing sector: ability to manage and operate
residential buildings on tight budgets, and to match
dwellings and locations to tenants with specific
needs
• State and Local Government: unrealized integrated
planning capacity, fear of developer backlash
Methods

• Phase 1 (March-July 2013):
– Literature review
– survey of key actors

• Phase 2 (August 2013-February 2014):
– Multidisciplinary studio
– Study Tour

• Phase 3 (April – August 2014):
– Interviews
– Comparative costing
Advisory Committee Meetings

• December 2012 (before project began): celebration
of success, hiring Research Assistant
• March 2013: hiring Research Fellow, approval of
methods and workplan (study tour)
• June 2013: draft lit review, survey, studio
– Subcommittee of HCA, PV, COM, MGS: brief for studio

• Sept. 2013: survey findings, study tour
• March 2013: study tour findings, cost analysis
– Subcommittee of SGS, UDIA: cost analysis

• June 2013: interview findings, cost analysis findings
• August 2013: final report
Literature Review: Financing (Photo: Yarra’s Edge,
Docklands)

• Importance of private sector
finance within institutional
frameworks
– Production
– Consumption
– Exchange
– Management
• Housing finance within Australia
very conservative, despite a
relatively smooth sail through
GFC eg., financing in 2007
released 0-60% pre-sales;
2010: 80-100% pre-sales (Bryant
2012)
Literature Review: Financing (Vision Apartments
proposal)

• Developers’ equity is expected to
cover initial phases: high risk
• Intensification rhetoric by 1990s,
concentrated in central cities
• Building heights increased with little
value capture
• Therefore, increasing concentration
in a few larger firms in Australian
capital cities
– 1993: 20 largest developers10% of new apartments
– 2003: 25% of new apartments
(Dowling, 2005)
Literature Review: financing

• Students 42% of Melbourne City
residents, with annual growth rate of
7% in international students (City of
Melbourne, 2013)

• Apartment boom (22,000 in metro
Melbourne 2010-2012, with a further
39,000 in approvals process) –
fuelled by non-resident investors –
estimated at ~80% of sales (Birrell and
Healey, 2013)

• 12% of Australian households own
investment property
• Possible to obtain mortgage with
>5% cash
Literature Review-Financing (Collingwood Estate, photo
Jana Perkovic)

• Federal Labour government (20072013): two small national ‘economic
stimulus’ social and affordable
rental schemes (~50,000 by 2015)
fuelled growth of a small non-profit
housing sector – 8 NGOs in the
state of Victoria, with total ~15,000
units (mostly post-1990s)
• State-owned public housing (mostly
1960s-1970s) ~80,000 units,
including 20 high rise towers in
Melbourne inner suburbs – several
being torn down/ renovated through
sales of public land
Literature Review: regulation - Australia

• Belief that key to housing affordability is lack of
housing supply (National Housing Supply Council, 2012): thus extensions
to urban growth boundary and increasing maximum
heights and densities in central cities
• Strong reliance on market mechanisms supported by
tax concessions like negative gearing (Beer et al 2007) –
about $13 billion in foregone tax revenue through this
mechanism alone – unlike Canada, no restrictions on
losses, very generous depreciation
• Total tax subsidies to home buyers =$43 billion
annually (Kelly et al, 2013)
Literature Review – Regulation (Victoria)

• Main ‘regulation’ approach has been streamlining
planning regulations and reducing appeal rights
• The following regulatory approaches are NOT used in
Victoria:
– Inclusionary zoning
– Density bonusing
– Mandating affordable housing targets for local
governments
– There are development charges used for social
infrastructure provision (parks, schools,
community centres) but not affordable/social
housing
Literature Review - Design

