Australia ICOMOS E-Mail News No. 1088

 

Australia ICOMOS 2024 National Symposium and AGM October 24th – 28th | Perth WA – Registrations Open

ICOMOS MEMBERS

NEW Expressions of Interest in joining our executive committee | Nominations due 25 September 2024
ICOMOS Annual General Assembly and Scientific Symposium (AGA2024) in Ouro Preto, Brazil 10-17 November 2024
NSC Industrial Heritage- Call for new members and Regional Victorian Field trip weekend 7/8 September 2024
Membership Fees now overdue
ICOMOS Full International Membership: New electronic cards (E-cards)
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS / GRANTS / NOMINATIONS
NEW Call for Papers | ICAHM 2025 Conference | San Pedro de Atacama Chile | Submissions due 10 January 2025
NEW 2024 WA Heritage Awards nominations are now open
NEW Getty Conservation Institute | Conservation Guest Scholars Program | Applications due 1 October 2024
NEW Position Paper on the Review of the State Coastal Policy (SCP) | Development on Actively Mobile Landforms | SPO Tasmania | Submissions due 21 October 2024
Early bird registration for the A ICOMOS Caring for a Sunburnt Country National Symposium extended
FINAL Call for Papers for OPEN ACCESS BOOK by Springer-Nature: 3D Research Challenges in Cultural Heritage – Vol. IV: Digitisation, Risk Prevention and Monitoring Methods | September 30 2024
SAHC 2025 | Switzerland | Call for papers | Submissions due 15 September 2024
10th biannual International Euro-Mediterranean Conference on Digital Heritage (EuroMed2024) Call for Papers

GUIDELINES

Reminder to use new Guidelines for preparing a statement of heritage impact (SOHI)

WORKSHOPS / COURSES / EVENTS / EXHIBITIONS

NEW Talking Intangibles with Traditional Trades: Copper, Lead, Slate & Stone | Presented by AICOMOS National Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage | 25 September 2024
NEW Garden History Society ACT Monaro Riverina Branch | Clever Country: an Aboriginal Perspective on Landscape | Adj Professor MargoNgawa Neale | 18 September 2024
NEW Public Lecture The Trouble with Hardy Wilson | Judy Willis | Sydney University School of architecture Design and Planning 19 September 2024
NEW Book Launch Experts in the World Heritage regime: Between protection and prestige by Luke James and published by Palgrave Macmillan
NEW Australian Institute of Landscape Architects | Free webinar: Nature in the City – Fostering Biodiversity | 12.00 – 1.30 | 23 September 2024
NEW NSCES meeting with guest speakers on the ICOMOS Responsible Practice Toolkit |Online | 5.30 pm | 30 September 2024 
NEW Sydney Screening: The Power of Utopia: Living with Le Corbusier in Chandigarh | Presented by GML Heritage | Chauvel Cinema | 9 October 2024
NEW Dry Stone Wall Repair 2-Day Workshop | Mernda, Victoria | 23-24 November 2024
NEW RAHS Evening Lecture | Portable Buildings: Port Jackson to Darwin | 25 September 2024
NEW Lunchtime Talk: Maggolee Awards 2024 Presented by the Australia ICOMOS Young and Emerging Professionals Working Group | 11 October 2024
NEW Culture in Emergencies in the Pacific Region | Zoom Webinar | 29 October 2024, 8am Paris, 6pm AEDT
NEW Antarctic Heritage Trust | Inspiring Explorers Expedition – 18-35 year olds | Applications close 7 October 2024
NEW Hardy Wilson’s Old Colonial Architecture 1924-2024 exhibition | Sydney University Library level 2 of Fisher Library
IA Conference | The Power of Interpretation – Big Impact – Small Footprint | Brisbane | Oct 31-Nov 1 
The 5th International Conference on Energy Efficiency in Historic Buildings | Singapore / online | 7-8 October 2024
ICOMOS NZ AGM Weekend | Everyone’s Heritage Dunedin 19-20 October 2024
Garden History 44th Annual National Conference  | WA Branch | Bunbury W.A | 18 to 20 October 2024
ACAHUCH | 9th Annual Symposium | Keeping House | 6 November 2024
Destinations, connections and shared culture: Albany 2024 – 24-25 October 2024
Australasian Engineering Heritage Conference | UniSA Adelaide | 24-25 October 2024
10th biannual International Euro-Mediterranean Conference on Digital Heritage (EuroMed2024) | Cyprus | 2-4 Dec 2024 
The Uncovered Past Institute | Harrietville Vic | Chinese Mining Village Archaeological excavation – Chinese Mining Village Nov – Dec 2024
Kinchela Boys Home 100th Anniversary Gathering | 18-20 October 2024

SURVEYS / PUBLICATIONS

NSCES Heritage, energy and sustainability Reports –  RELEASED
Consultation open on Draft Recommendations Report – Improving Residential Standards in Tasmania project

SITUATIONS VACANT / WANTED

NEW SITUATION VACANT | City of Gold Coast – Environment, Heritage & Resilience | Senior Heritage Protection Officer | Hybrid – Bundall & WFH | FT | Applications close 20 September 2024
NEW TENANT SOUGHT | Eryldene flat in Sydney
SITUATION VACANT | Edwards Heritage Consultant | Senior Heritage Consultant | Sydney | FT | Applications reviewed upon submission
SITUATION VACANT | Purcell | Senior Architect | Sydney | FT | Applications reviewed on submission 
SITUATION VACANT Conservation Studio | Architect/Experienced Graduate of Architecture (Conservation / Heritage Experience) | Melbourne

Australia ICOMOS 2024 National Symposium and AGM October 24th – 28th | Perth, WA – Registrations Open 

Registrations are now open for the Australia ICOMOS 2024 Caring for a Sunburnt Country national symposium and AGM to be held on October 25th and 26th 2024 at the Curtin School of Technology, City Campus – Old Boys School and Technical School on St Georges Terrace, Perth. 

Various optional excursions and side trips will also be offered in and around Perth and WA from October 24th to 31st. 

