
Fresh Economic Thinking
New ideas and analysis on Australian property markets, housing affordability, environmental economics, and the effects of corruption on urban governance.
What is Urban Design?
Urban design is a collaborative process to help shape and design the future form and performance of our cities. Cities are complex, made up of physical elements such as infrastructure, landscape and buildings, but also more intangible elements such as culture, governance and the experiences of those who live there. Urban design coordinates these elements to make cities and neighbourhoods where people want to live, creating places that respond to their context.
Urban design is visionary
Negotiating complex issues and interests, seeking to address current and future problems within our built environments. Through urban design, we pursue an equitable urban environment with a human and ecological focus.
Urban design is a process
Exploring how to improve and protect our urban environments. Often operating at a strategic scale, urban design navigates the intersection of social, economic and environmental factors over a long period of time.
Urban design is an integrated discipline
Bringing together people from diverse fields to collaboratively explore complex relationships in our cities. Urban designers focus on the public realm – all elements of built and unbuilt space – and intentionally shape our urban environments.
The demand for highly skilled urban designers has never been greater. Australia is facing a shortfall of qualified urban designers, owing to lack of understanding of professional opportunities, limited exposure alongside with challenges with accreditation.
Attracting Talent
Urban design is a rewarding, but less known discipline. We map out the career pathways for the next generation of urban designers and provide a platform for increasing the profile of urban design education and the profession.
Education Reform
Urban design demands far more than technical design skills. Operating at the interface of built environment disciplines, urban designers solve complex urban issues. We are working with a number of Australian universities to continue to elevate the standard of urban design education.
Continued Learning
Urban design is a life-long pursuit of continued learning. We offer master classes for built environment professionals including cross-disciplinary workshops, seminars and study tours. For current information, follow us on social media and subscribe to our mailing list.
We support a collegiate profession that promotes the rapid exchange of ideas, and nurtures a new generation of designers. We believe in collaboration – not competition.
Building Community
Our member networks support connection and professional growth. This includes frequent guest speakers and round table workshops, as well as a curated communication platform to share knowledge and career opportunities.
Mentor Forum
Our mentorship program for students and professionals supports the next generation of urban designers to thrive. We partner mentees with experienced professionals to offer mentorship, coaching and career advice. Click here to read more about the Mentor Forum.
We draw upon our individual members and supporters for their expertise and knowledge, collegiality and commitment to creating a better urban future for all.
Business as usual is no longer a choice. Alone our effectiveness is limited, but collectively we can advocate for the change our world needs. We need public policy that puts people and the environment first. We need development processes that provide ‘more good’, not ‘less bad’. We need education programs that attract the best talent and cultivate the next generation of public interest urbanists.
We enable this change, through empowering a more strategic and effective design industry. Our cities’ future is bright, but we need to work together to get there.
Join Urban Design Forum and Hume City Council for a one-day workshop exploring a vision for the adaptation of Sunbury Town Centre. The outputs of this design workshop will feed directly into Hume City Council’s place-study for Sunbury Town Centre.
Once a rich Victorian-era township 35kms from Melbourne nestled in the Basalt and Grassland landscape of Jacksons Creek, Sunbury has been subsumed within the metropolitan region and faces increasing pressure from nearby urban sprawl to become a new hub for the growing region.
This workshop invites participants to rethink the future of town centres (Activity Centres in policy speak) at the edge of Melbourne—with Sunbury as a focal example—by exploring how it could evolve into a low-carbon, walkable, and socially connected hub while reconnecting with the deep time of the omni-present landscape it sits within. How can we design strategically for the intensification of development while responding to local identity, Country, and ecological systems?
Held in-place at the Croxon Ramsay-designed Global Learning Centre, the day will begin with a precinct field trip with local stakeholders, followed by foundational presentations on key themes including Country, Urban Form & Movement, Economy & Activation, Landscape & Ecology, and Energy & Waste. Participants will then work in multi-disciplinary teams, developing rapid fire design propositions through a range of visual and spatial media. Guided by leading professionals in urban design, landscape architecture, placemaking, and sustainability, teams will craft innovative proposals that address the challenges facing Sunbury and illustrate a compelling prototype for how to adapt the town to its changing role.
Our expert guests include:
– Anna Maskiell (Architecture)
– Mark Jacques (Landscape)
– Andy Fergus (Urban Design)
– Samantha Smith (Sustainability)
At the end of the day, each team will present their vision to the guest panel, simulating a design competition jury process. This provides a valuable opportunity for feedback, fostering professional growth and industry insights. The workshop will also serve as a conversation piece within the broader design community, exploring how suburban activity centres like Sunbury can be reimagined to better respond to environmental and social challenges.
We invite students, early-career practitioners, and built environment professionals from all disciplines to join us for a lively and thought-provoking day of learning, collaboration, and visioning. Whether you’re an urban designer, architect, landscape architect, planner, or simply passionate about shaping better places, this is an opportunity to contribute to meaningful change in a rapidly evolving outer metropolitan community.
Melbourne Design Week is an initiative of the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria.
Event Address:
Sunbury Global Learning Centre
44 Macedon Street, Sunbury (*Koorakoorakup*) 3429
Wurundjeri Country
*Please arrive 15 minutes prior the starting time.