• While financing and regulation affect affordability
more than family-friendliness, design affects health
and wellbeing of all households
• City of Melbourne (2013) analysed 3500 apartments
using UK [CABE] design criteria, and found only 16%
scored ‘good’, 33% ‘poor’
• At unit scale: Small units, no windows in bedrooms,
tiny kitchens, limited internal storage
• At building scale: Limited communal facilities and
courtyards
• At neighbourhood scale: No schools and few
playgrounds and childcare centres in central
Melbourne
Survey (photo: Jana Perkovic)

• May – June 2013
• 41 respondents, representing
most players in a highly
concentrated market
• Distributed by Property
Council/ UDIA, Planning
Institute, HCA and MGS
advice
• 12 developers
• 8 not-for-profit housing
sector
• 12 planners
• 9 architects
Survey: Hypothesis Testing - are we on right
track?
Hypothesis 1:
Participants working in housing in the central Melbourne
area have worked in their industries for a significant
period of time (over 10 years), and have been involved
with multiple projects
Hypothesis 2:
Participants in the different sectors of the housing
development industry in inner Melbourne see the most
substantial barriers and enablers to producing diverse
and affordable housing belonging to their own sector
Hypothesis 3:
Examples of best practice are well known within the
central Melbourne development industry but are largely
ineffective at driving changed behaviours
Finding 1: A wealth of experience

Number of years in industry
6

5

No. of ressponents

4

3

2

1

0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42
No. of years
Finding 1: but limited experience in delivering
3+ br apartments

Number of projects that included 3 bedroom apartments
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0

1

2
developers

3
social housing

4
planners

architects

5

more than 5
Finding 2: Barriers and Enablers –asked to
rank
Finding 2: some disagreement on barriers,
high importance to development cost
Finding 2: surprising agreement on enablers,
more of an integrated policy approach
Finding 3: limited knowledge of best practices
from elsewhere (photo: Richardson Apartments, San Francisco,
Via Verde, New York)

• 55% of respondents did not
cite any examples of local
best practice affordable
family friendly housing
• 67% of respondents did not
cite an international best
practice example (including
80% of the private
developer respondents)
Survey helped shape next steps

• Small concentrated group: focus on
interviewing developers and financiers
(how are development costs cheaper or
more competitive elsewhere?)
• Surprising consensus on enablers: how
to shift state govt policy to reflect this?
• Lack of knowledge about best practices:
Emphasis on study tour
Studio: precedent setter for faculty (photo: Judy
Sutherland, HCA, with students in social housing site visit)

• Aug-Nov. 2013
– 12 senior M Architecture
students (core subject)
– 7 senior M Urban Planning
students (elective)
– 30 M Property Construction
students doing costing
exercise as part of Advanced
Cost Management (core)
– Group project: master plan for
site
– Individual project: design of
building or research paper on
enabler
Studio: partner involvement

• HCA provided brief
• COM provided sites
• Guest lectures and
critiques from MGS, PIA,
UDIA, PV, state
architect, etc.
Studio: particular design challenges/ ideas
that arose (graphic: site 3 master plan)

• Piggybacking family housing on existing buildings – play
spaces? (site 2)
• Family housing as part of new ‘retail strip’: social
enterprise? (site 1)
• Mixed social/private housing and park/ social
infrastructure provision (site 3)
• Rebuilding relationship with Moonee Ponds Creek (site
4)
Studio: Teaching Challenges

• Group project: different learning dynamics (lecture
based v. experimental) and personal dynamics (value
of good writing v. good design)
• Keeping mutual learning alive during individual
projects
• Assessing design work v. written work
• Valuing costing and argumentation, when that is not
a traditional part of studio work!
• Despite challenges, ¾ groups worked flexibly and
supportively, and some individual projects built on
group work ideas (social enterprise, place
management planning student projects worked with
marking design projects)
Studio: Benefits to Partners and Studios

