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Melbourne’s ‘Mini Australia ICOMOS Conference’, October 2014 – CALL FOR OFFERS OF ACCOMMODATION
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AICOMOS Symposium: ‘The Return to a New Age of Activism for Cultural Heritage?’ – FULL PROGRAM OF TOP SPEAKERS
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‘Grasping the intangible’ Symposium, 18 October – PROGRAM OUT!
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Australia ICOMOS / Docomomo Sydney Talk Series, 23 October
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Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific (CHCAP) seminar, Melbourne
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Engineering Heritage Australia Quarterly Magazine – now online
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Heritage and Tourism workshop, Adelaide, 7 October 2014
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Case Studies on the Conservation and Management of Historic Cities
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China Study tour, May 2015
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National Heritage Listing for ‘Cathedral of the Wimmera’
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Link to Heritage Tasmania’s E-newsletter
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News from ICCROM
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Cambridge Heritage Research bulletin available
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New publication on Built Environments in transition
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New publication on Indigenous Networks – discount offered
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News from CyArk
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The Protected Areas Learning and Research Collaboration
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“Growing Greater Sydney” Colloquium, 7 November 2014
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SITUATION VACANT Manager, Heritage Places Team, GML Heritage (NSW)
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SITUATION VACANT Senior Specialist (Built Heritage), GML Heritage (NSW)
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SITUATION VACANT Senior Heritage Consultant, Rappoport Heritage Consultants (NSW)
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SITUATION VACANT Senior Project Specialist (Built/20th-century Heritage), Getty Conservation Institute
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SITUATION VACANT Tender opportunity: Activation of Heritage Space 14 Mrs Trivett Place, Arthur’s Head, Fremantle
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1. Melbourne’s ‘Mini Australia ICOMOS Conference’, October 2014 – CALL FOR OFFERS OF ACCOMMODATION
On 17-18 October, Australia ICOMOS is holding two all-day symposia back-to-back, along with the Australia ICOMOS Annual General Meeting. The program is as follows:
- Friday 17 October: The Return to a New Age of Activism for Cultural Heritage?
- The Australia ICOMOS AGM will be held after the ‘Activism’ symposium
- Saturday 18 October: Grasping the intangible at heritage places
- The launch of the Intangible Cultural Heritage National Scientific Committee (NSC)
More information on each event is provided in the related items below.
Accommodation
It has come to the organisers’ attention that these events coincide with a very large international convention (as well as the Caulfield Cup!), and accommodation in the city is at a premium. Rooms are still available, particularly away from the CBD, and we would encourage members to look to different options such as Airbnb.
BUT!! This circumstance provides a great opportunity for AI members to connect by providing or seeking accommodation in the city over the course of the event, and we would like to facilitate the arrangement of accommodation within our membership for these dates:
- Thursday 16 October
- Friday 17 October
- Saturday 18 October
For hosts
Accordingly, if you feel that you, or someone that you know, could offer accommodation to a visiting symposium-ite, please go to our online spreadsheet and provide details requested.
People seeking accommodation will then contact you.
When your offer has been taken up, please update the spreadsheet.
For visitors
If you require accommodation for some or all of these dates, please choose from the offers on the spreadsheet, contact the offering member/s and make arrangements.
Please email Abi Belfrage if you have any difficulties with the spreadsheet.
We look forward to hearing about Australia ICOMOS members working together to help make these events the great success they promise to be.
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2. AICOMOS Symposium: ‘The Return to a New Age of Activism for Cultural Heritage?’ – FULL PROGRAM OF TOP SPEAKERS
The Return to a New Age of Activism for Cultural Heritage?
Conserving Heritage: Activism & Advocacy in the 21st Century
- Friday 17 October, 9.00am-4.00pm (followed by the Australia ICOMOS AGM at 4.30pm)
- Deakin University City Campus
550 Bourke Street, Melbourne
This ‘Activism’ symposium asks whether we need to return to an age of activism to retain and build on what achieved in cultural heritage conservation since the 1970s.