The symposium theme will focus on the adaptive management of cultural landscapes, cultural routes and waterways, historic urban landscapes and cultural heritage tourism in the face of flooding, fire, urban consolidation and food production challenges. 

We are also excited to announce that the proposed field trip to the World Heritage-nominated Murujuga property is now confirmed to go ahead from Monday October 28th-Wednesday October 30th. Please tick that box on the registration site if you wish to receive more detail on that program.

Please follow this link to book. 

Attendance numbers are capped at 120 members and non-members, so make sure to get in quick!

Indigenous and Pacific Islander attendees are encouraged to enquire about assisted attendance to the symposium – Please follow the above link to add your EOI on the try booking page.

ICOMOS MEMBERS

NEW Expressions of Interest in joining our Executive Committee |Nominations due 25 September 2024

Nominations to join our executive committee are now open (full international members). An email has been sent to all currently financial FIMs with a nomination form. If you have not received this email and would like to submit a nomination, please contact the Secretariat Officer Rebecca Davies: austicomos@deakin.edu.au asap. If there are more than 5 candidates an election will be held.

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 ICOMOS Annual General Assembly and Scientific Symposium (AGA2024) in Ouro Preto, Brazil 10-17 November 2024

Australian members of ICOMOS (and other attendees from Australia) are invited to let EC Member Stephanie Johnston know if you are attending the AGA2024 in Ouro Preto, Brazil in November.  Stephanie and Kerime (Danis) will organise a hook up for Australians and partners who are attending. Please contact Stephanie on stephaniejohnston2@icloud.com and flavia.kiperman@elementadvisory.com.au for voting comms.

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2024/2025 Membership Fees now overdue 

Fees for the 2024-2025 membership year are now due. If you have any questions regarding your membership, please contact Rebecca Davies Secretariat Officer: austicomos@deakin.edu.au Prompt payment will assist with the financial workflow and budget preparations. Thanks to those who have already paid! 

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ICOMOS Full International Membership: Electronic cards (E-cards)

You can now download your membership card from your profile in the ICOMOS International membership database. In order to do this, you must:

  • have renewed your 2024/25 membership 
  • have uploaded a picture on your profile in the membership database.

ICOMOS_e-cards: How to upload a picture on your profile.

Please email the Secretariat (austicomos@deakin.edu.au) if there are any problems.

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CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS / GRANTS / NOMINATIONS

NEW Call for Papers | ICAHM 2025 Conference | San Pedro de Atacama Chile | Submissions due 10 January 2025

The scientific committee invites the submission of abstracts (100 to 300 words) on these topics. The languages of the conference are English and Spanish (with simultaneous translation provided throughout the event). Please submit abstracts electronically through the conference website.

THEMES

  • Strategies and Objectives for the Management of Archaeological Heritage.
    Archaeology, Astronomy and Geoglyphs in Northern Chile and Surrounding Areas.
    Climate Change, Integrity and Archaeological Sites Management.
    Public Archaeology and Native Peoples.
    Archaeological Heritage and Sustainable Tourism.
    Processes of Plundering and Restitution of Archaeological and Anthropological Collections.
    Archaeology and the Role of New Technologies In the Presentation and Interpretation of Archaeological Sites

For further information and to submit your abstract please visit: https://www.icahm2025.com/

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NEW 2024 WA Heritage Awards nominations are now open

The awards are Western Australia’s premier heritage event which highlights best practice in adaptive reuse, conservation, interpretation, heritage tourism, and promotion.

The Heritage Awards are an opportunity to showcase the excellent work in revitalising heritage places, setting standards in interpretation, heritage tourism, conservation, and adaptive reuse.

There are seven categories open for nomination, covering the diverse range of work being undertaken in the heritage sector.

  • Voluntary Individual Contribution
  • Professional Contribution
  • Contribution by an Organisation
  • Interpretation Project
  • Heritage Tourism
  • Conservation or Adaptive Reuse of a Local Heritage Place
  • Conservation or Adaptive Reuse of a State Registered Place

The new category ‘Conservation or Adaptive Reuse of a Local Heritage Place’ provides an opportunity to recognise outstanding work that has been undertaken on local heritage places. We would also encourage you to nominate any locally listed places you deem worthy for this category as well!

Nominations are completed and submitted online. Register or login to the WA Heritage Awards portal, to start a nomination.

For more information, visit the website, get in touch with the Awards Coordinator. Complete and lodge your submission by 11 October 2024.

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NEW Getty Conservation Institute | Conservation Guest Scholars Program | Applications due 1 October 2024

The Conservation Guest Scholars Program provides opportunities for established scholars or professionals who have attained distinction in the cultural heritage conservation field.

Recipients are in residence at the Getty Conservation Institute for either three or six months, in which they pursue their own projects free from work-related obligations, make use of research collections at the Getty Center and Getty Villa, and participate with other Getty scholars, fellows, and interns in the intellectual life of Getty.

Applications are welcome from researchers and practitioners of all nationalities working in conservation, historic preservation, heritage science, heritage studies, and related fields. Applicants should have at least seven years of professional experience and should have an established record of publications and other contributions to the field. Individuals from groups underrepresented across the field of cultural heritage conservation are encouraged to apply. Proposals for postdoctoral research or research that contributes to a PhD or other academic degree will not be considered.

For eligibility, terms, and how to apply, visit https://gty.art/GCIScholars. The application deadline is October 1, 2024.

For questions regarding the program or the application process, please contact: GCIScholars@getty.edu

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NEW Position Paper on the Review of the State Coastal Policy (SCP) | Development on Actively Mobile Landforms | SPO Tasmania | Submissions due 21 October 2024

The Premier, in consultation with the Minister for Parks and the Environment, have released a Position Paper on the Review of the State Coastal Policy (SCP) – Development on Actively Mobile Landforms (the Position Paper) for public comment for a 6 week consultation period.

To have your say and review the Position Paper, please visit the State Planning Office website

Outcome 1.4.2 of the SCP contains a self-regulating prohibition of all development and works on ‘actively mobile landforms’, other than for engineering or remediation works to protect land, property and human life. The Position Paper explores issues associated with the application of this provision and ways to address them by replacing the Outcome with a more sophisticated policy response that considers the type of development being proposed and to clarify what comprises an ‘actively mobile landform’.