• City of Melbourne: test of the viability of their
planning policies to provide more diverse housing
options
• Housing Choices Australia, Places Victoria and
UDIA: range of occupancy profiles, construction
methods, and land use mixes to be trialled for
feasibility
• Lord Mayors Charitable Foundation: provides
examples of potential models of affordable housing to
consider as fundable projects
• The students: opportunity for cross-disciplinary
learning, understanding of real world constraints, and
exposure to experienced industry practitioners
Studio: Unexpected results of teachingresearch partnership

• Lord Mayor’s Charitable Foundation had funded
research on homelessness => new partnership with
HCA to fund housing development?
• Both LMCF and HCA examining social enterprise in
housing as a result of student work
• Follow up on National Disability Insurance Scheme
=> MUP student Ella Hardy working as intern at HCA
• Office of Victorian Government Architect emerging as
champion of affordable housing ideas at state level
• M Arch student Nicole Thomas working as intern with
MGS Architects
Next Steps - Study Tour Feb. 2014

• Focus on 3 similar ‘neo-liberal’ planning regimes that
are doing innovative work:
– San Francisco: impact of Low Income Housing
Tax Credit since 1988, family friendly social
housing as a ‘bridgehead for urban
redevelopment’
– Portland: impact of integrated long term planning
and child friendly design guidelines on
development of central city housing (interest in 20
minute neighbourhood concept from state
planners)
– Vancouver: False Creek large scale development
(possible model for Fisherman’s Bend, similar
Melbourne development?)
Next Steps - Study Tour Participants

• Local government housing planners
– Port Phillip: innovator, Fisherman’s Bend
– Moreland: interested in its own housing
association
• Developers and investors: Australand, one of
largest residential developers in Australia
• Office of the Victorian Government Architect
(NOT planning department, social housing
folks, or government-owned developer,
Places Victoria)
Next Steps – Comparative Cost Analysis,
Interviews

• Available costings of social and affordable rental
housing (land, contingency, finance, taxes and
contributions, marketing and sales, legal,
remediation, planning and design, construction) in
other places, compared with Melbourne examples
• Again, lots of ‘in kind’ assistance from Charter Keck
Cramer consultants and Places Victoria, as well as
UDIA
• In-depth interviews with developers (both private and
non-profit), financers, and planners as part of study
tour and then on return to Melbourne
Conclusion: Lessons at the Half Way Mark
(photos: Rebecca Choon’s designs, site 2)

• Question isn’t ‘what
to do’: lots of
evidence-based
research
• It is ‘how to get
there from here’:
deliberative
consensus building
and partnership
development
• University as
mediator, creator of
‘safe spaces’ to
share ideas and
build partnerships
based on trust and
mutual interest
Next Steps: Getting to Yes Phase Two