Featuring presentations from successful activists in social media, local government, planning community action, the natural environment and the arts, it will offer us a chance to reflect and look forward.
The full list of confirmed speakers is:
- Lyndon Schneiders, National Director, Wilderness Society
- Rebecca Wilson, Deputy Director, Learning and Community, Australian Progress.
- Jackie Fristacky: Mayor, Yarra City Council
- Corinne Fisher: Convener, Better Planning Network (NSW)
- Professor Peter Tregear: Head, School of Music ANU
- Brendan Sydes: CEO and lawyer, Environmental Justice Australia
- Jonathan La Nauze: Healthy Ecosystems Program Manager, Australian Conservation Foundation
Download the UPDATED Conserving Heritage – Activism & Advocacy in the 21st Century flier.
REGISTRATION
Cost: registering for either symposium on its own – $65, registering for both symposia at the same time – $120
PLEASE NOTE: Australia ICOMOS is not able to pre-issue tax invoices for these events. A tax invoice will be sent by email upon the completion of the registration process via the links below.
- To register for the Conserving Heritage: Time for a New Age of Activism? symposium ONLY – go to https://www.registernow.com.au/secure/Register.aspx?ID=14174
- To register for the Grasping the intangible at heritage places symposium ONLY – go to https://www.registernow.com.au/secure/Register.aspx?ID=14176
- To register for the AICOMOS 2 Day Mini Conference, Melbourne (ie. BOTH SYMPOSIA concurrently) – go to https://www.registernow.com.au/secure/Register.aspx?ID=14179
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3. ‘Grasping the intangible’ Symposium, 18 October – PROGRAM OUT!
Join us for this exciting symposium on intangible cultural heritage and place. The draft Program has just been announced. It offers a wealth of interesting presentations on intangible cultural heritage in Australia and elsewhere.
Need support to attend? Through our great sponsors we can offer some support towards your attendance – the symposium fee and travel. You’ll need to complete a Bursary Application Form and submit it preferably by Wednesday 8 October.
To register for the Symposium: Go to the NSC-ICH Symposium registration page. The Symposium registration fee is $65, or $120 if you register for the Activism symposium too.
The on-line registration system will issue you a tax invoice, and we will send out more details about the event to all those who register.
Membership of the NSC is now open: the membership application form is on the NSC page of the Australia ICOMOS website and the Symposium website.
And we’d love more volunteers to help out at the Symposium: Register using the form on the Symposium website Contact page.
Download the UPDATED Grasping the Intangible Symposium flier.
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4. Australia ICOMOS / Docomomo Sydney Talk Series, 23 October
A FORGER’S PROGRESS: THE LIFE OF FRANCIS GREENWAY
presented by Alasdair McGregor
Sentenced to death for forgery, then granted an eleventh-hour reprieve, Greenway was transported to New South Wales in 1814. He was talented, versatile and well trained, confident in his own abilities; but he was also cocksure, hotheaded and tactless. He argued with his superiors and fostered his own inevitable and sad demise, yet within the space of a single eventful decade he etched an urbane face on prominent parts of early Sydney, helping to drag a ramshackle convict garrison out from the murky shadow of shame and banishment and into the gathering light of civic decorum. As Australia’s first government architect he had dreamt of a city the equal of any in architectural beauty and refinement, a city of cathedrals and grand public buildings, broad avenues, generous squares and flowering gardens.
SPEAKER
Alasdair McGregor is a graduate in architecture from the University of New South Wales, but much of his career has been spent as a writer and painter. He is the author, co-author or editor of nine books, reflecting a broad range of interests covering natural history and the environment, biography, architecture and design, and the history of exploration.
Members of the public are welcome!
Time & Date: Thursday 23 October 2014, 5.30 for 6.00pm start
Cost: Members $10, non-members $15 payable at the door. Wine and nibbles will be provided.
Venue: GML Heritage, 78 George Street, Redfern
RSVP: email Caitlin Dircks or call (02) 9319 4811. RSVP is essential as places are limited.