Submissions on the Position Paper are invited until close of business Monday 21 October 2024.

Submissions can be sent to: yoursay.planning@dpac.tas.gov.au

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Early bird registration for the AICOMOS Caring for a Sunburnt Country National Symposium extended

The deadline for early bird registrations for the Caring for a Sunburnt Country National Symposium (Perth, Oct 24-28 2024) has been extended to midnight 15 September 2024 to enable our rich range of presenters to take advantage of the early bird rate. Presenters will be informed of whether their paper has been accepted by 31st August 2024, and need to register for the symposium by September 15th 2024.

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FINAL Call for Papers for OPEN ACCESS BOOK by Springer-Nature: 3D Research Challenges in Cultural Heritage – Vol. IV: Digitisation, Risk Prevention and Monitoring Methods | September 30 2024

This book will illustrate the advances and challenges in digital data acquisition/documentation of tangible objects and the modelling of acquired massive data sets into accurate 2D/3D architectural drawings/models through different innovative methodologies and systems – for monuments and sites such as Heritage Building Information Modelling (HBIM), and parametric/freeform surfaces. Additionally, it will address the processes of semantic annotation of digital models and the application of linked data approaches to embedding vital data (original materials and their conditions, structural analysis, etc.) and enrich the model with ancillary records/models/data that inform the modern multidisciplinary team required to assess and protect heritage at risk.

For further information please follow this link.

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SAHC 2025 | Switzerland | Call for papers | Submissions due 15 September 2024

We are excited to announce that abstract submission for SAHC 2025 is now open! You can access the submission portal here. The deadline for abstract submission is September 15th, 2024.

The 14th International Conference on Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions (SAHC 2025) will take place between September 15th and 17th, 2025, in Lausanne, Switzerland.

For more information regarding the conference topics and special sessions organized by the Scientific Committee, visit the conference website sahc2025.epfl.ch.

Subscribe to our newsletter or follow us on LinkedIn to receive updates regarding the conference’s planned activities.

We look forward to receiving your abstracts and meeting you in Lausanne!

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Guidelines

Reminder to use new Guidelines for preparing a statement of heritage impact (SOHI)

In 2023 Heritage NSW published revised guidelines for preparing a statement of heritage impact. A SOHI is an assessment report that assists owners, custodians and managers of heritage items to understand how proposed works to a heritage item or in its vicinity may impact the item’s heritage significance. The revised guidelines explain what a SOHI is, lists the steps and questions that must be considered while preparing one and sets out the structure for a SOHI in a template.

A SOHI in the new prescribed format must accompany all applications submitted to Heritage NSW for works to items listed on the State Heritage Register. SOHIs that are not prepared according to these new guidelines and template may not be accepted by Heritage NSW. 

Visit this link to access the updated guidelines and stay up to date: https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/research-and-publications/publications-search/statements-of-heritage-impact  

Contact us if you have any questions.

Heritage NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water

Email: heritagemailbox@environment.nsw.gov.au

Web: https://www2.environment.nsw.gov.au/topics/heritage

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WORKSHOPS / COURSES / EVENTS / EXHIBITIONS

NEW Talking Intangibles with Traditional Trades: Copper, Lead, Slate & Stone | Presented by AICOMOS National Scientific Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage | 25 September 2024

Join the Australia ICOMOS National Scientific Committee Intangible Cultural Heritage and our panel of experts to discuss how Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) can inform high quality conservation outcomes.

The first in a series of conversations with Traditional Tradespeople, we will be joined by conservation stonemason James Charlwood and heritage roof plumber Rob Jones to hear about the ways ICH informs their daily practice in the historic built environment.  

Date and Time:   Wednesday 25th September 5-6pm AEST

Registration:     https://bit.ly/talking-intangibles-with-traditional-trades 

More information: https://intangibleculturalheritagensc.wordpress.com/events-activities/

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NEW Garden History Society ACT Monaro Riverina Branch & Friends of NLA | Clever Country: an Aboriginal Perspective on Landscape | Adj Professor MargoNgawa Neale | 18 September 2024

Land is viewed as ‘Country’ in Aboriginal Australia. It is a worldview that embodies a oneness with nature and its many manifestations through the seasons, weather and land formations. It is not a view of nature as the term landscape implies in the western view. Our history is written in the land. Country is our archive, it is where our knowledge, law and identity reside. Country holds information, stories and secrets – from medicine, engineering, ecology, astronomy to social mores on how to live well and sustainably on this planet and with each other. If Country holds such knowledge, then Country is clever. This concept will be visually explored through the award-winning landmark exhibition Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters and the Garden of Australian Dreams (GOAD) at the National Museum of Australia (NMA). It begs the question of where gardens fit into this schema?

Cost: $20 for AGHS members & NLA Friends, others $25 (includes light refreshments following the presentation.) Livestream tickets $11 for AGHS members & NLA Friends, others $16.

Bookings: Through the NLA at https://www.nla.gov.au/whats-on/events/clever-country-aboriginal-perspective-landscape  (NO bookings to be made through AGHS).

Inquiries: Nancy Clarke clarkenancy624@gmail.com

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New Public Lecture The Trouble with Hardy Wilson | Judy Willis | Sydney University School of architecture Design and Planning | 19 September 2024

A century ago, architect William Hardy Wilson published his folio Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania. A collection of some fifty plates, the collection of drawings has been celebrated as sparking wide appreciation for Australia’s early colonial buildings. The pencil and crayon drawings showed extraordinary artistry, presenting the Georgian facades through carefully delineated brick and stonework amongst encroaching foliage and dappled with shadow.

Although credited with great influence, Wilson’s relationship with architecture in Australia was evidently an ambivalent one, and aspects of his legacy troubling. Over time, his interests increasingly lay largely outside of the practise of architecture, focusing on illustrating, writing and publishing his own books. His work took a distinctly racist and eugenicist turn after the publication of Old Colonial Architecture, and he became increasingly disdainful of architectural trends, disparaging modernism. Yet, the very characteristics celebrated in his drawings of Australian buildings – simple, poised, well-proportioned and relatively unadorned structures over which the play of light enhanced their elegance – were seen by some to be aligned with progressive architectural sensibilities.

