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1 Research News Built Environment Issue 32 – February 2017 From the Associate Dean Research Welcome to 2017. This is a year when the UNSW 2025 Strategy will really make an impact on our research activities. The Strategy provides the overall framework for directing out energies according to the three main goals of academic excellence, social engagement and global impact. For research specifically, the university has clear expectations for our performance across a range of measures including external grant income, research impact, citations, and higher degree research student (HDR) completions. From early 2016 we commenced the process of preparing a new research strategy with the faculty research manager, director of postgraduate research, postgraduate research coordinator, research committee and other forums all making vital inputs. The previous strategy for 2014-16 was comprehensively reviewed and we determined that we had fully or partly achieved 77% of our 83 indicated actions grouped within 29 objectives under 5 main goals. That was a healthy result given that unfulfilled aspirations usually related to a changing of institutional goalposts, targets that proved beyond the realm of research management, and initiatives dropped through lack of funding. Subsequent development of the new research strategy proceeded differently, being integrated within a faculty-wide process guided for a time by KPMG. The targets have been stripped back and refined to address new priorities driven not only by the 2025 Strategy but a new environment for research with emphases on industry connections, interdisciplinarity, and societal impact. The almost-finalised strategy makes a strong declaration: In 2025 we are a global leader in research that is vital to cities, their built environments and inhabitants. Our work ranges across the spectrum of built environment research from human-centred design and sustainability to culture, urbanism and public policy. We demonstrate excellence in creative, scholarly and industry-focused research, harnessing new technologies. Research is ingrained in the Faculty’s culture through the interplay of research with teaching and practice. High impact research is articulated through a dynamic and innovative institutional ecosystem organised around collaborative and interdisciplinary work; creative foci such as clusters, centres, institutes, and alliances; and strong community, government and private partnerships all cumulatively addressing pressing urban challenges intersecting across global, national, regional, and local scales

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Research News Built Environment

Issue 32 – February 2017

From the Associate Dean Research Welcome to 2017. This is a year when the UNSW 2025 Strategy will really make an impact on our research activities. The Strategy provides the overall framework for directing out energies according to the three main goals of academic excellence, social engagement and global impact. For research specifically, the university has clear expectations for our performance across a range of measures including external grant income, research impact, citations, and higher degree research student (HDR) completions. From early 2016 we commenced the process of preparing a new research strategy with the faculty research manager, director of postgraduate research, postgraduate research coordinator, research committee and other forums all making vital inputs. The previous strategy for 2014-16 was comprehensively reviewed and we determined that we had fully or partly achieved 77% of our 83 indicated actions grouped within 29 objectives under 5 main goals. That was a healthy result given that unfulfilled aspirations usually related to a changing of institutional goalposts, targets that proved beyond the realm of research management, and initiatives dropped through lack of funding. Subsequent development of the new research strategy proceeded differently, being integrated within a faculty-wide process guided for a time by KPMG. The targets have been stripped back and refined to address new priorities driven not only by the 2025 Strategy but a new environment for research with emphases on industry connections, interdisciplinarity, and societal impact. The almost-finalised strategy makes a strong declaration:

In 2025 we are a global leader in research that is vital to cities, their built environments and inhabitants. Our work ranges across the spectrum of built environment research from human-centred design and sustainability to culture, urbanism and public policy. We demonstrate excellence in creative, scholarly and industry-focused research, harnessing new technologies. Research is ingrained in the Faculty’s culture through the interplay of research with teaching and practice. High impact research is articulated through a dynamic and innovative institutional ecosystem organised around collaborative and interdisciplinary work; creative foci such as clusters, centres, institutes, and alliances; and strong community, government and private partnerships all cumulatively addressing pressing urban challenges intersecting across global, national, regional, and local scales

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The detail is organised across issues of recruitment for research excellence within the framework of the Scientia programs, new degree programs in the HDR space, increased success rates across all categories of grants, working towards a university-wide interdisciplinary research institutes led by the faculty, and a more strategic approach to industry engagement. The overall touchstone for 2017 and beyond remains our commitment to vital and high quality city research so people’s lives are improved through a better built environment. Rob Freestone Associate Dean Research

