News location:

Thursday, January 9, 2025 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Why Chris Steel’s ’15-minute city’ is not a good omen

Chris Steel… “If he wants to develop a more sustainable city, he should analyse the operation of Canberra’s centres hierarchy,” says Mike Quirk. 

“Minister Chris Steel’s belief that Canberra is a 15-minute city is not a good omen. It is a simplistic concept. A cursory look at travel data demonstrates this is wildly inaccurate,” writes former planner MIKE QUIRK.

Chris Steel, as transport and planning minister, can improve the quality of life of Canberrans. 

Mike Quirk.

His record, highlighted by the reduction in bus services, prioritising light rail over extending bus services and a failure to act on employment location, suggests minimal improvement is likely. 

His belief that Canberra is a 15-minute city is not a good omen. It is a simplistic concept where work, shopping, education, healthcare, community services and leisure can be easily reached by a short walk, bike or public transit ride from any point in the city. 

A cursory look at travel data demonstrates this is wildly inaccurate. 

People routinely travel further to access employment and services requiring larger catchments such as hospitals, tertiary education and specialist retailing and services found at the town centres, Fyshwick and Majura Park. 

This flawed perception underlies an incomplete policy response. Reducing car dependence and the development of a more sustainable city is far more complex than providing additional houses in and near centres, infrastructure and green spaces. 

His use of the term is a deception similar to that he displayed when portraying the transport choice as between light rail and the car, ignoring bus-based solutions. 

If Mr Steel wants to develop a more sustainable city, he should analyse the operation of Canberra’s centres hierarchy. 

The hierarchy is Civic, serving as the prime centre for commercial, entertainment and facilities and services requiring a metropolitan catchment; town centres providing residents of the new towns with employment, retailing, community and entertainment services and facilities; local centres to meet the day-to-day convenience needs of the community; and group centres, serving a “group” of neighbourhoods to primarily meet the weekly grocery shopping and business needs of the community. 

The compromise between competing objectives

It represents a compromise between the often competing objectives of facilitating competition to achieve lowest possible prices; ensuring facilities are convenient and easily assessed; meeting the needs of the disadvantaged; reducing travel and infrastructure costs; providing safe, attractive and comfortable centres. 

It has been modified from time to time to respond to change generated by factors including the increased workforce participation of women, increased car ownership, greater affluence, the advent of big-box retailing at Fyshwick and Majura Park, an increased demand for higher-density housing in and adjacent centres and increased size of supermarkets at town and group centres.

Town centres have increasingly become the locations of services including cinemas, higher-density housing and, with the exception of Gungahlin, continued to be locations for major office development (albeit at levels less than desirable). 

Group centre policies were adjusted to facilitate additional residential and services space in response to the contraction of functions that had previously been supported such as banks, libraries and health centres. 

Local centres have experienced a decrease in their share of retail and services space and an increase in vacant space. 

In 1988, 60 of the 61 local centres had a supermarket. By 2011, 24 of the 79 local centres did not have a supermarket with the proportion of local centres without a supermarket varying from 7 per cent in central Canberra to 44 per cent in Belconnen. 

The decline disproportionately affects those with low mobility including the frail aged, people without cars, with disabilities and those on low income. 

Initiatives to improve the viability of local centres have included programs to upgrade paving, street-lighting, signage and street furniture; the widening of lease-purpose clauses and the land uses permissible and the introduction of policies permitting higher-density housing close to centres. 

Some local centres have closed while others (eg Scullin, Aranda and Carleton Street, Kambah) are being revitalised by the opening of new activities including cafes and restaurants attracting customers from a wider area. 

A recent response, Variation 381, increased the maximum size of supermarkets to 1500 square metres. This will increase the attractiveness of some centres (eg Giralang) but will attract expenditure away from other centres and could exacerbate the decline of those centres.

The hierarchy, if it is to optimise the integration of land use and transport, needs to be responsive to trends influencing household and commercial decisions. 

Assessments required include: 

(a) The extent of how increased working from home will result in the conversion of office space to other uses, a reduction in commuting and additional spending at group and local centres. 

(b) The scope to increase office employment at town centres given the impact of office location on travel demand. 

(c) The impact of changing demography and decreased housing affordability on housing demand and choice by location. 

(d) Infrastructure costs by location. 

(e) Whether the light rail extension should be cancelled given the reduction in peak-hour capacity required and improvements in bus technology. A cancellation would free-up funds for the improvement of bus services, cycling and walking infrastructure, a strategy that could be more effective in reducing car dependency by promoting healthy and sustainable living through increasing the ease of reaching desired destinations

If decisions surrounding light rail are a guide, the needed assessments are unlikely to be undertaken by the analysis-light Barr-Rattenbury government.

Mike Quirk is a former NCDC and ACT government planner. 

Who can be trusted?

In a world of spin and confusion, there’s never been a more important time to support independent journalism in Canberra.

If you trust our work online and want to enforce the power of independent voices, I invite you to make a small contribution.

Every dollar of support is invested back into our journalism to help keep citynews.com.au strong and free.

Become a supporter

Thank you,

Ian Meikle, editor

Share this

One Response to Why Chris Steel’s ’15-minute city’ is not a good omen

David says: 26 February 2024 at 10:16 am

Ever driven around Canberra for those many hours every day where the road utilisation drops below 10% and most peoples cars sit in their parking places? What an inefficient use of resources heavily targeted towards carbon consumption.
We need to move towards a model of minimising energy and resource consumption for the every day tasks we perform. If a car’s main use is shopping then that’s a failure. Far more efficient to have a cost effective home delivery system available to all.
Yes, your “bus” principle but with some intelligence behind it. Do some maths on how efficient cars with 1-2 people driving around to do shopping is compared to a home delivery system. Yes, people need to get out and do some exercise but this is best done without requiring a car to get there. People do need to get out and enjoy nature before the Greens affordable housing policies flatten all the bushland and kill off the native animals.
15 minute city means up to 15 minutes of transportation energy consumed to get anywhere. Sounds like a good idea when your faced with a world where we know we need to reduce our energy consumption while we’re heavily reliant on energy generation that negatively impacts where we live.
Providing of more buses to encourage people to travel longer distances may just accelerate smaller local commerce centres to fail and make it so much harder to deal with the situation when energy prices sky rocket.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Letters

Labor should be worried if Steel is the answer 

Letter writer SUE DYER, of Downer, believes Labor should be worried if the plan is to have the current treasurer, planning and transport minister Chris Steel take on full parliamentary party and government leadership duties any time soon. 

Opinion

Now for the main bout where truth versus fantasy 

"Unfortunately, the human mind is a precision instrument of self-delusion. Its most fearsome power is its capacity to provide self-sustaining fables that support its natural desire to escape its own demise," writes columnist ROBERT MACKLIN.

Follow us on Instagram @canberracitynews