Wilson’s work has endured, in part, because of its rarity. Few books were published on Australian architecture or by Australian architects at the time, fewer still were focused on the aesthetic and artistic possibilities of Australia’s architectural past. This talk will explore Wilson’s experiences leading to the publication of Old Colonial Architecture, situating him and his work within the context of the Australian architecture profession and the reappraisal of its built past.

Date: Thursday, 19th of September 
Time: 6.00pm reception for 6.30pm lecture
Venue: Charles Perkins Centre, B1900, Auditorium
Speaker: Professor Julie Willis, University of Melbourne

Professor Julie Willis is Dean of the Faculty of Architecture Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne where she is Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor of Architecture. She was the co-editor of the Encyclopedia of Australian Architecture (2012), and has a particular expertise in buildings for health. She is currently engaged in mapping and understanding networks of Australian architects globally in the early decades of the twentieth century.

Exhibition Tour
This public lecture is part of a series of events linked to the exhibition Hardy Wilson’s Old Colonial Architecture 1924-2024. Co-curator of the exhibition Hector Abrahams will lead a tour of the exhibition before the talk. Spaces for this tour are limited. 

Time: 5.00pm – 5.40pm

To register please follow this link.

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NEW Book Launch Experts in the World Heritage regime: Between protection and prestige by Luke James and published by Palgrave Macmillan

GML Heritage and Australia ICOMOS invite you to the NSW launch of Experts in the World Heritage regime: Between protection and prestige by Luke James and published by Palgrave Macmillan.

Date: Tuesday 24 September, 5.30pm for 6.00pm

Location: GML Heritage, Level 17, 323 Castlereagh Street, Haymarket

RSVP: Essential by 20 September to rsvp@gml.com.au

About the book

Experts in the World Heritage regime argues that the UNESCO World Heritage regime emerged as a Faustian pact between protection and prestige, and a productive tension between these elements remains at its core, embodied by the heritage expert. Tracing experts’ practices in the World Heritage regime, this book shows how they burnish, broker and themselves benefit from World Heritage prestige. As World Heritage prestige also contributes to states’ international status claims, the stakes are raised, with both the denouement of the pact and the future for World Heritage poised between condemnation and redemption.

About the author

Luke James is a heritage studies scholar, lawyer and heritage practitioner specialising in World Heritage and international conservation governance. Luke is Lecturer, Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies at Deakin University and previously worked in the Australian Government’s International Heritage Section, with UNESCO and as a heritage consultant.

A small number of books will be available for purchase. Hardcover books $120 (40% off) and softcover books $60 – cash preferred.

Flyer available here.

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NEW Australian Institute of Landscape Architects | Free webinar: Nature in the City – Fostering Biodiversity | 12.00 – 1.30 | 23 September 2024

Join us for a webinar exploring the Government Architect NSW Biodiversity in Place Framework. The framework provides good practice guidance on how to respond to biodiversity in the planning, design and delivery of built environment projects in NSW.

Hosted by AILA as part of the Government Architect NSW Webinar Series, the ‘Biodiversity in Place’ webinar will equip you with the knowledge and insights needed to implement the framework in your projects.  

In the webinar, we will take a deep dive into the case studies which provide examples of how biodiversity has been considered in completed projects and consider the importance of fostering collaboration for biodiverse public realm design and maintenance.

The panel of experts will share case studies to show how biodiversity has been considered in completed projects. No space is too small to be valuable to urban nature, to build corridors and create stepping stones. One garden here, a green roof there, to a beautiful stretch of naturalistic planting will all deliver local impact. When connected on a city-wide scale, these elements are transformational. 

When:  Monday 23 September, 12.00pm – 1.30pm AEST

Case Studies – 4 projects: one small, one medium, one large, and one extra-large:

  • Why we need Biodiversity in Place – An overview of the Framework
     
    Barbara Schaffer, Principal Landscape Architect, Government Architect NSW
  • Biodiverse Pollinating Places: Small – residential gardens 
    Emily Simpson, Emily Simpson Landscape Architecture
  • Daramu House Living Roof – Medium: Green Roof 
    Lucy Sharman, Director Sustainability at Bradfield Development Authority
  • Melbourne Arts Precinct / Hills Showground – Large 
    Jon Hazelwood, Principal at Hassell Studio
  • Elara Riparian Parklands – Extra Large  
    Garth Paterson, Director at Paterson Design Studio

Our speakers will be joined by Georgina de Beaujeu, Climate and Biodiversity Strategist, for the panel discussion session at the end of the webinar.

Further information and to register please follow this link.

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NEW NSCES meeting with guest speakers on the ICOMOS Responsible Practice Toolkit |Online | 5.30 pm | 30 September 2024 

You are invited to the next online National Scientific Committee for Energy and Sustainability (NSCES) meeting.

The ICOMOS Responsible Practice Toolkit has been developed to guide members, ICOMOS Committees and ISCs to understand their personal and committee carbon footprint, and to encourage and explore models for responsible meetings and events. 

Deirdre McDermott (ICOMOS Ireland, AdCom), Kerime Danis (Australia ICOMOS, NSCES, AdCom) and Renata Bornberg (ICOMOS Austria), members of the ICOMOS AdCom Sustainability and Communications Task Force (SCTF), will be presenting on the ICOMOS Responsible Practice Toolkit and explaining how this can be used throughout ICOMOS to assist with sustainability and reduce ICOMOS’ carbon footprint.