Researcher Highlights

Visit of Delegation from Kyushu University On Wednesday 7 December, 2016, a delegation from the Faculty of Design at Kyushu University in Fukuoka, Japan visited Built Environment to discuss possible joint ventures in research and teaching. The group was led by Professor Masakazu Tani (Vice Dean), Professor Ken-ichi Tanoue, Associate Professor Tomo Inoue, and Assistant Professor Masaaki Iwamoto. They were accompanied by Julie Ward the International Research Manager from the UNSW Research Strategy and Partnerships Office. Professor Tani gave a general orientation to the purpose and objectives of the visit around an international partnership. He highlighted three particular areas of interest: physiological human adaptation to indoor environment conditions (making a presentation on behalf of Professor Takafumi Maeda), historical vernacular structures in British Colonies (with a projected visit to Sydney early in 2017), and housing for the rural area in developing countries using future technologies. Along with the ADR Rob Freestone, BE staff in attendance discussing these and other possibilities were Sid Newton and Riza Sunindijo (Construction Management), Scott Hawken (Urban Design), Russel Rodrigo (Architecture), Bruce Watson (Interior Architecture), and Bruce Judd (School of Architecture & Design). The prospect of joint studios in South and East Asia seemed most immediately realistic and indeed students from BE and Kyushu had met up in the recent studio in Myanmar.

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New Grant Highlights

BILL RANDOLPH; Increasing Affordable Housing Supply: Affordable housing prospects in different market contexts This project forms one of three interrelated AHURI funded projects exploring government efforts to increase affordable housing supply, focusing on industry partnerships, planning levers, and exemplar housing projects. This project, running to mid-2017, focuses on the financial parameters and affordability outcomes of a carefully selected sample of recently affordable housing developments (rental and ownership). Using the data collected from these examples, the team will develop an affordable housing model that is capable of appraising affordability outcomes for a range of subsidy arrangements for projects planned in different market contexts (higher to lower value). The core aims of the research are to:

• Improve our understanding of the variety of ways that major completed affordable housing projects have been financed in Australia;

• Demonstrate how differing procurement and operating costs, housing revenues and public subsidies interact in different markets to generate affordable housing outcomes and for which target groups;

• Develop an assessment tool that will assist industry participants to test the feasibility of potential affordable housing outputs in different market and financing regimes.

Given the current heightened level of interest in developing new approaches to affordable housing supply at both Federal and State levels in Australia, as well as growing interest from major financial institutions in how the sector might be funded, this research will have significant implications for the debates on affordable housing policy making and industry development in Australia.

Meet the Researchers – Laura Crommelin

Laura started at City Futures as a Research Associate in 2015, having first joined FBE as a PhD student in 2011. Originally trained as a lawyer, Laura worked in intellectual property and competition law for a number of years, before returning to academia to pursue a longstanding interest in urban issues, with a focus on the US. The city of Detroit was a case study for her PhD research (along with Newcastle, NSW), which examined how post-industrial cities grapple with

redefining their image in the wake of major economic transition. This work was supported by a Fulbright scholarship, which allowed Laura to spend 8 months studying the Motor City as a visiting researcher at the University of Michigan in 2012-2013. She continues to work with US

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collaborators on projects examining the relationship between economic and cultural change in Detroit and other American ‘Rust Belt’ cities. Beyond American urbanism, Laura’s research interests cover a range of contemporary trends in post-industrial cities worldwide, including urban renewal, place-making, place branding and unofficial revitalisation practices. Since joining City Futures Laura has worked on ARC-funded projects on urban renewal in Australia, including an examination of the challenges involved in translating urban renewal policy into practice, and an investigation of the feasibility and implications of NSW’s new strata renewal process. Both projects have raised complex legal and policy issues, providing an opportunity to put her legal training to use once again. New projects in development focus on addressing key issues in strata living, including short-term letting and managing defects in multi-unit dwellings, and the disruptive impact of Airbnb on housing markets.

BE Research in the News Linda Corkery & Kate Bishop: Let Kids Plan How they Live and Play. UNSW Uniken Magazine, 10 January 2017. View online. Bill Randolph: Land Values Surge in Development Hot Spots across Sydney. Sydney Morning Herald, 13 January 2017. View online.

Have you have had your research mentioned in the media recently?

Please send details to Toni Hodge for inclusion in the next newsletter.

BE Research on the Web Altmetrics measures the attention a DOI-linked output receives on the web and tracks outlets such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, Wikipedia, Pinterest, blogs, Reddit, The Conversation and other media outlets. Each month we list the top scoring outputs from the faculty, sourced from Altmetric Explorer.

