VISION Issue 14 | Page 30

30 Vision Magazine THE STRATEGY HERE IS TO GIVE THE COMMUNITY OWNERSHIP. FUNDAMENTALLY, THEY OWN THIS CENTRE. IT HAS BECOME A REAL SENSE OF PRIDE. Fady Hachem Architect How well does it live up to its name as a flagship structure for Ecoville? It delivers substance. That gives it leverage. The local Ecoville Committee is putting in new infrastructure. They’re planning a skateboard ramp. There’s a basketball court attached and dog exercise area. It will become a real focus. What are some of its Green qualities? It has a sustainable edge. There are wind turbines in the structure. Those generate power that feeds the park itself. There’s also water capture of 300,000 litres from the street that also feeds the park. Air-conditioning is provided through cooled underground tunnels and circulated throughout the centre on warm days. How long did it take for the basic design to materialize? I locked myself in a room, researched and came up with a strategy. I did my sketches over a two-week period. Open House Does the built project vary from the original sketches? The project has been scaled back. I proposed a butterfly sanctuary. There were tree-houses and a number of other customized elements. The client and council had concern about liability, although I disagreed as measures can be taken to protect users, the project inevitably was curtailed to a more conventional use. What were your key influences? In terms of the park itself, I love CERES, a selfsustainable park in Melbourne’s inner-city Brunswick. It has a great community drive. It has an organic garden and is really well developed and well run by the community. I wanted some of that same quality of community ownership in the west. If we can provide the same foundations, then we’ve done our job. That was one of the fundamental inspirations for our park. We have a community organic garden there now.