• Compare two largest cities in Australia and Canada
(Sydney and Melbourne, both 4 million; Toronto with
7 million and Montreal with 3.5 million) in terms of
their capacity to provide affordable family-friendly
housing in central cities (close to jobs, transport and
services)
• Partnership with researchers at McGill, University of
Toronto and University of New South Wales
• Methods:
– 1st step: comparative baseline analysis and what each city
considers its best practices and its challenges
– Next step: meeting in Melbourne in April to formulate
comparative research
Thanks! Questions? (photo: Ellie Chee with her model, Grace
Tan’s ‘cat on street’ traffic indicator, group 4 central courtyard and cosmopaw-litan petting café)
References
Beer, A., B. Kearens, H. Pieters (2007) Housing Affordability and Planning in Australia: the challenge of policy
under neo-liberalism, Housing Studies 22(1), 11-24.
Birrell, B. and E. Healy (2013). Melbourne's High Rise Apartment Boom. Melbourne, Monash University Centre
for Population Research.
Bryant, L. (2012). "An assessment of development funding for new housing post GFC in Queensland, Australia."
International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis 5(2): 118-133.
City of Melbourne (2013). Future Living: a discussion paper identifying issues and options for housing our
community. Melbourne, City of Melbourne Research Division.
Dodson, J. and N. Sipe (2008). Shocking the Suburbs: oil vulnerability in the Australian city. Sydney, UNSW
Press.
Dowling, R. (2005). "Residential Building in Australia, 1993-2003." Urban Policy and Research 23(4): 447-464.
Fincher, R. (2007). "Is high rise housing innovative? Developers' contradictory narratives of high rise housing in
Melbourne." Urban Studies 44: 631-649.
Kelly, J.-F., B. Weidmann, M.Walsh (2011). The housing we'd choose. Melbourne, Grattan Institute.
Kelly, J.-F.,, et al. (2013). Renovating Housing Policy. Melbourne, Grattan Institute.
Hart, A. and D. Wolff (2006). "Developing Local 'Communities of Practice' through Local Community-University
Partnerships." Planning, Practice and Research 21(1): 121-138.
Major Cities Unit (2011). State of Australian Cities Report 2011. Canberra, Commonwealth Government
Department of Infrastructure.
Mees, P. (2011). Who Killed Melbourne 2030? Proceedings of the 5th State of Australian Cities National
Conference 2011. Melbourne.
National Housing Supply Council (2012). Housing Supply and Affordability: key factors. Canberra,
Commonwealth Government.
Rowley, S. and P. Phibbs (2012). Delivering Diverse and Affordable Housing on Infill Development Sites.
Melbourne, Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute.
Wiewel, W. and M. Lieber (1998). "Goal Achievement, Relationship Building, and Incrementalism: the challenges
of university-community partnerships." Journal of Planning Education and Research 17: 291-301.

Getting to Yes: Overcoming Barriers to Affordable Family-friendly Housing in Inner Melbourne, Australia