1. Edgar Liu/Hazel Easthope Multigenerational Family Living 2. Martin Loosemore/Anumitra Chand Climate Change Risks and Opportunities in Hospital

Adaptation 3. Anumitra Chand/Martin Loosemore Hospital Learning from Extreme Weather Events:

Using causal loop diagrams 4. Anumitra Chand/Martin Loosemore A Socio-ecological Analysis of Hospital Resilience

to Extreme Weather Events 5. Mat Santamouris On the Impact of Urban Heat Island and Global Warming on the Power

Demand and Electricity Consumption of Buildings – A review

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University Updates

New Resources Added to the University Library Collection The Library has added two new resources which will be of interest to researchers in art and architecture: DETAIL inspiration An image and reference database for architects. Containing over 2,000 projects from the last 30 years of DETAIL magazine, DETAIL inspiration is a source of research and inspiration for architects providing access to reference photos, sketches, and technical product information. Access is currently available: DETAIL inspiration ProQuest Art and Architecture Archive A full-text archive of magazines comprising key research material in the fields of art and architecture, dating from the late-nineteenth century to the twenty-first. Subjects covered include fine art, decorative arts, architecture, interior design, industrial design, and photography. The magazines are scanned from cover-to-cover and presented as full-colour page images; detailed indexing permits quick, efficient searching and navigation of this material. Coverage: 1895 - 2005. Access is currently available: Proquest databases

HDR News

GRADUATING STUDENTS Congratulations to the following HDR candidates who have recently received their completion letters.

• Mao (Sumavalee) Chindapol (PhD), supervised by Paul Osmond, Deo Prasad and John Blair

• Aida Eslami Afrooz (PhD), supervised by Bruno Parolin, Alan Peters, Gethin Davison and David White

• Yingying Qu (PhD), supervised by Martin Loosemore and Cynthia Wang • Sara Mehryar (PhD), supervised by Bruce Judd, Gethin Davison and Mahmoud

Ghalehnoee

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EVENTS 1. PGRS End of Year Dinner @ AL ASEEL For the 2016 HDR Cohort Dinner we were all off to AL ASEEL in Alexandria for an authentic Lebanese feast teamed up with a night of great company and good food. A great night was had by all, below are some photos from our “Great Night Out”.

2. Monthly Cohort Workshop Our first monthly cohort workshop for 2017 is scheduled on Wednesday 1st March at 11am and will be held in 6007 (Level 6 PhD Lab). At this meeting we will be discussing any issues and welcome any ideas for making 2017 a “Bigger and Better” year. The DPGR will be attending and all HDR students are encouraged to come along to share with us their expectations for 2017. This will be followed by monthly meetings on the first Wednesday of every month until the end of the year.

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Did You Know….?

…the Research Strategy Partnerships Office has an online resource on strategic grant application principles. For those new to grant writing in the Australian context (or needing a refresher), seven short videos with essential information on applying for funding are now available. Visit the Research Strategy Partnerships Office (RSPO) website to gain access for Moodle self-enrolment instructions: https://research.unsw.edu.au/rspo-workshop-presentations

Upcoming Events

2018 Venice Architecture Biennale – Australian Creative Director Sought Expressions of Interest are currently being invited for the position of creative director(s) of the Australian exhibition at the 2018 Venice architecture Biennale. This role provides an opportunity to participate on the world stage as Australia showcases its architectural industry, talent and intellect at what is arguably the most important event on the international contemporary architecture calendar. Helen Lochhead is happy to share her insight from her time on the selection panel on what the panel is seeking and what makes a compelling proposition. A supporting information document, containing information on the venue, the role, the budget, the timeline and submission requirements, can be obtained by emailing [email protected] Submissions close on 26 February 2017.

