SESSION THEMES & PROGRAM

UN/EARTH seeks to illuminate the worlds beneath us through exploration of the physical and metaphoric soil horizons upon which landscape architecture practice is founded. The eroding, geologic, cavernous, mineral, and organic processes that have shaped our planet's crust, so often hidden and beyond our gaze, are the primary source materials for UN/EARTH. Critical and creative spaces for investigation are unearthed through a focus on varied landscape domains including soils, fertility, geological strata, subterranean infrastructure, mineral excavations, fossil records, enduring practices for living on Country, and archaeologies.

The Festival brings together four streams of thought that engage with the elements and life below and within the earth’s surface – we term these streams DEEP EARTH / RAW EARTH / FERTILE EARTH / SUBTERRANEAN EARTH. These theoretical conversations are enriched by walks and expeditions on Country to Adelaide’s north, southern coast, and urban plains, and to the Adelaide hills, Peramangk Country. 


SESSION THEMES

DEEP / EARTH 

DEEP/EARTH establishes the cultural-physical-spiritual-living connection to Country and Indigenous dimensions of earth. The sessions are inspired by the spiritual and human dignity of the world’s oldest continuous societies, and the clays and deep culture of the Tarntanya / Adelaide plains. It will feature First Nations custodians and others engaging with Country and working with earth as an expressive, spiritual material to connect through.

RAW / EARTH 

RAW/EARTH explores the challenges and solutions of extraction, mining, arid regions and processes, climates and cultures which excavate and expose earth. It considers how landscape architecture might better engage with the landscape shaping industries and work with more sensitivity and conviction with degraded quarry and mine sites and arid regions. In essence the session examines landscape architecture that exposes more than it covers. The idea that green is not always good, and that bare earth, sand and soil is sometimes the most honest, ethical, fitting, or necessary approach. It touches on arid, archaeological, sandy, and other types of exposed earth landscapes either by evolution, engineering or design.

FERTILE / EARTH 

This session is inspired by the fertile and endangered hinterland of Adelaide. Soil is of fundamental importance to life on earth and a key to sustainability yet it is being rapidly degraded. This session engages with the living dimensions of soil as an ecological imperative with specialists on food systems, microbiomes, and soil biodiversity. Australia has the world’s oldest soils and minerals that have evolved across geological time. Once lost their culture and biodiversity can be irretrievable. How might we care for and consider this resource more intelligently and creatively? UN/EARTH will reveal the most recent research in soil science and go beyond our understanding of soils as growing mediums, to consider their inherent worth as living ecologies, their fragility, complexity, and resilience.

SUBTERRANEAN / EARTH 

SUBTERRANEAN/EARTH illuminates the extensive and also subtle interventions made into the earth and seeks to overturn the terra nullius or no-man’s land of the subterranean, giving it a value as an alternative and integral, layered landscape. Deep excavations are a fundamental part of urban and human culture. Cities integrate extensive underground infrastructures and there are mines of such vast scale they can envelope whole settlements. Likewise past cultures have inhabited and crafted subterranean spaces for shelter and ecological reasons. This session considers how landscape architecture can work at the interface of the underground either to repair or to link to the world above.


PROGRAM

The Festival program extends across four days and includes walks and tours on Country pre and post the Festival.

A snapshot of the 2023 Festival program can be found below.

Please note, program, timings and speakers are subject to change.

 

THURSDAY, 19 OCTOBER
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FRIDAY, 20 OCTOBER
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SATURDAY, 21 OCTOBER
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SUNDAY, 22 OCTOBER
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THURSDAY, 19 OCTOBER