Download the AICOMOS-DOCOMOMO TALKS 2014 – No. 8 flyer.
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5. Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific (CHCAP) seminar, Melbourne
The next CHCAP seminar at Deakin University will be a presentation by Dr Steven Cooke, Deakin University, on “Before Eichmann: Holocaust exhibitions and the ‘myth of silence’”.
Abstract
Much recent work in the historiography of the Holocaust has challenged the ‘myth of silence’, the supposed post-war reticence of Holocaust survivors to speak about their traumatic experiences. A major focus of this work has been on examining the ‘sheer volume of talking, recording, writing, representation in various media, and publishing’ that went on in the two decades after the Second World War (Cesarani and Sundquist 2011: 10). However, little work to date has explored museum displays for what they can add to the reappraisal of this period.
This paper examines the origins, development and reception of two temporary exhibitions held in 1961; one in Melbourne, one in London, which both have as their focus the Warsaw Ghetto. Within the context of recent discussions on the role of emotion and affect in the engagement between museum exhibitions and viewer as a way to develop more collaborative and emancipatory museum practice, it explores the politics and poetics of the displays, particularly the use of photographs in the London exhibition, influenced by ideas of the ‘democratic surround’ pioneered by the Museum of Modern Art in New York (Turner 2013) and the role of survivors in the Melbourne exhibition. Through this I argue that the displays presaged more recent debates about exhibitions as affective spaces in an attempt to effect political and social change. It shows how representations of the Holocaust were shaped by both local concerns and an emerging global network of information, artefacts, people, and institutions involved in remembrance which adds to the nuanced reading that unsettles the established narratives of the development of post-war Holocaust memory in the UK and Australia.
Biography
Dr Steven Cooke is a cultural and historical geographer who has published widely on issues relating to the memorial landscapes of war and genocide, museums and national identity and maritime heritage and urban redevelopment. On arriving in Australia in 2002, he worked in the heritage sector for a number of years before moving to the Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific at Deakin University in February 2011. He is Course Director for the Cultural Heritage and Museum Studies programs at Deakin, and also an Honorary Research Fellow at Winchester University, UK.
Date: Wednesday 29 October 2014
Time: 5.30pm
Venue: Meeting Room 3, Deakin Prime, City Campus, 3/550 Bourke Street, Melbourne
DINNER: The seminar will be followed by dinner around 7.00 pm at a nearby restaurant. Please RSVP to Yamini Narayanan by email for dinner booking.
Email list: To be included in the CHCAP email newsletter distribution list, email Yamini Narayanan
FINAL 2014 CHCAP SEMINAR (26 November 2014):
- “The Historic Urban Landscape Approach: Finding a better way to manage change in the regional historic city of Ballarat”, Susan Fayad, Coordinator Heritage Strategy, City of Ballarat
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6. Engineering Heritage Australia Quarterly Magazine – now online
Engineering Heritage Australia’s Quarterly Magazine can be downloaded from here.
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7. Heritage and Tourism workshop, Adelaide, 7 October 2014
The National Trust of South Australia, in partnership with the Local Government Association, is running a one day workshop on Heritage and Tourism to promote the benefits of heritage as a tourism asset.
“Tourism and Heritage – A Winning Combination” is a new program developed in conjunction with the National Trust. It is designed to inspire you to blow the cobwebs off your heritage assets and catapult your Council’s heritage tourism into the future by embracing modern technology and partnerships to enhance economic rewards.
For further information and to register, click here.
Download the Heritage and Tourism – A Winning Combination program.
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8. Case Studies on the Conservation and Management of Historic Cities
Carried out between 2008 and 2012, Developing Heritage Cities: Keys for Understanding and Taking Action is a study that attempts to provide solutions to the following question:
- How to safeguard and enhance heritage in an exemplary fashion and, at the same time, allow a city to develop for the profit of the inhabitants, the visitors and future generations?
The report uses World Heritage urban areas from around the globe as Case Studies on the Conservation and Management of Historic Cities.