UNSW Grand Challenges Program The UNSW Grand Challenges program is underway with Climate Change and Refugees & Migration the first two declared themes. All UNSW staff, postgraduate and undergraduate students are encouraged to be involved and this has been made possible via the Meetup platform. This platform provides a central portal where meetups are organised and discussions can occur. Each Meetup features different speakers and topics that are related to the existing or potential future Grand Challenges. These Meetups provide an opportunity for Built Environment staff to get involved with the Grand Challenges, either by potentially linking their existing activities to the current Grand Challenges themes or by being involved with the development of future Grand Challenges proposals. To join the Meetup platform go to https://www.meetup.com/UNSW-Grand-Challenges-Program/

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Publications

Edited Books O'Callaghan, J. M., Hogben, P., & Freestone, R. (Eds.) (2016). Sydney's Martin Place: A cultural and design history (1 ed.). Crows Nest, NSW: Allen and Unwin. Retrieved from https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/general-books/history/Sydneys-Martin-Place-Edited-by-Judith-OCallaghan-Paul-Hogben-and-Robert-Freestone-9781760293628

Book Chapters Alic, D. (2016). From Commemoration to Protest: Sydney’s Civic Heart. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney’s Martin Place, a cultural and design history (pp. 207-221). Sydney: Allen & Unwin.

Burnley, I. (2016). Demographic Characteristics of Multigenerational Households in Australia, with Special Reference to Metropolitan Sydney and Brisbane. In E. Y. Liu, & H. Easthope (Eds.), Multigenerational Family Living: Evidence and Policy Implications from Australia (pp. 14-37). London: Routledge. Retrieved from https://www.routledge.com/Multigenerational-Family-Living-Evidence-and-Policy-Implications-from/Liu-Easthope/p/book/9781472476692

Easthope, H. (2016). Losing Control at Home?. In R. Freestone, & E. Liu (Eds.), Place and Placelessness Revisited (pp. 108-119). New York: Routledge. Retrieved from https://www.routledge.com/Place-and-Placelessness-Revisited/Freestone-Liu/p/book/9781138937116

Fileborn, B. K., Jones, T., & Minichiello, V. (2016). Identity, sexuality and stigma in multigenerational households: perspectives from LGBT household members. In E. Liu, & H. Easthope (Eds.), Living with the family: multigenerational households in Australian cities. Routledge.

Freestone, R. (2016). A “Monument to Civic Foresight”: Extending Martin Place, 1923-35’. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney’s Martin Place: A Cultural and Design History (pp. 18-35). Sydney: Allen and Unwin.

Freestone, R., & Wiesel, I. (2016). Place-making in the Rise of the Airport City. In R. Freestone, & E. Liu (Eds.), Place and Placelesness Revisited (pp. 168-185). New York: Routledge. Retrieved from https://www.routledge.com/Place-and-Placelessness-Revisited/Freestone-Liu/p/book/9781138937116

Hogben, P. E. (2016). A Sydney Social Hub: The Australia Hotel and the Commercial Travellers' Association of NSW. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney's Martin Place: A Cultural and Design History (1 ed., pp. 139-154). Crows Nest, NSW, Australia: Allen & Unswin. Retrieved from https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/general-books/history/Sydneys-Martin-Place-Edited-by-Judith-OCallaghan-Paul-Hogben-and-Robert-Freestone-9781760293628

Kohane, P. M., & Stiles, M. (2016). The Beginnings: James Barnet and the General Post Office. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney's Martin Place - A Cultural and Design History (1 ed., pp. 1-18). Crows Nest, NSW, Australia: Allen & Unwin. Retrieved from

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https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/general-books/history/Sydneys-Martin-Place-Edited-by-Judith-OCallaghan-Paul-Hogben-and-Robert-Freestone-9781760293628

Lang, J. T. (2016). An Urban Designer's Perspective: Paradigms, Places and People. In R. Freestone, & E. Liu (Eds.), Place and Placelessness Revisited (pp. 37-48). New York: Routledge. Retrieved from https://www.routledge.com/Place-and-Placelessness-Revisited/Freestone-Liu/p/book/9781138937116

Margalit, H. Z., & Favaro, P. (2016). A Central Player: The Corporate Presence of the MLC. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney's Martin Place A cultural and design history (pp. 122-137). Allen & Unwin.

Marshall, N. G. (2016). Urban Squares: A Place for Social Life. In Place and Placelessness (pp. 186-203). New York: Routledge. Retrieved from https://www.routledge.com/Place-and-Placelessness-Revisited/Freestone-Liu/p/book/9781138937116

Murray, A. G. (2016). The Matter of Voids. In S. Breen Lovett, & C. Perren (Eds.), Expanded Architecture. Temporal Spatial Practices.

O'Callaghan, J. M., Hogben, P., & Freestone, R. (2016). Introduction. In Sydney's Martin Place: A Cultural and Design History (pp. xi-xiii).