Tours, workshops and events
The below activities and events are ticketed - attendance numbers are limited. Please note, timings may change.
 9-22 Oct Festival Exhibition
Chthonic: Inhabiting the Underworld
SASA Gallery
Free and everyone is welcome
Open 10am - 4pm, Monday - Fridays and 11am - 3pm Sunday
Venue: University of South Australia, City West Campus
9am-3pm Healing Country Tour 
Join Senior Kaurna Elder Uncle Jeffery Newchurch and the Kaurna Firesticks at Torrens Island, for a rich discussion on cultural and ecological regeneration. Visit Wangayarta, at Smithfield Memorial Park, an AILA award winning project and site dedicated to the reburial of Aboriginal Ancestral remains. Learn about the history of repatriation in SA and the challenges facing Aboriginal Communities. Enjoy morning tea, and lunch at Parra Wirra Conservation Park. 
Please arrive by 8:45pm.
Meeting spot: National Wine Centre - Car Park off Hackney Road
Registration for this tour is now closedClick here for more information.
12:30-4pm City Projects Walk
Enjoy a guided project tour led by some of Adelaide’s award-winning Landscape Architects and gain design insights into the Adelaide Botanic Gardens Wetlands, Lot Fourteen, The University of Adelaide's Kaurna Learning Circle and Adelaide Festival Plaza. 
Following the tour, attend the official Festival Welcome to Country at nearby Adelaide Botanic Gardens.
Please arrive by 12:15pm.
Meeting spot: Adelaide Railway Station Entrance - North Terrace – Google Maps Link
Registration for this tour is now closedClick here for more information.
11am-3pm Art Workshops
Participate in an immersive hands-on art workshop of your choice exploring the sustainable practises of natural dyes for textiles or working with foraged or “wild” clays.  
Join landscape architect Kiri Bowmer and learn about her research exploring the use of organic and inorganic materials as a source of sustainable fabric dyes, and Dye Gardens, an emerging garden typology.
Get your hands dirty working with ‘wild’ clay and learn about the philosophy behind it that aims to protect Country while empowering First Nations peoples. 
Please arrive by 10:45pm.
Meeting spot: National Wine Centre 
Registration is for this workshop is now closed. Click here for more information.
4:30-6:00pm Official Welcome to Country 
Followed by light refreshments. Included as part of your registration, RSVP essential.
Venue: Adelaide Botanic Garden.  Meet at the Kiosk Lawn in the Botanic Gardens (it’s just across from The Gardens Kiosk) from 4:30pm for a 5:00pm Welcome to Country. The event includes light refreshments and will conclude at 6:00pm. NB this is a dry event. 
6:30pm 2023 AILA National Landscape Architecture Awards Ceremony
Awards Cocktail Function at the Adelaide Festival Centre featuring DJ Surahn Sidhu! 
Supported by Proludic.

Venue:
Adelaide Festival Centre, Banquet Room. King William Rd, Adelaide
This is a paid, ticketed event. Registration is now closed.

FRIDAY, 20 OCTOBER

 Conference sessions and public lecturer
Main Conference Program to be held at the Hickinbotham Hall in the National Wine Centre, next to Adelaide's Botanic Gardens
7:30am Registration
Coffee cart thanks to Nexsys
8:30am Welcome to Country
Alan Sumner
8:45am Introduction 
With Peta-Maree Ashford - AILA President, Ben Stockwin - AILA CEO, Creative DirectorsUncle Jeffery Newchurch & Aunty Merle Simpson
  THEMATIC SESSION: DEEP EARTH 
Unearthing Culture: This session establishes the cultural connection to Country and the local Indigenous dimensions of earth. Inspired by the rich clays and deep culture of the Adelaide Plains Unearthing will feature First Nation artists, custodians, designers, and other allies working in this space.
 
9:00am

Ancestral Grounds
The first session sets the foundation of the conference, exploring the deep meaning and significance of the underground for First Peoples.  Understand Country as a fabric of interconnected layers and the spiritual, physical, social, and cultural connection with its Traditional Owners. This session reflects on the challenges facing Communities as they try to repair and heal the damage of the past and present and suggests ways we might tread more sensitively on Country. 

The moderator for this session is Dana Shen.

  Keynote Speaker: 
Alison Page
  Panel Discussion: 
Uncle Jeffrey Newchurch 
Dana Shen
Tommy Day
Alison Page
10:25am Morning tea
10:45am

Co-Mapping on Country / Yitpi Yartapuultiku
Considers collaborative processes intrinsic to engaging with First Nations Communities and celebrates the pioneering co-mapping methodologies crafted by artist and writer Kim Mahood.  Her work in remote Communities demonstrates authentic engagement resulting in meticulous works of art with rich layers of meaning. 
Yitpi Yartapuultiku means 'Soul of Port Adelaide' in Kaurna language and the new Aboriginal Cultural Place aims to represent cultural unity within the local community. Central to its conception is recognition of the importance of giving voice and empowerment to Aboriginal people through co- design and decision-making. The journey has been marked by a commitment to respect, deep listening, collaboration, and shared learning.

The moderator for this session is 
Prof. Gini Lee

  Keynote Speaker:
Kim Mahood
  Lightning Talks: 
Rodney Welch
Aunty Pat Waria-Read
Warwick Keates
 

Panel Discussion:
Rodney Welch
Aunty Pat Waria-Read
Greg Grabasch
Warwick Keates
Kim Mahood

12:30pm Lunch
  THEMATIC SESSION: RAW EARTH
Unearthing Authenticity: This session is inspired by the arid outback. It examines landscape architecture that exposes more than covers. It touches on arid, archaeological, sandy and other types of exposed earth landscapes either by evolution, engineering or design.
1:15pm

Crafting the Arid
This session examines the shared qualities and differences in Moroccan Architect Aziza Chaouni's community-sensitive design approach in Northern Africa apposed with the recent establishment of the internationally significant Nilpena Ediacara National Park, a place offering an unparalleled glimpse into the origins of life itself.  Step back in deep time to uncover the enduring stories of the geological formation of the Ikara / Flinders Ranges and its Traditional Owners, the Adnyamathanha people. Brave and Curious’ sensitive landscape architectural work demonstrates how to effectively support both the preservation of significant sites and celebration of heritage with thoughtful sequencing of visitor access and engaging experience.