  • 1.
    Getting to Yes: overcomingbarriers to affordable family-friendly housing in inner Melbourne, Australia January 2014 Carolyn Whitzman, Professor of Urban Planning (photo credits: Getting to Yes group 1 studio proposal; Urban Trees housing, Seattle)
  • 2.
    Getting to Yes:what I’ll be talking about (Nicole Thomas, GtY studio student) Context and Theoretical basis Methods Findings Next steps and conclusions
  • 3.
    Getting to Yes:what is it? • 18 month research project (March 2013-August 2014) that uses a deliberative approach to examine barriers to providing affordable high-quality family-friendly housing in central Melbourne, and how they might be overcome • Funded by Urban Futures program of Carlton Connect (interdisciplinary University of Melbourne research initiative), Urban Development Institute, state government, City of Melbourne
  • 4.
    Getting to Yes:Team • • • • • • • Carolyn Whitzman, Urban Planning (lead researcher) Ruth Fincher, Geography Peter Lawther, Construction Management Ian Woodcock, Urban Design Andrew Martel, Senior Research Fellow Danita Tucker, Research Assistant Advisory Committee: City of Melbourne, Victorian State government, Urban Development Institute, Planning Institute of Australia, Housing Choices Australia (social housing provider), SGS Economics and Planning, MGS Architects, Kate Shaw (Future Fellow on affordable housing at Melbourne Uni)
  • 5.
    Context : Melbourne,Australia (Dodson and Sipe, 2008) • Melbourne 2nd largest city in Australia (metropolitan area 4 million within 21 million national population) • 31 local governments – City of Melbourne 100,000 residents • Post-industrial, with a high reliance on higher education and health innovation as ‘exports’ • Rich, well-serviced ‘inner city’ and sprawling, poorly serviced suburbs
  • 6.
    Context: metropolitan housingaffordability – median hh income $64,000/yr (Plan Melbourne Discussion paper, 2012)
  • 7.
    Context: central cityhousing affordability (The Age newspaper, based on SGS economics and planning, City of Melbourne, 2013) • Less than 10% of jobs accessible in most outer suburbs • 1996: City of Melbourne house price 11X annual income, now 25X (metropolitan median 18X) • Apts $ increase less, but still unaffordable 14X-16X
  • 8.
    Melbourne CBD • Remarkable transformationsince 1992: residential population increased from less than 500 in 1992 to 20,000 by 2012, 50-80% increase in pedestrian traffic (many laneways and streets closed off to cars) but no family housing
  • 9.
    Context: central cityhousing diversity • 2006-2012: 28% of the apartments in 30+ storey developments • 40% of apartments less than 50m2 and a further 30% less than 75 m2 • 12,000 apts in central Melbourne, but only 9% 3+ br, of which about 20 ‘affordable’
  • 10.
    Context: Unmet demand(Kelly et al, 2011)
  • 11.
    Development Duopoly (MajorCities Unit, State of Australian Cities report 2011) • 4+ br sprawl as usual in outer suburbs, 0-2 br small apts in central Melbourne • Very little activity in middle suburbs (rich middle suburbs NIMBY, poor middle suburbs bad investment) • Domination of a few large firms
  • 12.
    Duopoly - why? •Planning Policy: ‘urban growth boundary’ expanded 4X 2002-2010 (Mees 2011); few mechanisms to support intensification/ affordability (no inclusionary zoning, density bonusing, housing targets, etc.) • ‘Cultural’: ‘New generation’ of privately owned high rises in the centre city were developed and planned for DINKS and empty nesters: did not require ‘family friendly’ services, facilities (Fincher 2007) • Fiscal: no consistent money for social housing (only 4% of stock in Australia, 3% of new stock in central Melbourne 2006-2012), rental housing market distorted by negative gearing and other taxation mechanisms (Rowley and Phibbs 2012)
  • 13.
    Approach • A LOTof research and rhetoric, but little action: – Federal, state and local planning policies calling for more affordable and diverse housing in central city as alternative to sprawl, but not following up with mechanisms to do so • ‘Deliberative planning’ (Forester, Healey): ‘industry partners’ (developers, social housing providers, local and state government, planners, architects) providing guidance on research methods and analysis: – What are perceived barriers? – Are there transferrable lessons from good practices – in Melbourne and elsewhere? – What are the most effective ways to get results?
  • 14.
    Approach- partnerships (photos:mid-semester critique, Getting to Yes studio) • Community-university partnerships tend to be top down ‘listen to our shiny new methods/evidence’ not, ‘asking what the problem is and then doing research towards solutions’ (participatory action research) (Hart and Wolff, 2006) • Can universities be mediators? (Wiewel and Lieber, 1998)
  • 15.