Click here for more information.
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9. China Study tour, May 2015
The fourth China study tour, led by Anne Warr, will take place from 15 – 30 May 2015. For full itinerary and price CLICK HERE, or contact Anne directly by email.
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10. National Heritage Listing for ‘Cathedral of the Wimmera’
The Murtoa No. 1 Grain Store (aka ‘Cathedral of the Wimmera’ or the ‘Murtoa Stick Shed’), is the only remaining emergency grain store built during World War Two and is an enduring testament to iconic Australian bush ingenuity and a symbol of the growth and strength of the Australian wheat industry.
The quiet and unassuming exterior of this rare and remarkable building stands in the Victorian wheat growing region of the Wimmera and belies its majestic interior and the story it tells of the impact of World War Two on the Australian home front, especially for the production of agricultural exports, like wheat.
For further information and to read media releases, click on the links below.
- Dept of the Environment Heritage Places – Murtoa Grain Shed
- Australian Heritage Council media release
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11. Link to Heritage Tasmania’s E-newsletter
To download the latest issue of Heritage Tasmania’s E-newsletter, click here.
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12. News from ICCROM
To view the latest news from ICCROM, click here.
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13. Cambridge Heritage Research bulletin available
To read the latest Cambridge Heritage Research bulletins, click on the following link.
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14. New publication on Built Environments in transition

Out of Place (Gwalia): Occasional Essays on Australian Regional Communities and Built Environments in Transition
Edited by Philip Goldswain, Nicole Sully, and William Taylor
University of Western Australia Press, 2014
Paperback, 304 pages, ISBN: 9781742585543
AUD$39.99
This collection of essays explores historical, geographical and cultural factors that contribute to our understanding of places and settings of Australian transient communities. From Gwalia and Kalgoorlie in Western Australia, Charters Towers in Queensland and Queenstown in Tasmania, the places provide opportunity to revisit sites of history from the different angles of architecture, landscape theory, social history and visual arts. They also provide a springboard for thinking through the pressing issues for of contemporary Australians and counterparts in other ‘post-settler’ societies.
Contents
Introduction to Australian places, place-making and the politics of displacement in a transient society
William M. Taylor
1. ‘Public photographs’: A serial representation of Kalgoorlie, 1893–1903
Philip Goldswain
2. The moral economy of prefabrication: The curious case of the Brown Hill Mine building and Kalgoorlie Health Laboratory, c.1899–1923
William M. Taylor
3. Burning the bastards out: The destruction of Yugoslav homes on the Boulder lease, 1934
Criena Fitzgerald
4. From lords of creation to petticoat dominions: The place of women during the gold rush of 1851
Clarissa Ball
5. ‘The World’ and Charters TowersGold, stock exchanges and the electric telegraph in the first era of globalisation
John Macarthur
6. Mining, place and propriety in Queenstown: Architectural propriety and belonging in social and environmental contexts
Stuart King
7. On the edge of beyond: Mining and painting the Australian landscape
Nicole Sully
8. Designing way out: Shay Gap and the ‘living laboratory’ of the 1970s
Lee Stickells
9. Back to the future: FIFO, mining and urbanisation in Australia
Mathew Aitchison
This title is available for purchase from the University of Western Australia Press website.
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15. New publication on Indigenous Networks – discount offered
Indigenous Networks: Mobility, Connections and Exchange
Edited by Jane Carey, Jane Lydon
This edited collection argues for the importance of recovering Indigenous participation within global networks of imperial power and wider histories of “transnational” connections. It takes up a crucial challenge for new imperial and transnational histories: to explore the historical role of colonized and subaltern communities in these processes, and their legacies in the present.
For further information and to order a copy, click here – Routledge are currently offering a 20% discount – see the Indigenous Networks Flyer for details.