O'Callaghan, J. M. (2016). The 'Taj Mahal' of the Eastern Suburbs Line: Martin Place Railway Station. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney's Martin Place: A Cultural and Design History (pp. 155-172).

Osmond, P. W., & Blair, J. (2016). Green roof retrofitting and conservation of endangered flora. In S. J. Wilkinson, & T. Dixon (Eds.), Green Roof Retrofit: Building Urban Resilience (pp. 140-157). Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. Retrieved from http://au.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1119055571.html

Santamouris, M. (2016). Urban warming and mitigation: Actual status, impacts and challenges. In M. Santamouris, & D. Kolokotsa (Eds.), Urban Climate Mitigation Techniques (pp. 1-26). Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315765839

Simon, K. (2016). Animating Public Space: Designs for Civic Life. In J. O'Callaghan, P. Hogben, & R. Freestone (Eds.), Sydney's Martin Place: A Cultural and Design History (1 ed., pp. 191-206). Crows Nest, NSW, Australia: Allen & Unwin. Retrieved from https://www.allenandunwin.com/browse/books/general-books/history/Sydneys-Martin-Place-Edited-by-Judith-OCallaghan-Paul-Hogben-and-Robert-Freestone-9781760293628

Journal Articles Abisuga, A. O., Famakin, I. O., & Oshodi, O. S. (2016). Educational building conditions and the health of users. Construction Economics and Building, 16(4), 19-34. doi:10.5130/AJCEB.v%25vi%25i.4979

Carnemolla, P., & Bridge, C. (2016). Accessible housing and health-related quality of life: Measurements of wellbeing outcomes following home modifications. Archnet-IJAR, 10(2), 38-51.

Crawford, D. F., O'Connor, M. H., Jovanovic, T., Herr, A., Raison, R. J., O'Connell, D. A., & Baynes, T. (2016). A spatial assessment of potential biomass for bioenergy in Australia in 2010, and possible expansion by 2030 and 2050. GCB Bioenergy, 8(4), 707-722. doi:10.1111/gcbb.12295

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Foustalieraki, M., Assimakopoulos, M. N., Santamouris, M., & Pangalou, H. (2017). Energy performance of a medium scale green roof system installed on a commercial building using numerical and experimental data recorded during the cold period of the year. Energy and Buildings, 135, 33-38. doi:10.1016/j.enbuild.2016.10.056

Glover, K., & Steinmetz, C. A. (2016). Are we satisfied?. New Planner, (107), 18-19. Retrieved from http://www.planning.org.au/documents/item/7656

Haddad, S., Osmond, P., & King, S. (2016). Application of adaptive thermal comfort methods for Iranian schoolchildren. Building Research and Information: the international journal of research, development and demonstration, 17 pages. doi:10.1080/09613218.2016.1259290

Haddad, S., Osmond, P., & King, S. (2016). Revisiting thermal comfort models in Iranian classrooms during the warm season. Building Research & Information, 1-17. doi:10.1080/09613218.2016.1140950

Hatfield-Dodds, S., Schandl, H., Newth, D., Obersteiner, M., Cai, Y., Baynes, T., . . . Havlik, P. (2016). Assessing global resource use and greenhouse emissions to 2050, with ambitious resource efficiency and climate mitigation policies. Journal of Cleaner Production. doi:10.1016/j.jclepro.2016.12.170

Lim, B. T. H., & Loosemore, M. (2017). The effect of inter-organizational justice perceptions on organizational citizenship behaviors in construction projects. International Journal of Project Management, 35(2), 95-106. doi:10.1016/j.ijproman.2016.10.016

Mojtahedi, M., & Oo, B. L. (2017). Critical attributes for proactive engagement of stakeholders in disaster risk management. International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction, 21, 35-43. doi:10.1016/j.ijdrr.2016.10.017

Pignatta, G., Chatzinikola, C., Artopoulos, G., Papanicolas, C. N., Serghides, D. K., & Santamouris, M. (2016). Analysis of the indoor thermal quality in low income Cypriot households during winter. Energy and Buildings. doi:10.1016/j.enbuild.2016.11.006

Santamouris, M., Ding, L., Fiorito, F., Oldfield, P. F., Osmond, P., Paolini, R., . . . Synnefa, A. (2016). Passive and active cooling for the outdoor built environment – Analysis and assessment of the cooling potential of mitigation technologies using performance data from 220 large scale projects. Solar Energy. doi:10.1016/j.solener.2016.12.006