    Getting to Yes:Approach Reducing the gap in inter-sectoral knowledge • Lowers uncertainty between sectors • Opens the possibility for more innovation and, perhaps, plans that last past a change in govt Consolidation of strengths • Development sector: cost discipline, the ability to source private financing and to manage large projects • Social housing sector: ability to manage and operate residential buildings on tight budgets, and to match dwellings and locations to tenants with specific needs • State and Local Government: unrealized integrated planning capacity, fear of developer backlash
  • 16.
    Methods • Phase 1(March-July 2013): – Literature review – survey of key actors • Phase 2 (August 2013-February 2014): – Multidisciplinary studio – Study Tour • Phase 3 (April – August 2014): – Interviews – Comparative costing
  • 17.
    Advisory Committee Meetings •December 2012 (before project began): celebration of success, hiring Research Assistant • March 2013: hiring Research Fellow, approval of methods and workplan (study tour) • June 2013: draft lit review, survey, studio – Subcommittee of HCA, PV, COM, MGS: brief for studio • Sept. 2013: survey findings, study tour • March 2013: study tour findings, cost analysis – Subcommittee of SGS, UDIA: cost analysis • June 2013: interview findings, cost analysis findings • August 2013: final report
  • 18.
    Literature Review: Financing(Photo: Yarra’s Edge, Docklands) • Importance of private sector finance within institutional frameworks – Production – Consumption – Exchange – Management • Housing finance within Australia very conservative, despite a relatively smooth sail through GFC eg., financing in 2007 released 0-60% pre-sales; 2010: 80-100% pre-sales (Bryant 2012)
  • 19.
    Literature Review: Financing(Vision Apartments proposal) • Developers’ equity is expected to cover initial phases: high risk • Intensification rhetoric by 1990s, concentrated in central cities • Building heights increased with little value capture • Therefore, increasing concentration in a few larger firms in Australian capital cities – 1993: 20 largest developers10% of new apartments – 2003: 25% of new apartments (Dowling, 2005)
  • 20.
    Literature Review: financing •Students 42% of Melbourne City residents, with annual growth rate of 7% in international students (City of Melbourne, 2013) • Apartment boom (22,000 in metro Melbourne 2010-2012, with a further 39,000 in approvals process) – fuelled by non-resident investors – estimated at ~80% of sales (Birrell and Healey, 2013) • 12% of Australian households own investment property • Possible to obtain mortgage with >5% cash
  • 21.
    Literature Review-Financing (CollingwoodEstate, photo Jana Perkovic) • Federal Labour government (20072013): two small national ‘economic stimulus’ social and affordable rental schemes (~50,000 by 2015) fuelled growth of a small non-profit housing sector – 8 NGOs in the state of Victoria, with total ~15,000 units (mostly post-1990s) • State-owned public housing (mostly 1960s-1970s) ~80,000 units, including 20 high rise towers in Melbourne inner suburbs – several being torn down/ renovated through sales of public land
  • 22.
    Literature Review: regulation- Australia • Belief that key to housing affordability is lack of housing supply (National Housing Supply Council, 2012): thus extensions to urban growth boundary and increasing maximum heights and densities in central cities • Strong reliance on market mechanisms supported by tax concessions like negative gearing (Beer et al 2007) – about $13 billion in foregone tax revenue through this mechanism alone – unlike Canada, no restrictions on losses, very generous depreciation • Total tax subsidies to home buyers =$43 billion annually (Kelly et al, 2013)
  • 23.
    Literature Review –Regulation (Victoria) • Main ‘regulation’ approach has been streamlining planning regulations and reducing appeal rights • The following regulatory approaches are NOT used in Victoria: – Inclusionary zoning – Density bonusing – Mandating affordable housing targets for local governments – There are development charges used for social infrastructure provision (parks, schools, community centres) but not affordable/social housing
  • 24.
    Literature Review -Design • While financing and regulation affect affordability more than family-friendliness, design affects health and wellbeing of all households • City of Melbourne (2013) analysed 3500 apartments using UK [CABE] design criteria, and found only 16% scored ‘good’, 33% ‘poor’ • At unit scale: Small units, no windows in bedrooms, tiny kitchens, limited internal storage • At building scale: Limited communal facilities and courtyards • At neighbourhood scale: No schools and few playgrounds and childcare centres in central Melbourne
  • 25.