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16. News from CyArk
CYARK NEWSLETTER, VOLUME 5, ISSUE 9
- Francesco Bandarin joins CyArk 500 Advisory Council
Francesco Bandarin, the former Director of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre, joins the CyArk 500 Advisory Council, the advisory board tasked with advising CyArk on the development of selection criteria and reviewing nominated sites for the CyArk 500. Bandarin will join Council Chair, Gustavo Araoz and other members from the heritage community. Read more»
- One Week until 500 Annual Summit
We are one week away from the CyArk 500 Annual Summit at the National Archives in Washington DC. We are honored to have so many of our close partners alongside new faces as we discuss the CyArk 500 and the effort to Democratize Cultural Heritage by enabling access to information, technology and support. Check out the full schedule»
- Special event at Armenian Embassy
In a new and exciting partnership, CyArk and Tumo Center for Creative Technologies have committed to train Tumo’s students in 3D capture technologies through a series of workshops in Yerevan, Armenia. These students will use laser scanning technology to preserve historic Armenian heritage sites. The kick-off of this ambitious initiative will take place Wednesday, October 8th, 2014 at a fundraiser graciously hosted by the Embassy of Armenia to the United States of America in Washington, D.C. Learn More»
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17. The Protected Areas Learning and Research Collaboration
The Protected Areas Learning and Research Collaboration (PALRC) will be launched at the IUCN World Parks Congress in Sydney in November 2014. PALRC is a tertiary and vocational education and research initiative dedicated to natural and cultural heritage protection, stewardship and conservation management and capacity development for the Asia Pacific and Oceania regions. The Collaboration will benefit professionals and community-based conservation practitioners working on protected areas and other area-based conservation activities.
For further information, download the PALRC Update Bulletin_21 Sept 2014.
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18. “Growing Greater Sydney” Colloquium, 7 November 2014
Growing Greater Sydney – Connecting people and places
Friday 7 November 2014, 9.00am-5.30pm
Keynote event of the 2014 Sydney Architecture Festival
Urban Growth NSW claims their “ambition is to drive a world class urban transformation that will deliver housing and jobs growth, and improve the amenity and liveability of our urban spaces”. The Government Architects Office advocates strongly for Design Excellence in influencing change and the Committee for Sydney wants Sydney to be not just a global city but a great city. What does this mean for the future of Sydney?
Venue: Riverside Theatres, Church Street, Parramatta
Cost: $160 – tickets on sale now
5 Formal CPD points
For further information, including how to purchase tickets, CLICK HERE.
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19. SITUATION VACANT Manager, Heritage Places Team, GML Heritage (NSW)
GML Heritage (GML) is a leading Australian heritage consultancy. Our multi-disciplinary in-house team has expertise in built heritage, conservation planning, archaeology, Aboriginal heritage, history and interpretation. We are seeking to appoint two experienced and creative heritage practitioners to join our Heritage Places team – position one as per below.
Manager, Heritage Places Team
The Manager of the Heritage Places Team is a new senior leadership position within GML. The key requirement of the position is to lead and manage our team of architectural, planning, history and interpretation specialists to deliver a broad range of projects. This is an exciting opportunity for someone with at least ten years’ experience working in the heritage field to join our senior management team, and also to contribute to the strategic direction of the firm. A strategic focus, and experience in managing project teams within time and budget constraints will be essential for the role.
The Manager will have had extensive experience working in the built heritage field, and have developed a reputation amongst your heritage peers and the development industry for delivering high quality outcomes for projects involving heritage buildings and cultural landscapes. Experience working on large projects in multidisciplinary teams, and the ability to operate in a commercial environment are essential. You will also possess an excellent knowledge of relevant heritage legislation and guidelines. A degree in architecture, registration as an architect, full membership of Australia ICOMOS and experience in Land and Environment appeals are all desirable.
Working at GML Heritage
GML Heritage is the heritage consultant of choice for many of Australia’s most important government and private organisations engaged with the management and development of heritage assets. We have offices in Sydney and Canberra, and a team of over 40 in-house professional and support staff. You will work alongside colleagues who are leading experts in their fields.