Please RSVP to: Helen Wilson + Rachel Jackson helenwilson@outlook.com.au + rachel.jackson@gml.com.au

Convenors of Australia ICOMOS NSCES National Scientific Committee on Energy and Sustainability

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NEW RAHS Evening Lecture | Portable Buildings: Port Jackson to Darwin | 25 September 2024

Event Date & Time: Wednesday, 25 September 2024 @ 6.00 pm – 7.00 pm

Event Location: History House, 133 Macquarie St, Sydney NSW 2000

Cost: RAHS members $20* | Non-members $25

CLICK HERE TO BUY A TICKET

Event Description:

Prefabrication played an important role in Australia from the first European settlement onwards, and more examples survive here than anywhere else in the world. They include wooden houses from Singapore (none of which survive in Singapore itself); English iron buildings of the 1850s (only one of which survives in Britain); plate iron buildings from Glasgow, like the Legislative Council building in Macquarie Street (none in Scotland), redwood buildings from the USA (none), and others from Germany, France and Italy. Most are of great historical and technical interest.

About the speaker:

Professor Miles Lewis AM FAHA is an architectural historian specialising in the history of building technology and is the author of the research upon which is based the bid for UNESCO World Heritage listing of the buildings imported to Australia in the nineteenth century.

*Australian Institute of Architects members are also entitled to this discount.

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NEW Sydney Screening: The Power of Utopia: Living with Le Corbusier in Chandigarh | Presented by GML Heritage | Chauvel Cinema | 9 October 2024

GML Heritage presents a special screening of the film ‘The Power of Utopia: Living with Le Corbusier in Chandigarh’ in Sydney’s Chauvel Cinema on Wednesday 9 October.

The construction of the Indian planned city of Chandigarh 70 years ago saw Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier complete his life’s work. Born in a time of unrest, resettlement and the Partition of India, Chandigarh stands for progress and the newly emerged democracy. His vision was to create a modern, humane and just city, built according to the “measure of man”, which allowed for a cultural life and harmonious interaction between people and nature. In this atmospheric and thoughtful documentary, four people from different walks of life, reflect on Le Corbusier’s legacy, the city they live in, his utopian urban concepts and the cultural differences between East and West. Join GML Heritage for a special screening of this award-winning documentary. 

Wednesday 9 October

Doors open at 6.00pm.

Screening commences at 6.30pm.

Film runs 84mins. Tickets $25. Bookings via Humanitix.

Event link: https://www.gml.com.au/news/the-power-of-utopia-living-with-le-corbusier-in-chandigarh/

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NEW Dry Stone Wall Repair 2-Day Workshop | Mernda, Victoria | 23-24 November 2024

You are invited to join other dry stone wall enthusiasts for a 2 day training course on how to repair and restore dry stone walls using field basalt stone. The training will be held at historic Rockbank in Mernda in the northern suburbs of Melbourne.

Lunch and morning tea will be provided.  Please note places are limited. For further information and to book: COURSES & WORKSHOPS | KDSWC

Ten free places are available for City of Whittlesea residents, so please share with your networks!

City of Whittlesea residents can WIN one of 10 subsidised places at the workshop, by telling us in 50 words or less how the training will benefit them. Please email submissions by 27/09/2024 to colleen.lazenby@whittlesea.vic.gov.au. Please contact Colleen Lazenby for further information.

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NEW Lunchtime Talk: Maggolee Awards 2024 Presented by the Australia ICOMOS Young and Emerging Professionals Working Group | 11 October 2024

Maggolee Awards recognise Victorian local governments working in partnership with First Peoples to support self-determination, advance reconciliation, and strengthen shared decision making with First Peoples.

This spring, we are hosting 2024 winners who will share their journey on meaningful reconciliation with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples. Join speakers from the City of Ballarat, Wyndham City Council and Federation University to learn about Peel to Prest (Yarrowee River History) and Mooroop Yarkeen (Australia’s largest Aboriginal designed and installed mural).

Speakers:

Dr David Waldron (Federation University)

Tegan Lang (Wyndham City, Coordinator Arts Culture & Events)

Shannen Mennen (Wadawurrung woman and Aboriginal Community and Industry Partnership Broker at Federation University)

When: 11 October 2024, 12:30pm AEST

Location: Online, MSTeams (link will be circulated to registered attendees)

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NEW Culture in Emergencies in the Pacific Region | Zoom Webinar | 29 October 2024, 8am Paris, 6pm AEDT

To commemorate the 70th anniversary of the adoption of the 1954 Convention for the Protection of the Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and first Protocol, and the 25th anniversary of the adoption of the 1999 Second Protocol. The event is organised under auspices of the UNESCO Chair in International Law and Cultural Heritage and the new UNESCO-UNITWIN Network on Culture in Emergencies at UTS.

This webinar focuses on the Pacific region which as one of the lowest number of States Parties among the regions worldwide. While our region, its peoples and culture heritage are less impacted by armed conflict, relatively speaking; its cultures and cultural heritage faces threats from climate change and other disasters. This webinar emphasizes the importance of implementation and cooperation efforts under the 1954 Hague framework for culture in emergency situations more broadly.

The three panellists are leading contributors to the key themes of this webinar: 

Ms Krista Pikkat, Director, Culture and Emergencies Entity, Culture Sector, UNESCO Paris

Dr Adi Meretui Ratunabuabua, Chair Blue Shield Pasifika

Professor Mat Trinca Talalin, Chair Blue Shield Australia and Professor of Museum Practice, Australian National University.

Moderator will be Ana Filipa Vrdoljak, UNESCO Chair of International Law and Cultural Heritage and co-coordinator UNESCO-UNITWIN Network on Culture in Emergencies, University of Technology Sydney.

Please register in advance for this webinar here. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

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NEW Antarctic Heritage Trust | Inspiring Explorers Expedition – 18-35 year olds | Applications close 7 October 2024

To celebrate the tenth anniversary of our Inspiring Explorers™ programme, Antarctic Heritage Trust is offering a rare opportunity: to walk in the footsteps of the early Antarctic explorers by stepping inside the historic bases the Trust cares for on the Icy continent. An Inspiring Explorers Expedition™ team will visit the Ross Sea region on a ship-based expedition, between 7 January 2025 – 4 February 2025, with Inspiring Explorers Expedition™ Partner Heritage Expeditions.