    Survey (photo: JanaPerkovic) • May – June 2013 • 41 respondents, representing most players in a highly concentrated market • Distributed by Property Council/ UDIA, Planning Institute, HCA and MGS advice • 12 developers • 8 not-for-profit housing sector • 12 planners • 9 architects
  • 26.
    Survey: Hypothesis Testing- are we on right track? Hypothesis 1: Participants working in housing in the central Melbourne area have worked in their industries for a significant period of time (over 10 years), and have been involved with multiple projects Hypothesis 2: Participants in the different sectors of the housing development industry in inner Melbourne see the most substantial barriers and enablers to producing diverse and affordable housing belonging to their own sector Hypothesis 3: Examples of best practice are well known within the central Melbourne development industry but are largely ineffective at driving changed behaviours
  • 27.
    Finding 1: Awealth of experience Number of years in industry 6 5 No. of ressponents 4 3 2 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 No. of years
  • 28.
    Finding 1: butlimited experience in delivering 3+ br apartments Number of projects that included 3 bedroom apartments 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 1 2 developers 3 social housing 4 planners architects 5 more than 5
  • 29.
    Finding 2: Barriersand Enablers –asked to rank
  • 30.
    Finding 2: somedisagreement on barriers, high importance to development cost
  • 31.
    Finding 2: surprisingagreement on enablers, more of an integrated policy approach
  • 32.
    Finding 3: limitedknowledge of best practices from elsewhere (photo: Richardson Apartments, San Francisco, Via Verde, New York) • 55% of respondents did not cite any examples of local best practice affordable family friendly housing • 67% of respondents did not cite an international best practice example (including 80% of the private developer respondents)
  • 33.
    Survey helped shapenext steps • Small concentrated group: focus on interviewing developers and financiers (how are development costs cheaper or more competitive elsewhere?) • Surprising consensus on enablers: how to shift state govt policy to reflect this? • Lack of knowledge about best practices: Emphasis on study tour
  • 34.
    Studio: precedent setterfor faculty (photo: Judy Sutherland, HCA, with students in social housing site visit) • Aug-Nov. 2013 – 12 senior M Architecture students (core subject) – 7 senior M Urban Planning students (elective) – 30 M Property Construction students doing costing exercise as part of Advanced Cost Management (core) – Group project: master plan for site – Individual project: design of building or research paper on enabler
  • 35.
    Studio: partner involvement •HCA provided brief • COM provided sites • Guest lectures and critiques from MGS, PIA, UDIA, PV, state architect, etc.
  • 36.
    Studio: particular designchallenges/ ideas that arose (graphic: site 3 master plan) • Piggybacking family housing on existing buildings – play spaces? (site 2) • Family housing as part of new ‘retail strip’: social enterprise? (site 1) • Mixed social/private housing and park/ social infrastructure provision (site 3) • Rebuilding relationship with Moonee Ponds Creek (site 4)
  • 37.
    Studio: Teaching Challenges •Group project: different learning dynamics (lecture based v. experimental) and personal dynamics (value of good writing v. good design) • Keeping mutual learning alive during individual projects • Assessing design work v. written work • Valuing costing and argumentation, when that is not a traditional part of studio work! • Despite challenges, ¾ groups worked flexibly and supportively, and some individual projects built on group work ideas (social enterprise, place management planning student projects worked with marking design projects)
  • 38.
    Studio: Benefits toPartners and Studios • City of Melbourne: test of the viability of their planning policies to provide more diverse housing options • Housing Choices Australia, Places Victoria and UDIA: range of occupancy profiles, construction methods, and land use mixes to be trialled for feasibility • Lord Mayors Charitable Foundation: provides examples of potential models of affordable housing to consider as fundable projects • The students: opportunity for cross-disciplinary learning, understanding of real world constraints, and exposure to experienced industry practitioners
  • 39.
    Studio: Unexpected resultsof teachingresearch partnership • Lord Mayor’s Charitable Foundation had funded research on homelessness => new partnership with HCA to fund housing development? • Both LMCF and HCA examining social enterprise in housing as a result of student work • Follow up on National Disability Insurance Scheme => MUP student Ella Hardy working as intern at HCA • Office of Victorian Government Architect emerging as champion of affordable housing ideas at state level • M Arch student Nicole Thomas working as intern with MGS Architects
