Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408:front:0:p261
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408
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Character Range: 808024–811080

the design of Barry Webb and Alexander Tzannes & Associates, as consultants to the NCA.  Also in this period additional buildings to the north of the Australian War Memorial complex were constructed by the Australian War Memorial.

Subsequent to the major landscape change in the 1960s, there have been rejuvenation or refurbishment phases of various scales and areas of the planted landscape, mainly including row inter-planting and trialling an understorey of native grasses within the plantations in 1995.

4. Evidence of Community-Based Values

    4.1 Introduction

This section investigates the nature and scope of social and community aesthetic values, considering the National Heritage criteria and the indicators of significance defined for such assessments in the Guidelines for the assessment of places for the National Heritage List (Australian Heritage Council 2009).

It supplements the existing values assessed as part of the National Heritage listing of Anzac Parade, and draws on the assessments undertaken for the Parliament House Vista, a Commonwealth Heritage place (Marshall and others 2010b), the previous Australian War Memorial Heritage Management Plan (Godden Mackay Logan 2011, noting the current plan was not available until recently), Lake Burley Griffin and Adjacent Lands Heritage Management Plan (Godden Mackay Logan 2009), and other materials.

This section defines the associated communities and documents the research undertaken into these values as part of this plan.  The evidence is analysed against the two relevant criterion (in Chapter 6) and this contributes to the statement of significance (Chapter 7).

Understanding these community-based values is critical in the assessment of criteria (e) and (g), aesthetic and social significance – and these criteria place a specific emphasis on community associations and values.

It should be noted that this chapter derives from research undertaken for the 2013 version of the heritage management plan.

Indigenous cultural and social values attributed to Anzac Parade have not been researched.

    4.2 Review of Existing Data

This section looks at the existing data on social and community aesthetic values from previous studies and other sources.  Existing research and assessments have provided a foundation for the present plan, and provided a substantial amount of data on social and community-held aesthetic values.

As well, through the review and analysis of this material, the consultants were able to:
     * identify the communities and cultural groups that may value Anzac Parade highly because of its strong or special associations for their community or cultural group;  and
     * generate key questions for exploration with each community or cultural group, or with representatives of, or suitable surrogates for, that group.

Assessments of the Broader Landscape

Parliament House Vista Area Heritage Management Plan
This plan (Marshall and others 2010b) included an assessment of social and community-based aesthetic values derived from an on-line