Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408:front:0:p330
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2024L00408
Segment Type: other
Provision Reference: 
Character Range: 1002127–1005723

War Memorial
                                                        * Collection of individual memorials
                                                        * New Zealand Memorial
                                                        * Street lighting
Criterion (g) – Social value                            * Anzac Parade, including the parade as a public and accessible space
                                                        * The overall design and symbolic elements including the red gravel, eucalypts and Hebe plantings, the openness and sweeping vista
                                                        * The individual memorials and their immediate setting as carefully designed spaces, inviting engagement and powerfully triggering memory
                                                        * The ability to hold commemorative events and take part in remembrance rituals at each memorial and in Anzac Parade as a whole
                                                        * The ability to represent and continue important armed services traditions
Criterion (h) – Significant associations                * Anzac Parade
                                                        * Individual memorials
                                                        * Commemorative activities

[1] Duntroon is for the Australian Army.  The Royal Australian Naval College is located at Jervis Bay, and the RAAF College was at Point Cook, but is now in several locations including Wagga Wagga, Sale and RAAF Williams.
    8. Development of Policy – Opportunities and Constraints

    8.1 Implications Arising from Significance

Based on the statement of significance for Anzac Parade presented in Chapter 7, the following management implications arise.

The following attributes should be conserved:
     * Anzac Parade overall;
     * commemorative activities, at each memorial and in Anzac Parade as a whole;
     * Anzac Parade as a public and accessible space;
     * individual memorials, including as designed spaces that engage those who enter;
     * New Zealand Memorial;
     * relationship to the overall Land Axis and Australian War Memorial;
     * formal symbolic landscape, including symmetry and plant use/selection to express this;
     * openness of the Parade;
     * views up and down the Parade along the Land Axis;
     * the red colour of the median, both visually and symbolically, including the crushed brick paving;
     * the contrast between the openness of the Parade and the tall, enclosing eucalypts that edge the Parade;  and
     * street lighting.

These implications do not automatically lead to a given conservation policy in Chapter 9.  There are a range of other factors that must also be considered in the development of policy, and these are considered in the rest of this chapter.  Such factors may modify the implications listed above to produce a different policy outcome.

    8.2 Legislative Requirements

The management of Anzac Parade operates within a legislative and quasi-legislative framework which includes the:
     * Australian Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Act 1988 (Commonwealth);
     * Public Unleased Land Act 2013 (ACT);
     * Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 (Commonwealth);
     * National Memorials Ordinance 1928 (Commonwealth);
     * Copyright Amendment (Moral Rights) Act 2000 (Commonwealth);  and
     * Building Code of Australia.

In addition, there are a range of relevant subsidiary plans and policies.  This framework and relevant elements are briefly