We’re looking for applicants with a range of skills and expertise, including interviewing, presenting, audio recording, and knowledge of heritage conservation. But really, what matters the most is you have a desire to step outside your comfort zone and develop an explorer mindset as you join an incredible team of people on this expedition.

The ship-based expedition will take place over four weeks, with the explorers departing New Zealand on January 7th, 2025, thanks to Heritage Expeditions.

Further information and how to apply can be found here.

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NEW Hardy Wilson’s Old Colonial Architecture 1924-2024 exhibition | Sydney University Library level 2 of Fisher Library   

This new exhibition marks the 100th anniversary of Hardy Wilson’s influential work, considered by many to be the foundation of historical scholarship on architecture in Australia. Published in 1824, Hardy Wilson’s book Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania was the first major publication dedicated to the documentation and conservation of Australian buildings.

In 1912, Wilson began a decade-long project to record the early colonial architecture of Australia, which would eventually culminate in the publication of Old Colonial Architecture in New South Wales and Tasmania in 1924.100 years on, this exhibition draws attention to the book’s creation, examines its enduring presence and influence in Australian architecture, and contextualises it in Wilson’s biography and wider body of published work. 

This exhibition was curated by Associate Professor Cameron Logan (Sydney School of Architecture, Design and Planning) and Hector Abrahams and Olivia Salkeld (Hector Abrahams Architects) in collaboration with Rare Books and Special Collections.

Items from the Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections are featured, alongside items generously lent by Hector Abrahams, Zeny Edwards, Glenn Harper, Geoff and Melanie Lovell, Julie Cracknell and Peter Lonergan, Dr. Clive Lucas OBE, the National Trust of Australia (NSW), and the Schaeffer Fine Arts Library.

Further information can be found here.
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Interpretation Australia Conference | The Power of Interpretation – Big Impact – Small Footprint | Brisbane | Oct 31- 1 Nov 2024

Natural and cultural interpretation becomes a potent force in a world where every action counts. This conference celebrates the art of understanding, translating, and reimagining the world around us. We will explore how interpretation shapes our lives and environment. But it’s not just about the bigger picture—it’s about impact. How can we make a difference without leaving a heavy footprint? How can we be innovative and engaging without causing impacts that will affect our shared future. Join us as we delve into the transformative power of interpretation, where small actions ripple outward, leaving lasting effects.

Register here

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The 5th International Conference on Energy Efficiency in Historic Buildings | Singapore / online | 7-8 October 2024

The EEHB 2024 Conference is your gateway to a world of innovation, sustainability, and preservation in the realm of historic buildings. This unique event brings together experts, scholars, professionals, and enthusiasts from around the globe, all with a shared passion for preserving our architectural heritage while embracing the demands of a sustainable future.

Join us in unlocking the secrets of sustainable preservation. Together, we will bridge the gap between heritage and innovation, ensuring that our cherished historic buildings continue to tell their stories for generations to come.

Let’s build a future that respects our history. Further information can be found here

Register here.

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ICOMOS NZ AGM Weekend | Everyone’s Heritage | Dunedin 19-20 October 2024

This year’s ICOMOS ANZ AGM Conference invites you to celebrate our heritage, through sharing stories of your experience – be they work, leisure or study, that reflect on ideas of our shared cultural heritage(s) and how the many values of heritage contribute to this.

Opening address by the Minister of Arts, Culture and Heritage, Hon Paul Goldsmith & Papers – a mix of 20 minute presentations and shorter “quick fire” presentations

Venue: Toito Otago Settlers Museum – 31 Queens Gardens, Dunedin, CBD

Further information can be found here. For registration enquires, please contact: conferenceicomosnz@gmail.com

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Garden History 44th Annual National Conference  | WA Branch | Bunbury W.A | 18 to 20 October 2024

The Western Australia branch hosts the 44th Annual National Conference (18 to 20 October 2024) in the coastal city of Bunbury, about two hours’ drive south of Perth. (Non-AGHS members can Zoom into the lectures from around the world.) Visits during the conference include places of early settlement when the W.A. colony saw its future in the hands of Hesperus, God of the west wind.

Colonisation of the western sector of New Holland was considered a venture that offered trading opportunities with the large British populations in India, and after 1814, the British Cape colony on the southern tip of Africa. The initial settlement on the Swan River in 1829 was championed by Captain James Stirling, who had convinced the British Government to support the establishment of a colony by free settlers. The name he contemplated for the new colony was Hesperia from Hesperus, the Greek name for the god of the west wind. This was not adopted, with the name the Swan River Colony being used until it became officially Western Australia in 1832.

So come to Hesperia where the landscapes are varied and the horticulture, equally so. They offer you a chance to escape to the country, to explore the variety and history of this South West land. We earnestly appeal to you to come ‘Bunburying’ with us, to live another life in far WA for a few days, converse with friends and immerse yourselves in the gardens of this beautiful area of the South West corner of our continent.

More info, and bookings, here:

https://www.gardenhistorysociety.org.au/product/aghs-conference-registration-2024/

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ACAHUCH | 9th Annual Symposium | Keeping House | 6 November 2024

ACAHUCH is pleased to announce our ninth annual symposium titled “Keeping House: conserving, managing and interpreting house museums” on 6th November, 2024.

The symposium focuses on the fascinating world of house museums. Invited expert speakers drawn from academia, the museum and heritage sectors will tease out the significant contemporary issues and opportunities facing this unique genre of public / private cultural institution.  Through an array of Australian and international exemplars, themed panels will explore innovative ways of interpreting the history, memories and stories that house museums harbour; challenges in conserving material fabric, house interiors and gardens; the maintenance of support, management and ownership; and house museums in the context of south-east Asia.

Registration link on Eventbrite is here.

More information can be found on ACAHUCH’s website here.

We look forward to you joining us.

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Destinations, connections and shared culture: Albany 2024 – 24-25 October 2024

The 2024 regional Heritage Conference is jointly presented by the Department of Planning, Lands and Heritage, the Heritage Council of Western Australia and the City of Albany.

Registration are now open for the upcoming 2024 regional Heritage Conference. 

