bit

 

 
For items published 2007 + please visit Monitor Online here To monitor Home page
University of Canberra home page

 

Monitor Archive Home
Vice Chancellor
Columns
Articles
Events calendar
Photo Album
Media Releases
Diversions
Classified Ads
Archives
About
Search Monitor Archive

To contact Monitor Online:
monitor@canberra.edu.au
Location: 1C73
Copyright © 2005 University of Canberra
Updated February 9, 2007

 

27 October 2006

Students' website to help gardens grow greener

Australia's gardeners will be able to have gardens as green as their thumbs thanks to a new sustainable gardening website produced by the University's landscape architecture students.

The fourth-year project, supported by the Open Gardens Scheme and the Australian Institute of Landscape Architecture, puts the sustainability expertise of practising landscape architects within a few clicks of amateur gardeners.

"There is a real need to communicate how to practise sustainable garden design to the wider Australian gardening community," lecturer Andrew MacKenzie said.

"Every time you do something in your garden, there is an element of design and the design decisions you make have an impact on sustainability.

"Sustainability is not about doing without, it's about making more intelligent use of what you have."

The website offers advice on a range of issues including energy efficiency, water use and the selection of plants and materials. The students gathered the information through interviews with professional landscape architects - bringing the latest industry practice to the public.

Mr MacKenzie said he hoped backing could be found to develop and maintain the website in the future.

For Katie Earle, one of the students behind the site, it was an opportunity to learn more about her future profession, as well as develop expertise in composing and analysing surveys.

"Individual gardeners can make a difference by adopting sustainability principles in their gardens," she said.

"Both at a local, regional and global scale, creating environmentally sustainable gardens can ultimately help replenish natural resources such as water and reduce the impact on the ozone layer via energy reduction, affecting the way we will live in the future."

UC Communications

Gaye Morrison
T: 02 6201 5855
M: 0409 470 755

Kaddie Pass
T: 02 6201 2681


For further information about Monitor Online, contact the editor: monitor@canberra.edu.au

Copyright © 2005 University of Canberra

Last Updated on August 1, 2005