The moderator for this session is 
Dr Tanya Court

  Keynote Speaker: 
Aziza Chaouni
  Lightning Talks:
Prof. Alan Collins
Greg Grabasch
Aunty Beverley Patterson
  Panel Discussion: 
Aziza Chaouni
Greg Grabasch
Prof. Alan Collins
Aunty Beverley Patterson
3:05pm Afternoon tea
3:25pm

Extraction and Material Narratives
This session illuminates the deep cultural and material dimensions within landscape architecture with keynote presentations from eminent and emerging leaders from the United States.
Californian studio Surfacedesign, apply a design philosophy and commitment to solutions that emerge from the site itself and challenge conventional approaches to landscape. Their work is informed by the vast openness and frontier spirit of the West, expressed in rugged materials and sustainable planting. Surfacedesign focus on cultivating a sense of connection to the built and natural world, pushing people to engage with the landscape in new ways. 

The moderator for this session is 
Dr Tanya Court

  Keynote Speakers: 
James Lord
4:25pm Closing remarks for day one
5:30pm

Public Lecture by Professor Zhu Yufan at the University of Adelaide, the Braggs Theatre
Chinese landscape architect, Professor Zhu Yufan, is Professor at the prestigious Tsinghua University Department of Landscape Architecture in China. His talk ‘YiYuZhongDi, Landscape Architecture Culture and the Post-industrial Sublime in China’ will articulate design approaches to sustainability and cultural innovation in transforming former carbon intensive industry sites into significant post-industrial cultural sites within Beijing.
Venue: University of Adelaide, the Braggs Theatre
This event is part of your registration, RSVP is essential. For more information, please click here.

7:00pm Close
7:30pm Fellows Dinner
Supported by Street Furniture Australia and WE-EF. 
This is an invite-only event. More information can be found here.
 8pm AILA Festival Fresh Friday
All AILA Student and Graduate Members welcome!
Venue: Jack + Jill’s Bar - 121 Pirie St, Adelaide SA 5000
RSVP is essential - Register now! 

SATURDAY, 21 OCTOBER

 Conference sessions and after party
 Main Conference Program to be held at the National Wine Centre, next to Adelaide's Botanic Gardens
 8:30am Conference Registration for Day Two (only Day and Flexi passes need to register) 
  THEMATIC SESSION #3: FERTILE EARTH
Unearthing Fertility : This session is inspired by the fertile and endangered hinterland of Adelaide. Soil is of fundamental importance to life on earth and a key to sustainability yet it is being rapidly degraded. This session engages with the living dimensions of soil as an ecological imperative with specialists on food systems, microbiomes, and soil biodiversity.
9:00am

Living Earth as Designed Systems
Global food systems are the primary driver of biodiversity loss and destruction of ecosystems and habitats. However, this destruction is not inevitable. This session presents both the reality of current agricultural landscape systems and innovative and alternative ways of designing for food production. 

Saline Verhoeven is a landscape architect at Rotterdam City Council and will present diverse approaches to linking biodiversity and agriculture through her concept of “foodscapes”. 

Associate Professor Josh Zeunert will speak to his three-year national scale study of Australia’s agricultural landscapes and his extensive survey of an extraordinary range of food production landscapes. He will present his particular method of understanding these landscapes through ‘projective design’ a technique synthesising information to make visual representations of food landscapes.

The moderator for this session is Dr Scott Hawken

  Keynote Speaker:
Dr Joshua Zuenert
  Keynote Speaker:
Saline Verhoeven
10:20am  
Morning tea
10:40am  

Moss, Mycelia & Micro-ecologies
The visible natural features in our landscapes intimately depend on tight-knit symbiotic relationships with a bustling conglomerate of microscopic life and ecological processes. Microbes are omnipresent and have life-sustaining roles in nutrient cycling, climate regulation, plant health and communication, and soil formation and more. 

Landscape architects rarely consider the microbial or fungi or spontaneous mosses that exist everywhere. This session considers how such organisms are essential for a healthy landscape and how they might be more intentionally and intelligently used in designing landscapes. 

This session presents insights from scientists and practitioners developed through experiment and traditional knowledge including microbial ecologist Dr Jake Robinson, indigenous fungi specialist and Traditional Owner Sherie Bruce, urban moss scientist Alison Haynes and cultural burning practitioner and respected Kaurna woman, Quahli Newchurch.  