For those who are unable to travel to Albany, there is an option to attend to conference virtually, as the program on Thursday 24 October will be streamed. Simply complete and submit the ‘Registration for attendees’ form and select the ‘Online only’ option and you will be provided with more information closer to the date.

Registrations for presenters

Registrations for attendees

This is a free event but you must register to attend. Registration will close on 13 September 2024.

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Australasian Engineering Heritage Conference | UniSA Adelaide | 24-25 October 2024

Celebrate the rich tapestry of the past and collectively inspire the future of heritage engineering.

Immerse yourself in two-days of knowledge sharing and debate as we explore the preservation and advancement of heritage engineering at the Australasian Engineering Heritage Conference (AEHC 2024).

Organised by Engineering Heritage Australia, AEHC 2024 has become the premier gathering for heritage engineering enthusiasts. The conference attracts engineers, architects, historians and professionals from various disciplines to navigate the intersection of tradition and innovation in the engineering realm. 

You’ll have ample opportunity to network and see prime examples of heritage engineering in the beautiful backdrop of South Australia. 

Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of a global community dedicated to the appreciation and progression of our engineering legacy.

To register follow this link.

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10th biannual International Euro-Mediterranean Conference on Digital Heritage (EuroMed2024) | University of Technology, Limassol, Cyprus | 2-4 Dec 2024 

Celebrating its twentieth anniversary, this key conference on digital cultural heritage will bring together researchers, policymakers, professionals and practitioners from the multidisciplinary heritage domains to discuss the challenges facing and successes in cultural heritage today. EuroMed2024 focuses on the interdisciplinary and intersectoral research on digital cultural heritage and use of cutting-edge technologies for the protection, restoration, preservation, mass digitalisation, documentation and presentation of heritage content.

Further information can be found on the conference website: EuroMed 2024 – 10th International Conference on Digital Heritage

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The Uncovered Past Institute | Harrietville Vic | Chinese Mining Village Archaeological excavation – Chinese Mining Village Nov – Dec 2024

Join us to discover more about the Chinese miners who once lived and worked in the 19th century Harrietville Chinese Mining Village. For around fifty years from the early 1860s Harrietville was home to many of the thousands of Victoria’s Chinese gold miners. This will be the fifth season of archaeological excavation at the Chinese Mining Village, following on from the previous four seasons in October 2017, October 2019, October 2022 and January-February 2024. The largely undisturbed site includes mine workings, water races, building foundations, and gardens: a rare survivor of the heyday of Chinese gold mining in Victoria. The foundations of at least 19 buildings were discovered during a survey undertaken during Season One fieldwork in 2017. Huge quantities of food, liquor, medicines, utensils, ceramics and even coins were imported from China for the Chinese mining communities. Many fragments of these were discovered during the earlier excavation seasons, along with fragments of European tableware ceramics and glass bottles. Season Five research objectives will be to undertake more intensive excavations on hut site WC1, in order to determine its size, footprint and how it was constructed; and also to gain a greater understanding of the lifestyle of the Chinese miners.

For more information or to book in for Season 5 please visit: https://www.uncoveredpast.org.au/harrietville-chinese-mining-village-season-5-dig-with-us-novdec-2024

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Kinchela Boys Home 100th Anniversary Gathering | 18-20 October 2024

2024 marks 100 years since the gates of Kinchela Boys Home (KBH) opened. At those gates, the spirits of the children who walked through the gates were left behind. To mark this 100th anniversary, the KBH Survivors, their descendants and families are honouring the spirits of those children and celebrating the past, present and future of the Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation (KBHAC) Community.

To recognise this important anniversary, a three-day gathering will take place from October 18th – 20th 2024. We would like to invite you to join KBHAC Survivors, their descendants and families in truth telling, cultural wellbeing, and ceremony which will take place across the Kinchela Boys Home site and the Macleay Valley, including Kempsey and South West Rocks.

Support Needed

There is important collective work to be done and KBHAC survivors and descendants are inviting you to walk alongside them, not just on “Sorry Day” or for this weekend, but in meaningful and sustained ways. This includes supporting their vision for transforming the Kinchela Boys Home Site into a national site of truth telling and healing through the creation of a living museum and healing centre. This anniversary event foregrounds the importance of connecting with each other, to empower one another and inspire each other through shared stories. This is an opportunity to join and support the KBHAC Community to witness, remember and grow. Many of the survivors of KBH have passed and the hope for the last generations of survivors is to have the former site that inflicted so much pain and suffering into a site of healing and truth telling. We are asking for your support in working to support their vision.

If you would like to provide sponsorship please email accounts@kbhac.org.au for a prospectus.

For further information please visit: www.kinchelaboyshome.org.au

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International Course on the Conservation of Earthen Architecture | Getty | Al Ain UAE | Applications open for Jan – Feb 2025

We are pleased to announce that applications are now open for the International Course On the Conservation of Earthen Architecture (EAC25). The third iteration of this month-long course will be held January 25 to February 23, 2025 in the World Heritage city of Al Ain, UAE, and in Nizwa, Oman. The course is organized by the Getty Conservation Institute in partnership with Department of Culture and Tourism–Abu Dhabi and the Oman Ministry of Heritage and Tourism.

Please find more information and application instructions on the course webpage: https://www.getty.edu/projects/international-course-conservation-earthen-architecture/eac-2025/.

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Surveys / Publications

NSCES Heritage, energy and sustainability Reports – RELEASED

Two reports have just been released which are both important contributions to the heritage, energy and sustainability field:

Congratulations to Australia ICOMOS NSCES members Ruth Redden and Steven Barry and thanks to all who have been involved in these valuable reports.

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SITUATIONS VACANT / WANTED

NEW SITUATION VACANT | City of Gold Coast – Environment, Heritage & Resilience | Senior Heritage Protection Officer | Hybrid – Bundall & WFH | FT | Applications close 20 September 2024

The Senior Heritage Protection Officer is a senior role within the City’s heritage protection service stream, reporting to the Heritage Protection Lead. As Senior Heritage Protection Officer, your primary goal is to provide high quality expertise for the effective identification and protection of cultural heritage places and areas through land use planning and development control for the City of Gold Coast. In this capacity, you will support the Heritage Protection Lead to maintain the Gold Coast Local Heritage Register and Heritage provisions within the Planning Scheme and assist in administering approvals for development on heritage places and areas. You also deliver cultural heritage technical studies for Master planning and other land use planning initiatives.

