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Explore Belgenny Farm: A Journey Through Time 2024

The 2024 Back to Belgenny festival showcased living history at Belgenny Farm, featuring reenactments, traditional trades, and various activities such as sheepdog trials and guided tours. The event included a demonstration by Governor Macquarie’s regiment and highlighted the farm's historical significance, providing visitors with an immersive glimpse into colonial agricultural life.

Adaptive Re-use · Adaptive Reuse · Built heritag · Built Heritage · Camden · Camden Police Barracks · Camden Story · Community · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Heritage · History · History of a building · Policing · Stories · Storytelling · Urban development · Urbanism

Future of the former Camden police barracks: community concerns

The former Camden police barracks, now vacant since 2011, represents a risk of neglect and disrepair. The Tharawal Local Aboriginal Land Council, which acquired the site in 2020, has yet to disclose plans for its future use. The community seeks clarity on whether the building will be utilized or sold.

Alan Baker Art Gallery Camden NSW · Attachment to place · Belonging · Built heritag · Built Heritage · Camden · Camden Library · Camden Story · Churches · Community celebrations · Community Engagement · Community identity · Cultural Heritage · Festivals · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical thinking · History · Johm Macarthur · Macarthur family · Memorialisation · Memorials · Memory · Place · Place making · Placemaking · Public art · Sense of place · Stories · Storytelling · Street Art · Uncategorized · Village

Revitalizing John Street: A Vision for Community Placemaking

The proposal advocates for transforming John Street in Camden into an Italian-style piazza, enhancing community bonding and social capital. By activating and enhancing various existing and under-utilised elements this revitalized space could foster deeper connections among residents and serve as a vibrant, meaningful heart for the town.

19th Century · 20th century · Aesthetics · Architectural History · Architecture · Art · Artists · Artworks · Book · Built Heritage · Colonial Architecture · Colonial Australia · Colonial Camden · Colonial frontier · Colonial garden · Community identity · Cowpastures · Cowpastures district · Cowpastures Gentry · Cowpastures Region · Cultural Heritage · Gardening · Georgian · Heritage · History · House history · Housing styles · Interwar · Landscape aesthetics · Local History · Local Studies · Narellan Built Heritage · Place making · Placemaking · Regionalism · Residential Housing Style · Sense of place · Settler colonialism · Settler Society · Storytelling · Uncategorized · Victorian · William Hardy Wilson

Unveiling Hardy Wilson’s architectural legacy and his influence on Camden’s aesthetics

William Hardy Wilson, a largely unrecognized architect and artist, authored The Cow Pasture Road in 1920, impacting Camden's cultural narrative. His work celebrates colonial architecture and aesthetics, leading to a recent exhibition at the University of Sydney Library, which explores his dual legacy as both a visionary artist and controversial figure in Australian history.

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Mid-Century Modernist Homes in Elderslie

In the 1960s, modernism significantly influenced the community of Elderslie, where miners sought contemporary homes. Innovative house designs reflected mid-20th-century trends, including American Ranch styles. Australian architects, like Robin Boyd, contributed to housing projects across the country, merging modern aesthetics with traditional Federation-style homes. These trends influenced the design of local mid-century housing style, resulting in a unique urban landscape.