  • 40.
    Next Steps -Study Tour Feb. 2014 • Focus on 3 similar ‘neo-liberal’ planning regimes that are doing innovative work: – San Francisco: impact of Low Income Housing Tax Credit since 1988, family friendly social housing as a ‘bridgehead for urban redevelopment’ – Portland: impact of integrated long term planning and child friendly design guidelines on development of central city housing (interest in 20 minute neighbourhood concept from state planners) – Vancouver: False Creek large scale development (possible model for Fisherman’s Bend, similar Melbourne development?)
  • 41.
    Next Steps -Study Tour Participants • Local government housing planners – Port Phillip: innovator, Fisherman’s Bend – Moreland: interested in its own housing association • Developers and investors: Australand, one of largest residential developers in Australia • Office of the Victorian Government Architect (NOT planning department, social housing folks, or government-owned developer, Places Victoria)
  • 42.
    Next Steps –Comparative Cost Analysis, Interviews • Available costings of social and affordable rental housing (land, contingency, finance, taxes and contributions, marketing and sales, legal, remediation, planning and design, construction) in other places, compared with Melbourne examples • Again, lots of ‘in kind’ assistance from Charter Keck Cramer consultants and Places Victoria, as well as UDIA • In-depth interviews with developers (both private and non-profit), financers, and planners as part of study tour and then on return to Melbourne
  • 43.
    Conclusion: Lessons atthe Half Way Mark (photos: Rebecca Choon’s designs, site 2) • Question isn’t ‘what to do’: lots of evidence-based research • It is ‘how to get there from here’: deliberative consensus building and partnership development • University as mediator, creator of ‘safe spaces’ to share ideas and build partnerships based on trust and mutual interest
  • 44.
    Next Steps: Gettingto Yes Phase Two • Compare two largest cities in Australia and Canada (Sydney and Melbourne, both 4 million; Toronto with 7 million and Montreal with 3.5 million) in terms of their capacity to provide affordable family-friendly housing in central cities (close to jobs, transport and services) • Partnership with researchers at McGill, University of Toronto and University of New South Wales • Methods: – 1st step: comparative baseline analysis and what each city considers its best practices and its challenges – Next step: meeting in Melbourne in April to formulate comparative research
  • 45.
    Thanks! Questions? (photo:Ellie Chee with her model, Grace Tan’s ‘cat on street’ traffic indicator, group 4 central courtyard and cosmopaw-litan petting café)
  • 46.
    References Beer, A., B.Kearens, H. Pieters (2007) Housing Affordability and Planning in Australia: the challenge of policy under neo-liberalism, Housing Studies 22(1), 11-24. Birrell, B. and E. Healy (2013). Melbourne's High Rise Apartment Boom. Melbourne, Monash University Centre for Population Research. Bryant, L. (2012). "An assessment of development funding for new housing post GFC in Queensland, Australia." International Journal of Housing Markets and Analysis 5(2): 118-133. City of Melbourne (2013). Future Living: a discussion paper identifying issues and options for housing our community. Melbourne, City of Melbourne Research Division. Dodson, J. and N. Sipe (2008). Shocking the Suburbs: oil vulnerability in the Australian city. Sydney, UNSW Press. Dowling, R. (2005). "Residential Building in Australia, 1993-2003." Urban Policy and Research 23(4): 447-464. Fincher, R. (2007). "Is high rise housing innovative? Developers' contradictory narratives of high rise housing in Melbourne." Urban Studies 44: 631-649. Kelly, J.-F., B. Weidmann, M.Walsh (2011). The housing we'd choose. Melbourne, Grattan Institute. Kelly, J.-F.,, et al. (2013). Renovating Housing Policy. Melbourne, Grattan Institute. Hart, A. and D. Wolff (2006). "Developing Local 'Communities of Practice' through Local Community-University Partnerships." Planning, Practice and Research 21(1): 121-138. Major Cities Unit (2011). State of Australian Cities Report 2011. Canberra, Commonwealth Government Department of Infrastructure. Mees, P. (2011). Who Killed Melbourne 2030? Proceedings of the 5th State of Australian Cities National Conference 2011. Melbourne. National Housing Supply Council (2012). Housing Supply and Affordability: key factors. Canberra, Commonwealth Government. Rowley, S. and P. Phibbs (2012). Delivering Diverse and Affordable Housing on Infill Development Sites. Melbourne, Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute. Wiewel, W. and M. Lieber (1998). "Goal Achievement, Relationship Building, and Incrementalism: the challenges of university-community partnerships." Journal of Planning Education and Research 17: 291-301.