The moderator for this session is Dr Scott Hawken

  Keynote Speaker:
Dr Jake Robinson
  Lightning Talks:
Quahli Newchurch
Sherie Bruce
Alison Haynes
 

Panel Discussion:
Quahli Newchurch
Alison Haynes
Sherie Bruce
Dr Jake Robinson

12:00pm   Lunch
  THEMATIC SESSION #4: SUBTERRANEAN EARTH
Unearthing the Geological: This session is inspired by the extensive and also subtle interventions made into the earth. Deep excavations are a fundamental part of urban and human culture. Cities integrate extensive underground infrastructures and there are mines of such vast scale they can envelope whole settlements. Likewise past cultures have inhabited and crafted subterranean spaces for shelter and ecological reasons. This session considers how landscape architecture can work at the interface of the underground either to repair or to link to the world above.
1:00pm

Sensitivity, Brutality and Metropolitan Earthworks
Like all forms of ‘development’, the ground beneath us presents a range of possibilities and quandaries. Underground urban development and earthworks, however, has been conceptualised through a technical rather than a broader social lens. This session presents two creative and critical thinkers and their theories and designs involving urban geomorphology and subterranean space. 

Subterranean scholar Marilu Melo Zurita critiques our approach to the underground and presents various lenses to work more sensitively and thoughtfully with what has hitherto been a “Sub Terra Nullius”. 

Director, Professor Mark Tyrrell presents his firm’s work on the award-winning Southern Parklands, a massive new park for western Sydney five times bigger than Central Park, New York. The design lays out in detail a series of mega-scaled sculptural interventions. These respond to the dramatic scenery of the ridgeline landscape which offers spectacular vistas from the Harbour Bridge to the Blue Mountains. 

The moderator for this session is Dr Scott Hawken

  Keynote Speaker:
Mark Tyrrell
  Keynote Speaker:
Dr Marilu Melo Zurita 
  Panel Discussion:
Mark Tyrrell
Dr Marilu Melo Zurita
2:35pm Afternoon tea
2:55pm

The Technological Subterranean
Michèle Orliac and Miquel Batlle will present their award-winning project, The Dark Line, an innovative project that passes through two historic railway tunnels and continues along a footbridge corbelled into the cliffs. 
The project preserves a post-industrial landscape in all its historical and ecological depth. These tunnels, where steam locomotives used to roar, have transformed into peaceful damp caverns. The project is implemented by respecting the subterranean and without giving up its historical interpretation. On the contrary, it broadens the spectrum of its history. 

The fact that a structure that required such considerable investment has been abandoned to vegetation and bats, its mouth filled with silt and rock, with water and sediment running through it, gives us a sense of the power of historical changes.  

The moderator for this session is Dr Scott Hawken

  Keynote Speakers:
Michèle Orliac and Miquel Batlle
  Panel Discussion:
Michèle Orliac
Miquel Batlle
4:40pm Message Stick Presentation
4:50pm Closing remarks & conference wrap up

5:30pm-
8:00pm

The Street Furniture Australia After Party.
Venue: Electra House Hotel, 31 King William St, Adelaide
This is a ticketed event, RSVP is essential. More information can be found here.

SUNDAY, 22 OCTOBER

 Tours and workshops
The below activities and events are ticketed - attendance numbers are limited.
10am-12pm Tuthangga / South Park Lands BIo-Cultural Burn Site
Join the Kaurna Fire Team for a walk on Country through a remnant native grassland in the heart of the city. Learn about traditional land care practices, including (the use of) cultural fire. Explore some of the local plants and their uses, and finish this with a natural fibre workshop with the team, where you will learn how to make string sourced from fibres of the plants around you.
Please arrive by 9:45am.
Meeting spot: Directly across the road from St Andrews Hospital 350 South Terrace – See red cross below Google Map Link
Registration for this tour is now closed. Click here for more information.
9am-5:30pm Willunga Basin Cultural & Ecological Regeneration Tour
Supported by Christie Barbecues

Somethings Hidden - Somethings Seen.  Led by Karl Winda Telfer, Burka, Mullawirra Meyu and Dr Gavin Malone, Cultural Geographer and Visual Artist, this tour will engage the bi-cultural landscape. Discover the Kaurna Tjilbruke Dreaming story, walk on Country at Aldinga and learn about the Lot50-Kanyanyapilla project at McLaren Vale. Savour lunch at Chalk Hill Winery.  Learn about Australia's first carbon-neutral winery, Hither and Yon, and taste their fine wines.  This illuminating tour will challenge and delight.
Please arrive by 8:45am.
Meeting spot: National Wine Centre - Car Park off Hackney Road
Registration for this tour is now closed. Click here for more information.

The 2023 Festival of Landscape Architecture is taking place in Tarntanya / Adelaide from the 19-22 October. We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of the land the Kaurna people and we pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging.