![](/images/_AILA/Events/QLD/September%2024%20Latitude%20WSUD%20(3).png)
Following on from last year's Water Sensitive Urban Design session with Kim Markwell and due to popular demand, Sally Boer will be taking the reigns to offer this overview course again for AILA members and allied professionals.
This LATITUTE session will provide an overview of water sensitive urban design
(WSUD) in Australia. Delivered by Sally Boer, an expert in WSUD who has
authored several Queensland and national-level guidelines, the session will equip
landscape architects, urban designers, and similar professionals with useful
knowledge and understanding they can apply in their day-to-day professional lives to
achieve better outcomes in their projects.
Focus of the Session
This online session will focus on the basics of WSUD including what it is, why it’s
important, the important roles for landscape architects and urban designers, and the
use of different WSUD practices. Case studies will demonstrate how WSUD is
undertaken in the real world including how different WSUD practices can be used to
achieve different design outcomes in different landscape scenarios.
Objectives of the Workshop
- Provide participants with a real world understanding of WSUD including its benefits
and common practices (e.g., bioretention systems, wetlands, passive irrigation).
- Provide participants with knowledge they can apply in their day-to-day professional
lives including how to apply different WSUD practices and influence design to
achieve good integrated outcomes in their projects.
Learning Outcomes
- Understanding what WSUD is, why it’s important, and its history up to now.
- Understand the benefits WSUD can provide in urban development.
- Be aware of the policy drivers and requirements for WSUD in Australia.
- Understand the role landscape architects, urban designers, and similar
professionals play in the WSUD process and project teams.
- Be aware of common WSUD practices, their different applications, and the benefits
they can provide, including climate change resilience.
- Be aware of common design pitfalls and how to avoid them.
- Be aware of different language used to refer to WSUD in Australia.
- Understand how to choose between and approach the design of different
management practices to advocate for and achieve good design outcomes in
projects.
Audience
This workshop is relevant to landscape architects, town planners, urban designers,
and similar professionals looking to work on WSUD, integrated water management or total
water cycle management projects in Australia.
Format
The session will be divided into three parts. The first part will focus on
introducing WSUD, the approach and the roles participants can play in the design
process. The second part will focus on common WSUD practices, their design intents,
and suitability for use in different landscape scenarios. The last part will provide
opportunities for questions and answers, open discussions, and networking between
participants and the speaker. Session materials will be shared with participants unless
otherwise advised due to copyright protections.
Speaker
![](/images/_AILA/Profiles/Sally%20Boer.png)
Sally Boer
Sally Boer is a Director of E2Designlab and an aquatic ecologist with 20 years' experience in urban water management, water sensitive urban design and green infrastructure asset management. Her passion is in sharing knowledge and achieving multiple outcomes that protect waterways and enhance urban ecology through collaborative and integrated planning and design processes.
Registration
Type
|
Details
|
Price
|
Member
|
AILA Member
|
$220 (inc GST)
|
Non-member |
|
$330 (inc GST) |