You will have cultural heritage planning experience and hold a tertiary qualification in a relevant cultural heritage practice (planning with heritage specialisation, architecture with heritage specialisation, cultural heritage management, or archaeology with planning or heritage specialisation).

Click on this link to apply: Senior Heritage Protection Officer Job in Bundall, Gold Coast QLD – SEEK

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NEW TENANT SOUGHT | Eryldene flat in Sydney

The accommodation comprises two charming rooms, bathroom, large linen cupboard, and shared use of the western loggia, kitchen and laundry which are also used for Eryldene activities. And the world renowned garden is all around, outside your window and at your doorstep for your enjoyment. https://www.eryldene.org.au/ Contact eryldene@eyldene.org.au to register your interest.

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SITUATION VACANT | Edwards Heritage Consultant | Senior Heritage Consultant | Sydney | FT | Applications reviewed upon submission

An exciting opportunity exists for an experienced and self-motivated Senior Heritage Consultant to join EHC’s growing team on a full-time, permanent basis.

If you have 2-5 years’ experience in heritage management and conservation practice, with a background in architecture, planning, archaeology, or other similar and relevant fields, and keen to work in a small but dedicated and respected practice in northwest Sydney, undertaking some exciting and challenging projects – we’d love to hear from you!

You would need to be comfortable working both independently and closely within a small team to contribute positively to the work produced. You should have a passion for heritage management and conservation practice, have good ‘people skills’ and value building great relationships with our Clients and stakeholders, as well as being an all-round great fit within our team.

We are seeking someone with excellent written and verbal communication skills and a passion for heritage within the built environment. You’ll have experience in preparing complex heritage management documentation, a demonstrated ability to provide responsible, rational and creative expert heritage advice, and a sound understanding of heritage legislation and the NSW heritage system generally.

Further information can be found here.

Introduce yourself by email at enquiry@edwardsheritage.com.au – you might like to send us some examples of your work that grabs our attention, together with a short CV.

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SITUATION VACANT | Purcell | Senior Architect | Sydney | FT | Applications reviewed on submission

Purcell is an award-winning employee-owned architectural and heritage consultancy practice with a commitment to quality, innovation, and diversity. We have staff of approximately 280 talented architects, designers, heritage consultants and surveyors across 14 offices, in the UK, Hong Kong and Australia. Winners of Architect Employer of the Year 2022.

Our Sydney Studio is looking for a Senior Architect to join the Practice on a full-time basis.  We’re after a results driven, highly motivated individual to focus on the delivery of a mixture of projects. We are a progressive practice; where you will have the ability to identify opportunities and develop your career. It’s an entrepreneurial job, where you have ownership of your projects and the freedom to deliver results.

The role requires excellent communication, leadership and organisation capability and an individual who excels in a hands-on environment who is passionate about delivering a mixture of small to medium scale bespoke architectural and conservation projects in Australia, and across the Asia Pacific region.

The Studio has a wide range of projects including places of regeneration, infrastructure, and public buildings. This is an excellent opportunity to join a talented and close-knit team, work on exciting projects and help the studio move from strength to strength, with excellent opportunities for career progression, whilst working in a local studio.

Applicants should be skilled in the delivery of architectural projects through all AIA work stages, with the ability to successfully lead and manage a team. Excellent technical skills, as well as strong design skills, will be essential in this role.  Key elements of the role include:

  • Developing relationships with clients, new and existing.
  • Leading and supporting proposals and bids for projects.
  • Co-ordination of internal and external works packages and team members.
  • Complete projects to a high standard, on time and to budget.
  • Lead, produce, assist, and review the production of design and technical related information and reports, both written and graphic.
  • Leading and supporting projects in conservation repair, refurbishment, alterations and additions, adaptive re-use and construction detailing.
  • Occasional travel across the region, as well as remotely supporting colleagues in our Melbourne, Hobart, and Hong Kong studios.

Further information about the role, and details on how to apply, can be found on our website

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SITUATION VACANT | Conservation Studio | Architect/Experienced Graduate of Architecture (Conservation / Heritage Experience) | Melbourne | FT | Applications reviewed upon submission

Conservation Studio Australia welcomes applicants seeking full-time employment in our specialist team of conservation architects, historians, and heritage consultants, in the position of experienced Heritage Consultant working in applied architectural conservation, universal access upgrade, and adaptation of heritage listed/registered buildings.

Applicants with comprehensive experience across all stages of architectural work are encouraged to apply, with the following minimum experience requirements:

Master level (formerly Bachelor) qualification in Architecture from an Architects Accreditation Council of Australia (AACA) accredited architectural qualification provider

minimum 5-7 years’ architectural experience

preferably 1-3 years’ experience working in Australia

preferably Registered Architect in Australia

For further information please follow this link to submit your application please send it to : contact@conservationstudio.com.au

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in the Australia ICOMOS Email News are not necessarily those of Australia ICOMOS Inc. or its Executive Committee. The text of Australia ICOMOS Email news is drawn from various sources including organizations other than Australia ICOMOS Inc. The Australia ICOMOS Email news serves solely as an information source and aims to present a wide range of opinions which may be of interest to readers. Articles submitted for inclusion may be edited.

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Australia ICOMOS Secretariat
Deakin University
221 Burwood Highway
Burwood VIC 3125
Telephone: (03) 9251 7131
Email: austicomos@deakin.edu.au
http://www.icomos.org/australia

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Disclaimer: Opinions expressed in the Australia ICOMOS Email News are not necessarily those of Australia ICOMOS Inc. or its Executive Committee. The text of Australia ICOMOS Email news is drawn from various sources including organizations other than Australia ICOMOS Inc. The Australia ICOMOS Email news serves solely as an information source and aims to present a wide range of opinions which may be of interest to readers. Articles submitted for inclusion may be edited.
 
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