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-List Of Titles -The Industrial plant and the 'shopping paradise' : General Motors-Holden and Westfield Eastgardens

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/165863

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Title
The Industrial plant and the 'shopping paradise' : General Motors-Holden and Westfield Eastgardens
Related
Australasian Urban History / Planning History Conference (10th : 2010) (7 - 10 February 2010 : Melbourne)
Related
Nichols, David; Hurlimann, Anna; Mouat, Clare and Pascoe, Stephen. Green fields, brown fields, new fields : proceedings of the 10th Australasian Urban History, Planning History conference, p.15-27
Publisher
Melbourne : University of Melbourne
Date
2010
FoR/RFCD Code(s)
210300 Historical Studies
Author/Creator
Bailey, Matt
Description
In the early I980s, plans were put in place for Westfield to develop the biggest shopping centre in NSW on the site of an aging General Motors-Holden (GM-H) manufacturing plant that had closed down in Pagewood, 10 kilometres southeast of Sydney. In a difficult economic climate, and facing high unemployment following the shredding of the industrial labour force through the latter 1970s, the Wran Labor government intervened to support the Westfield development. Public land was sold secretly and the site hastily rezoned. When the rezoning was challenged in the Land and Environment Court by smaller, competing retail interests, the government introduced legislation to retrospectively validate the rezoning, rendering the legal challenge obsolete. This paper explores the changing face of Pagewood in light of broader economic trends. It traces the site history of Westfield Eostgardens from the establishment of the GM-H plant through to the rise of the 'shopping paradise', contextualising the transformation of Pagewood's urban form within the decline of manufacturing in Australia, the politics of development, and the imperative of employment. The paper argues that the built environment at Pagewood reflected a transition in the Australian economy away from production and towards services, and that the Wran Labor government's intervention while requiring critique, must also be seen as a response to high and escalating unemployment problems in the state.
Description
13 page(s)
Subject Keyword
210300 Historical Studies
Resource Type
conference paper
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Modern History, Politics and International Relations

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/165863
Identifier
ISBN:9781921775079
Identifier
mq-rm-2010002166
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"Green fields, brown fields, new fields : proceedings of the 10th Australasian Urban History, Planning History conference"
 
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