Stathopoulos, N., El Mankibi, M., & Santamouris, M. (2017). Numerical calibration and experimental validation of a PCM-Air heat exchanger model. Applied Thermal Engineering, 114, 1064-1072. doi:10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2016.12.045

Wang, C. H., Baynes, T., McFallan, S., West, J., Khoo, Y. B., Wang, X., . . . Waring, A. (2016). Rising tides: adaptation policy alternatives for coastal residential buildings in Australia. Structure and Infrastructure Engineering, 12(4), 463-476. doi:10.1080/15732479.2015.1020500

Williams, P. (2016). Exclusionary affordable housing?. New Planner, Dec 2016(109), 11.

Yang, J., Tham, K. W., Lee, S. E., Santamouris, M., Sekhar, C., & Cheong, D. K. W. (2016). Anthropogenic heat reduction through retrofitting strategies of campus buildings. Energy and Buildings. doi:10.1016/j.enbuild.2016.11.051

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Conference Papers Bridge, C. E., & Barlow, G. (2016). Co-design of point of sale resources for ‘Do It Yourself’ (DIY) home modification. In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference for Universal Design in Nagoya 2016: Creating Shared Value through Universal Design. Nagoya, Japan: International Association for Universal Design.

Bridge, C. E., Demirbilek, O., & Mintzes, A. (2016). Transforming Inclusion: Designing in the Experience of Greater Technological Possibility. In H. Petrie, J. Darzentas, T. Walsh, D. Swallow, L. Sandoval, A. Lewis, & C. Power (Eds.), 3rd International Conference on Universal Design (UD 2016) Vol. 229 (pp. 143-152). York, United Kingdom: IOS Press. doi:10.3233/978-1-61499-684-2-143

Chindapol, S., Blair, J., Osmond, P., & Prasad, D. (2016). A Suitable Thermal Stress Index for the Elderly in Summer Tropical Climates. In Procedia Engineering. Sydney: Elsevier: Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No-Derivatives License.

D'Arcy, S. L. (2016). Gold in Spanish and Spanish-American Ecclesiastical Interiors of the Early Modern. In P. Goad, & A. Brennan (Eds.), Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand Vol. 33 (pp. 144-156). Melbourne: SAHANZ. Retrieved from http://sahanz2016.msd.unimelb.edu.au/papers/SAHANZ-2016-Front-Pages-and-Table-of-Contents.pdf

Dave, M. H., Watson, B., & Prasad, D. (2016). Performance and perception in prefab housing: An exploratory industry survey on sustainability and affordability. In International High- Performance Built Environment Conference – A Sustainable Built Environment Conference 2016 Series (SBE16), iHBE 2016. Sydney, Australia. Retrieved from http://www.sbe16sydney.be.unsw.edu.au/Proceedings/33618.pdf

Dunn, K. M., Niemela, M., Wozniack O'Connor, D., & Ulacco, G. (2016). Free Form Clay Deposition in Custom Generated Moulds. In D. Reinhardt, R. Saunders, & J. Burry (Eds.), Robotic Fabrication in Architecture, Art and Design 2016 (pp. 317-326). Sydney: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-26378-6

Freestone, R., & Foley, N. (2016). David L. Davidson: Early town planning reformer and administrator. In C. Bosman, & A. Dedekorkut-Howes (Eds.), Icons: The making, meaning and undoing of urban icons and iconic cities (pp. 128-138). Surfers Paradise, Queensland: Australasian Urban History Planning History Group and Griffith University. Retrieved from https://www.griffith.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/867298/UHPH16-Proceedings-FINAL-29-06-16-1.pdf

Hu, R., Freestone, R., & Davison, G. (2016). Pursuing Design Excellence in a Global CBD: The City of Sydney's strategic plans, 1988-2008. In C. Bosman, & A. Dedekorkut-Howes (Eds.), Icons: The making, meaning and undoing of urban icons and iconic cities (pp. 182-197). Surfers Paradise, Queensland: Australasian Urban History Planning History Group and Griffith University. Retrieved from https://www.griffith.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/867298/UHPH16-Proceedings-FINAL-29-06-16-1.pdf

Liu, E., Judd, B., & Mataraarachchi, S. (2016). Carbon reduction programs and lower income households in Australian cities. In Procedia Engineering. Sydney: Elsevier: Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No-Derivatives License. Retrieved from http://www.sbe16sydney.be.unsw.edu.au/Proceedings/32733.pdf

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Murray, A. G. (2016). Oscillations Between Art and Architecture. In D. Margarith, & I. Aravot (Eds.), Ar(t)chitecture. Technion, Israel Institute of Technology: Technion, Israel Institute of Technology.

