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Cold War heritage and the planned community: Woomera Village in outback Australia
Authors:Christine Garnaut  Robert Freestone  Iris Iwanicki
Institution:1. School of Art, Architecture and Design , University of South Australia , Adelaide , Australia christine.garnaut@unisa.edu.au;3. Faculty of the Built Environment , University of New South Wales , Sydney , Australia;4. School of Art, Architecture and Design , University of South Australia , Adelaide , Australia
Abstract:The heritage of the Cold War is attracting increasing international interest. Much of that revolves around technological legacies; less attention has been paid to the community infrastructure which supported defence research, weapons testing and military installations. Security and operational logistics meant that research and development was conducted not only in restricted settings but also in often geographically remote situations. An archetypal example is the Woomera Rocket Range in outback South Australia, where long-range weapons were trialled from 1947 under a joint project between the British and Australian governments. Woomera Village, established as a planned residential facility to support personnel employed on the Range, survives today in a similar role, but with a population greatly diminished from its late-1960s heyday. This paper introduces the Village against the backdrop of Cold War heritage and spatial planning ideology, surveys its raison d’être and growth as a Cold War town, and considers its modern-day status as a heritage place and sustainable community.
Keywords:planned community  Cold War heritage  post-war planning  Woomera Village  Australia
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