Adaptive Re-use · Aesthetics · Architecture · Attachment to place · Burra Charter · Business · Business History · Camden · Camden Town Centre · Collective Memory · Colonial Camden · Community identity · Country town · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Economy · Edwardian · Entertainment · Family history · First World War · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical Research · History · Interwar · Living History · Local History · Local Studies · localism · Memory · Modernism · Place making · Placemaking · Retail history · Retailing · Ruralism · Sense of place · Shopping · Small communities · Stereotypes · Storytelling · Streetscapes · Tourism · Urban development · Urban growth · Victorian

Whiteman commercial buildings in Camden, an example of adaptive re-use

The Whiteman's General Store, a historic Victorian colonial building in Camden, has been successfully repurposed through the Burra Charter principles of adaptive reuse, maintaining its architectural integrity. Operating continuously for over 135 years, it now houses various retail and professional outlets, contributing significantly to the town's charm and community identity.

Aesthetics · Architecture · Art · Artists · Attachment to place · Belonging · Campbelltown · Community identity · Community work · Craft · Cultural Heritage · Design · Education · Entertainment · Fashion · Heritage · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Leisure · Living History · Local History · Local Studies · localism · Macarthur · Monuments · Moveable Heritage · Parks · Place making · Placemaking · Public art · Sculpture · Sense of place · Storytelling · Symbolism · Tourism · Urbanism · Western Sydney University · WSU Campbelltown

Public Art and Well-Being at Campbelltown Lakes

The 8th Western Sydney University Sculpture Award and Exhibition features 23 artworks globally, including Denese Oates' Xerophyte Forest, a steel representation of future plants. The beautiful lakeside setting enhances the sculptures' aesthetic, positively impacting community well-being. The exhibition runs from 4 May to 3 June 2018, attracting students and staff.

20th century · Advertising · Architecture · Attachment to place · Built heritag · Business · Business History · Camden · Camden Story · Camden Town Centre · Community identity · Country town · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Fashion · Food · Heritage · Historical consciousness · Historical thinking · History · Lifestyle · Local History · Local Studies · localism · Memory · Modernism · Place making · Placemaking · Retailing · Sense of place · Shopping · Storytelling · Supermarkets · Urban growth · Urban Planning · Urbanism · Women's history

Supermarkets come to Camden, consumerism and modernism

Self-service supermarkets were one expression of consumerism and modernism in Camden NSW

1920s · 20th century · Attachment to place · Business History · Camden · Camden Story · Church History · Churches · Cobbitty · Costume History · Cultural Heritage · Cultural icon · Denbigh · Dress history · Family history · Farming · Festivals · Heritage · History · Interwar · Lifestyle · Local History · localism · Modernism · Place making · Retailing · Ruralism · Sense of place · Sewing · Social History · Storytelling · Uncategorized · Weddings

Whiteman & McIntosh, Camden Colonial Families Celebrate a Moderne Wedding at Cobbitty

A modern Cobbitty wedding for two important colonial families, the McIntosh family and the Whiteman family was an important social event in the district calendar.

Aesthetics · Agricultural heritage · Architecture · Attachment to place · Belonging · Camden · Camden Story · Collective Memory · Colonial Camden · Colonial frontier · Community identity · Cowpastures · Environment · Governor Macquarie · Heritage · Historical consciousness · History · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Local History · Local Studies · localism · Place making · Placemaking · Sense of place · Settler Society · Storytelling · Urbanism

Viewing the Cowpastures landscape

The early colonists of the Sydney area viewed the landscape from a number of different perspectives according to historian Grace Karskins in her book The Colony a History of Early Sydney (2009) and this also applied to the Cowpastures.

1968 Sydney Region Outline Plan · 1973 New Cities Campbelltown Camden Appin Structure Plan · Airds · Attachment to place · Belonging · Camden · Camden Story · Campbelltown · Elderslie · History · Hope and loss · Land releases · Landscape · Landscape aesthetics · Leppington · Local History · Local Studies · localism · Lost Sydney · Macarthur · Mount Annan · Mount Gilead · Narellan · Oran Park · Place making · Regionalism · rural-urban fringe · Ruralism · Sense of place · Storytelling · Sydney's rural-urban fringe · The Oaks · Town planning · Transition zone · Uncategorized · Urban development · Urban growth · Urban history · Urban Planning · urban sprawl · Urbanism

Sydney’s urban fringe: a transition zone of hope and loss

Sydney’s rural-urban fringe is a site of winners and losers. It is a landscape where dreams are fulfilled and memories are lost. The promises of land developers in master-planned suburban utopias meet the hope and expectations of newcomers.