Murray, A. G. (2016). Breathing Buildings: Practice-led Architectural Criticism. In Criticall. Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Madrid, Spain.

O'Callaghan, J. M. (2016). Trophy House: The Story of Barncleuth (later Kinneil). In A. Brennan, & P. Goad (Eds.), Gold. Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand (pp. 538-549). Melbourne: SAHANZ. Retrieved from http://sahanz2016.msd.unimelb.edu.au/papers/OCallaghan_Trophy-House.pdf

Osmond, P. W., & Rahman, K. M. Z. (2016). Developing a leaf area index database to inform green infrastructure and urban microclimate research. In 4th International Conference on Countermeasures to Urban Heat Island. National University of Singapore, Singapore.

Peters, A. (2016). The Emergence of Mapping, Planning in England and the Early English Colonies. In C. Bosman, & A. Dedekorkut-Howes (Eds.), Icons: The making, meaning and undoing of urban icons and iconic cities (pp. 340-350). Surfers Paradise, Queensland: ustralasian Urban History/Planning History Group and Griffith University. Retrieved from https://www.griffith.edu.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0004/867298/UHPH16-Proceedings-FINAL-29-06-16-1.pdf

Rizal, A. R., Doherty, B., & Haeusler, M. H. (2016). Enabling low cost human presence tracking : Using commodity hardware to monitor human presence in workplaces. In CAADRIA 2016, 21st International Conference on Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia - Living Systems and Micro-Utopias: Towards Continuous Designing (pp. 45-54).

Sepasgozar, S. M., Bliemel., & wang, C. (2016). A flipped classroom model to teach skill-based contents for a large construction technology course. In The 40th Australasian Universities Building Education Association (AUBEA) 2016 Conference. QLD 4702, Australia: Central Queensland University. Retrieved from http://aubea.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/AUBEA2016-Conference-Proceedings-6-8July2016_FINAL.pdfSepasgozar, S. M., Costin, A., & Wang, C. (2016). Challenges of Migrating from Desktop-based BIM in Construction. In ISARC 2016 - 33rd International Symposium on Automation and Robotics in Construction (pp. 934-942). AUBURN, ALABAMA, USA.

Sepasgozar, S. M., Wang, C., & Shirowzhan, S. (2016). Challenges and Opportunities for Implementation of Laser Scanners in Building Construction. In A. Sattineni (Ed.), ISARC 2016 (pp. 742-751). AUBURN, ALABAMA, USA.

Wang, Z. Y., Lim, B. T. H., & Kamardeen, I. (2016). Service Quality Management for Contractors – Theoretical Lens from Subcontractors and Suppliers. In N. Singhaputtangkul (Ed.), Radical Innovation in the Built Environment (pp. 545-559). Cairns, Australia: Central Queensland University. Retrieved from https://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=4&ved=0ahUKEwjX4rqfhbTRAhUJHJQKHbvrASkQFgglMAM&url=http://aubea.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/AUBEA2016-Conference-Proceedings-6-8July2016_FINAL.pdf&usg=AFQjCNFT6nd58ebNTMBv8lKfnxwplhCFIA&sig2=lXIW1GWDl_BhrIU1l9O_lA&cad=rja

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Conference Presentations King, C., & Crommelin, L. M. (2016, March 16). A Different Perspective on Post-Industrial Labor Market Restructuring in Detroit and Pittsburgh. In Urban Affairs Association 46th Annual Conference. San Diego, CA.

Steinmetz, C. A. (2016, December 13). Adult Premises in the Urban Landscape. In Intersecciones: Segundo Congreso Interdisciplinario de Investigacion en Architectura, Diseno, Ciudad y Terriritorio. Santiago, Chile.

Creative Work (non-textual) Murray, A. G. (2016). House for a Lost Tree. Eden Garden, Sydney. Retrieved from https://edengardensblog.wordpress.com/

Sanderson, D. (2016). Aid fails when aid fails to listen. UNSW. Retrieved from http://www.unsomnia.unsw.edu.au/speaker/david-sanderson

Zamberlan, L. (2016). the halflight. Jam Factory, Adelaide, South Australia.

