Acknowledgement of Country

Right Angle acknowledges the traditional custodians of the land and pay our respects to the Elders past and present.

The Place Debate

  • What

    Debate, Discussion & Drinks

  • Where

    MPavilion
    Kings Domain, Melbourne

  • Published
    March 5, 2020

Does it really take a village to raise a child? How about a city, or a suburb?

For over a decade, Right Angle Studio worked tirelessly to understand inner-city audiences and environments. The city was what we knew, and what we strove to improve. When we started getting asked to work on projects in the suburbs we were forced to question our intention as urban strategists. Was our singular focus actually just snobbery? What we decided was that creating the suburbs of the future will require learning lessons from our cities: adopting increased density, building in room for change and growth and creating clusters of culture, commerce and education. We’re also paying attention to what the suburbs do well and making sure that they don’t lose their character.

We've recently undertaken projects in the outer suburbs of Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra, Geelong and the Gold Coast. We haven’t started hosing down our driveways, but we like to think we are having the same impact on life in the ‘burbs as we have in the city.

In March 2020, mere days before Covid-19 had us running for collective cover, we brought together some of Melbourne’s great minds to flesh these ideas out in front of a live audience. The inaugural Place Debate pitted the city against the suburbs as two teams responded to the idea that ‘the suburbs are no place to raise a child’. The evening at MPavilion was moderated by our CEO, Barrie Barton, but we were mostly listening to the voices of our clients, collaborators and the next generation of great urban thinkers.

About the venue:

The 2019 MPavilion was designed by Glenn Murcutt AO. Each year the Naomi Milgrom Foundation commissions an internationally distinguished architect to create a platform for a cultural program of events, workshops, performances and talks running from November–March.