We provide high level heritage advice on major development projects and undertake benchmark projects for public and private sector clients. At GML, we believe that heritage should be celebrated. We enjoy solving complex challenges and providing enduring value for our clients and the broader community. Our unique position within the industry means that GML heritage specialists have the opportunity to work on some of the most interesting heritage conservation projects across Australia. We are also increasingly engaged in international conservation projects.
The position is full time and based in our Redfern office. We also have an office in Canberra. An attractive salary package and conditions will be negotiated. The successful candidate will be provided with excellent opportunities for professional advancement and promotion within the firm.
For inquiries regarding the above roles, please call Peter Romey on (02) 9319 4811. Email your application to Peter Romey. Applications close COB Friday 10 October.
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20. SITUATION VACANT Senior Specialist (Built Heritage), GML Heritage (NSW)
GML Heritage (GML) is a leading Australian heritage consultancy. Our multi-disciplinary in-house team has expertise in built heritage, conservation planning, archaeology, Aboriginal heritage, history and interpretation. We are seeking to appoint two experienced and creative heritage practitioners to join our Heritage Places team – position two as per below.
Senior Specialist (Built Heritage), Heritage Places Team
The Senior Specialist (Built Heritage) is a senior position in the Heritage Places team at GML Heritage. This is an exciting opportunity for a heritage practitioner with extensive experience in strategic heritage planning, preparing Heritage Impact Statements and Conservation Management Plans, and providing informed heritage advice to a range of clients.
The Senior Specialist will be responsive, client-focused and self-directed in the delivery of projects and management of clients and staff. You will have had at least five years’ experience working in the built heritage field, experience working on large projects in multidisciplinary teams, and the ability to operate in a commercial environment. A creative thinking focus and experience in managing projects within time and budget constraints will be essential for the role. You will also possess an excellent knowledge of relevant heritage legislation and guidelines. A degree in a relevant heritage conservation discipline and full membership of Australia are also desirable.
The position may also include leading and managing a small team that would include architectural, planning, history and interpretation specialists.
Working at GML Heritage
GML Heritage is the heritage consultant of choice for many of Australia’s most important government and private organisations engaged with the management and development of heritage assets. We have offices in Sydney and Canberra, and a team of over 40 in-house professional and support staff. You will work alongside colleagues who are leading experts in their fields.
We provide high level heritage advice on major development projects and undertake benchmark projects for public and private sector clients. At GML, we believe that heritage should be celebrated. We enjoy solving complex challenges and providing enduring value for our clients and the broader community. Our unique position within the industry means that GML heritage specialists have the opportunity to work on some of the most interesting heritage conservation projects across Australia. We are also increasingly engaged in international conservation projects.
The position is full time and based in our Redfern office. We also have an office in Canberra. An attractive salary package and conditions will be negotiated. The successful candidate will be provided with excellent opportunities for professional advancement and promotion within the firm. We would also consider a temporary appointment for a suitably experienced built heritage professional on a 6 months basis if this would suit the right applicant.
For inquiries regarding the above roles, please call Peter Romey on (02) 9319 4811. Email your application to Peter Romey. Applications close COB Friday 10 October.
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21. SITUATION VACANT Senior Heritage Consultant, Rappoport Heritage Consultants (NSW)
SENIOR HERITAGE CONSULTANT – PERMANENT NSW POSITION
MINIMUM 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN CULTURAL BUILT HERITAGE
RAPPOPORT HERITAGE CONSULTANTS
Rappoport is a specialist firm of dedicated heritage practitioners operating throughout NSW. Located in metropolitan Sydney, the firm assists town planners, architects, owners, managers and developers of heritage properties through the heritage approval process at both State and Local government levels.
Rappoport provides heritage advice to a wide range of major development projects throughout NSW and the ACT. Our in-house heritage staff has expertise in built heritage, urban planning, historians, research and architecture.
Due to an increase of work, Rappoport is seeking the right enthusiastic candidate with a degree or equivalent in heritage, town planning, architecture, urban design, history, archaeology or related fields.