Creative Written Work Davison, G., & Liu, E. Y. (2016). Neighbours’ fears about affordable housing are worse than any impacts. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/neighbours-fears-about-affordable-housing-are-worse-than-any-impacts-69291

Liu, E. Y., & Easthope, H. (2016). Why adult children stay at home: looking beyond the myths of kidults, kippers and gestaters. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/why-adult-children-stay-at-home-looking-beyond-the-myths-of-kidults-kippers-and-gestaters-68931

Loosemore, M. (2017). Social Procurement is About to Tear Down the Site Hoardings. Retrieved from https://sourceable.net/social-procurement-is-about-to-tear-down-the-site-hoardings/

Loosemore, M., & Chand, A. (2017). Hospitals Feel the Heat too from Extreme Weather and its Health Impacts. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/hospitals-feel-the-heat-too-from-extreme-weather-and-its-health-impacts-70997

Loosemore, M. (2016). How Design Thinking Can Help You Innovate and Succeed. Retrieved from https://sourceable.net/how-design-thinking-can-help-you-innovate-and-succeed/

Osmond, P. W., & Fox, J. (2016). Building cool cities for a hot future. The Conversation. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/building-cool-cities-for-a-hot-future-57489

Ryan, K., & Steinmetz, C. A. (2017). Housing the Dead: What happens when a city runs out of space?. Retrieved from https://theconversation.com/housing-the-dead-what-happens-when-a-city-runs-out-of-space-70121

Sanderson, D. (2016). Why you shouldn't give a goat this Christmas. Sydney: Fairfax Media. Retrieved from http://www.smh.com.au/comment/why-you-shouldnt-give-a-goat-this-christmas-20161212-gt92rm.html

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Report Watson, B. E., Bilbao, J., Dave, M., Sproul, A., & Prasad, D. (2016). Sustainable and Affordable Living through modular homes and communities - FINAL REPORT (RP1011). Australia: Cooperative Research Centres Programme. Retrieved from http://lowcarbonlivingcrc.com.au/resources/crc-publications/crclcl-project-reports/rp1011-final-project-report-2016

Conference Proceedings (Editor of) O'Callaghan, J. M., & Hogben, P. (Eds.) (2015). Architecture, Institutions, Change. Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand. In 32nd Annual Conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand. Sydney: SAHANZ. Retrieved from http://sahanz2015.be.unsw.edu.au/papers/SAHANZ%202015%20-%20Front%20pages%20&%20Table%20of%20Contents.pdf

Funding/Research Opportunities

Creative Fellowships – State Library of Victoria The State Library of Victoria offers several Creative Fellowships annually to artists and scholars who propose thoughtful and innovative ways to use its collections. Fellows receive a grant of $12,500 for three months' research and a desk in a private study within the Library that can be accessed outside normal Library hours. A librarian with specialist knowledge of the collection/s being researched will be assigned to help with accessing that collection. Closing Date: 12 April 2017 More information

The Global Connection Fund | Priming Grants First Round 2017 Initial funding support to promote collaboration between Australian Researchers and Small to Medium Enterprises (SMEs). The program is designed to:

• increase linkages and collaborations with key global economies • promote researcher-industry engagement and knowledge transfer • encourage translational activities, end use development and commercialisation outcomes

The program only supports Researcher-SME collaborations and does not support SME-SME or Researcher-Researcher collaborations …more External Deadline: 23 February 2017 (EOI)

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SAH/Mellon Author Awards The SAH/Mellon Author Awards will provide authors with the financial resources they need to produce scholarly books in their most desirable form. Books covering all periods and areas in the history of architecture, landscape architecture, urbanism and related subjects are eligible, except for those about art history and visual studies. Closing Date: 1 June 2017 More information

Researcher Development – UNSW Workshops

"Courageous Conversations: Fundamentals for Improving the Way you Negotiate" Thurs 16 February 2017, 1.30pm to 4.00pm How do you negotiate more effectively in a way that is consistent with your interests and values, whilst maintaining constructive and respectful relationships with your colleagues? This workshop will introduce participants to an interests based negotiation framework and will provide opportunities for participants to apply and discuss. Further information & to register

Related Links BE Research Resources UNSW Research

Women in Research Network (WiRN) Early Career Academic Network

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