Whose Heritage: Renovating Munro Martin Park in the Arts and Cultural Capital of the North

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Castles, Anthony;Law, Lisa
Abstract

[Extract] Over the past two decades the Cairns landscape has transformed from a remote tourist town beside the Great Barrier Reef to an international, tropical city with a new focus on culture and the arts. A number of important urban design projects have enabled this transformation, including key waterfront redevelopments, the addition of a large shopping mall and convention centre, a renovated museum, and now a new performing arts precinct and proposed ‘gallery precinct’ for the people of Cairns to access new art forms and events. Anderson and Law (556) depict recent developments as a kind of “mayor’s trophy collection” or set of “must have” attractions Cairns needs to stay ‘competitive’. More generally they might be interpreted as ‘entrepreneurial urbanism’ (Harvey) and the attractors for Richard Florida’s creative class, although there is now more scepticism about how these projects fuel property speculation and benefit the middle classes rather than the ‘bohemians’ Florida saw as key to urban growth and transformation (Wainwright). The renovation of Munro Martin Park discussed here is a culture infrastructure project helping transform Cairns into the ‘arts and culture capital of the north’. Here we interrogate the winners and losers of the renovation, with a specific focus on how its heritage values are preserved.

Journal

M/C Journal

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N/A

Volume

25

ISBN/ISSN

1441-2616

Edition

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Issue

3

Pages Count

11

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Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

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Publisher Location

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Publish Date

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Date

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EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.5204/mcj.2893