The right candidate will need to be able to have the ability to take on a wide variety of tasks. The role involves, research, report writing (such as CMPs, Statements of Heritage Impact and other heritage reports) site meetings, and general office activity in order to meet deadlines, schedules, workflow and standards. You will need to be self-motivated and have attention to detail. Your role would also involve coordination and management of your own projects.
Rappoport is located in Mascot and operates throughout NSW and the ACT. Our clients are architects, town planners, private owners, project managers and developers as well as State and Local government projects.
Applicants need to have the following expertise and skills:
- Good management and workflow control
- Knowledge of heritage charters, legislation and guidelines
- Understand the heritage planning framework in NSW (LEPs, DCPs etc)
- Historical and archival research
- Writing and producing various type of heritage reports
- Liaising & meeting with clients, external consultants and Councils
- Report writing skills
- Strong communication skills, including a good command of the English language
- Ability to manage own work and external consultants to meet deadlines
- Self-motivated – have a proactive approach to the tasks set, organised and plan ahead to meet deadlines
- Be part of a small team environment
- Knowledge and use of Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook
- Drivers licence
This role is permanent full-time position located at Mascot. The successful applicant will be required to have appropriate tertiary qualifications. Applicants with relevant unrestricted working rights should apply.
An attractive salary package, commensurate with experience, will be offered.
Please email your resume to Rappoport Heritage Consultants; or for a confidential discussion/enquiries regarding this position, please contact Sue Rosenberg on 0412 486 777.
Closing date for applications 10 October 2014.
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22. SITUATION VACANT Senior Project Specialist (Built/20th-century Heritage), Getty Conservation Institute
The Getty Conservation Institute is seeking a conservation practitioner to fill the position of Senior Project Specialist (Built/20th-century Heritage).
The Senior Project Specialist (Built/20th-century Heritage) will lead the Conserving Modern Architecture Initiative (CMAI), a comprehensive, long-term, and international program of the GCI. The goal of the CMAI is to advance the practice of conserving twentieth-century heritage, with a focus on modern architecture, through research and investigation, the development of practical conservation solutions, and the creation and distribution of information through training programs and publications. The CMAI works with international and local partners, including professional and organizational networks focused on modern architecture conservation, to expand the existing knowledge base.
For further information about this opportunity, download the Senior Project Specialist (Built/20th-century Heritage) position description.
Applications close 10 October 2014.
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23. SITUATION VACANT Tender opportunity: Activation of Heritage Space 14 Mrs Trivett Place, Arthur’s Head, Fremantle
The City of Fremantle invites quotations regarding the activation of Heritage space at 14 Mrs Trivett Place, Arthur’s Head, Fremantle through a heritage project.
The key contact person is Mike Pforr (Coordinator Community Development) – contact Mike by email.
Key project deliverables
- A heritage space at 14 Mrs Trivett Place that is inviting, interactive, interesting, evolving, and available to the public
- Funding opportunities for the location to ensure that it remains available for shared heritage use.
- Concept design of space with options for use
- Fitting out of space as approved by the City
- Promotional plan
- Ongoing management plan
- Identified funding opportunities
Further information can be found in the Activation of Heritage space at 14 Mrs Trivett Place, Arthurs Head request for quotation.
Timeframe
It is anticipated that the selection process will conclude within 2-4 weeks of the closing date for proposals.
Proposals can be submitted (marked “Attention: Mike Pforr, Coordinator Community Development) either in electronic copy to Mike Pforr by email or in hard copy to:
Community Development Directorate City of Fremantle
PO Box 807
Fremantle WA 6959
Closing date: Proposals will need to be received by Friday 24 October 2014.
The City may ask you to come and present your proposal to City officers for discussion if shortlisted.
For further information or queries, please contact Mike Pforr by email or on (08) 9432 9522.
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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
Georgia Meros, Secretariat Officer
Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific
Deakin University
221 Burwood Highway
Burwood VIC 3125
Telephone: (03) 9251 7131
Facsimile: (03) 9251 7158
Email: austicomos@deakin.edu.au
http://www.icomos.org/australia
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