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Tāone tupu ora : indigenous knowledge and sustainable urban design / edited by Keriata Stuart & Michelle Thompson-Fawcett.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Wellington, N.Z. : Steele Roberts, 2010Description: 119 pages : illustrations (chiefly colour), colour maps ; 25 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781877577130
  • 1877577138
Other title:
  • Indigenous knowledge and sustainable urban design
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 307.1176093 22
LOC classification:
  • HT169.N5 T36 2010
Contents:
Te whenua i whiriwhiri : the woven land, Henare Walmsley -- Keeping the past in sight to signal ways forward, Michelle Thompson-Fawcett -- Developing Maori urban design principles, Shaun Awatere, Shadrach Rolleston & Craig Pauling -- Micro-urbanism : regenerative buildings and the architectural landscape of the pa, Amanda Yates -- Do urban growth strategies support the development of Maori land for residential use? Biddy Livesey -- Orakei papakainga ki mua : Towards 2030 and beyond, Ngarimu Blair -- Suburban intensification and indigenous settlement patterns, John Gray with Charlotte Hoare -- Tangata whenua me te kainga kanohi / tangata whenua and the landscape, Wiki Walker -- A wharewaka for Wellington : keeping a Maori footprint in the city, Morrie Love -- From a footprint to a (sustainable) place to stand : where to from here? Keiata Stuart.
Summary: "How can traditional Maori built environments inform contemporary urban development? - How could Maori values inspire our visions for the 21st century city? - What can indigenous knowledge tell us about how to create a more sustainable design for the future? Tāone Tupa Ora suggests answers to these important questions, bringing together perspectives on a broad range of urban issues, from Maori development to architecture, town planning to strategic growth management. It collects stories of iwi experiences in the 21st century, and suggests principles and theories on which to base change."--Publisher's description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 307.1176093 TAO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Ordered

"Published in 2010 for the New Zealand Centre for Sustainable Cities"--Title page verso.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 111-116) and index.

Te whenua i whiriwhiri : the woven land, Henare Walmsley -- Keeping the past in sight to signal ways forward, Michelle Thompson-Fawcett -- Developing Maori urban design principles, Shaun Awatere, Shadrach Rolleston & Craig Pauling -- Micro-urbanism : regenerative buildings and the architectural landscape of the pa, Amanda Yates -- Do urban growth strategies support the development of Maori land for residential use? Biddy Livesey -- Orakei papakainga ki mua : Towards 2030 and beyond, Ngarimu Blair -- Suburban intensification and indigenous settlement patterns, John Gray with Charlotte Hoare -- Tangata whenua me te kainga kanohi / tangata whenua and the landscape, Wiki Walker -- A wharewaka for Wellington : keeping a Maori footprint in the city, Morrie Love -- From a footprint to a (sustainable) place to stand : where to from here? Keiata Stuart.

"How can traditional Maori built environments inform contemporary urban development? - How could Maori values inspire our visions for the 21st century city? - What can indigenous knowledge tell us about how to create a more sustainable design for the future? Tāone Tupa Ora suggests answers to these important questions, bringing together perspectives on a broad range of urban issues, from Maori development to architecture, town planning to strategic growth management. It collects stories of iwi experiences in the 21st century, and suggests principles and theories on which to base change."--Publisher's description.

Text in English, with some Māori.

RDA encoding generated via machine conversion from AACR2 record.

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