Showing posts with label walking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label walking. Show all posts

2020/03/31

Stony Creek Backwash, Urban reserve.

Stony Creek Backwash reserve 2020-03-30 13:58:15
Sitting at home yesterday, I noticed the light was very promising. I had recently seen a fellow photographers work in and around the base of the West Gate Bridge on flickr and decided to investigate the location. I eventually found this urban park created by Maribyrnong Council and the friends of Stony Creek Inc.. I was surprised I had not investigated this space earlier? I look down on it ofen as I traverse the West Gate Bridge. It has always fascinated me.

The Stony Creek Backwash Urban Reserve is a well looked after green spot adjacent to several oil storage facilities. Nestled between the facilities and the West Gate Bridge it is a pleasant oasis. The park had many people wandering and bike riding though in and around it, despite restrictions in place for the Corona Virus.

I arrived early in the afternoon and stayed until about 3:30 I spent the amount of time I did here because as a location seen from above, as I do so often, it appears intriguing. It is one of those places that has been though a series of uses. Despite some of which are detrimental to the vegetation. The vegetation bounced back. Walking through the space and reading the signage placed at various points gives a sense of what the community aspires the space to be. Closer examination may contradict this. Looking, and walking, beyond the established paths. it is apparent that while the vegetation is abundant it may not be as vibrant as expected. These kinds of spaces make me curious and are somewhat of a metaphor for my own existence. Both geographically and metaphysically.

In the end I spent several hours there only leaving around 3:30pm as the light had turned too harsh for my liking.

Pre-European settlement


Prior to dispossession three adjoining Koori clans probably used the area as a meeting place and for gathering food along its embankments and wetlands. The Koories managed the creek environment to ensure that these resources would be adequate for their needs and succeeding generations. Midden sites were recorded at the creek's mouth where the Koori's feasted on shellfish. Evidence of other activities in the region include stone tool sites, silcrete quaries, scarred trees and burial places.

The Stony Creek belonged to the Marin bulluk clan, who occupied the area between Kororoit Creek and Maribyrnong River. This clan was part of the Woi wurrung, the tribal group which owned most of Melbourne. Bungarin was the head man of the Marin bulluk clan. He was also a guardian of the famous axe quarry at Mt William. Bungarin's name appears as one of the 'chiefs' on John Batman's so-called deed of purchase.

European Heritage 

Stony Creek has a long and varied European history which has left a marked impression on the creek and its surrounds. The European heritage is summarised below and documented on the friends of stony creek website. A former Geocities webpage no less!
 

In the 1850s, Stony Creek was an important route for labourers heading upstream to quarries located north and south of the creek. Th labourers quarried bluestone which was used to supply material for some of Melbourne’s earliest public buildings such as Pentridge Prison and St. Paul’s Cathedral. The leftover bluestone, used as ballast, was collected by ballast lighters and delivered to sailing ships at anchor waiting in Hobsons Bay.

To accommodate the growing industries and local businesses around the Yarra River port, a multitude of industrial rail siding were established in the Spotswood aerate connect the railway terminals at Hobsons Bay. The sidings were constructed between 1880 and 1930 and served numerous purposes throughout these 50 years. Th speak period of use for the sidings was from the 1920’s to World War II.

In 1927, the branch railway sidings were utilised to serve the Newport Oil Wharf berths along the Yarra river. The branch railway sidings served Shell, BP, Ampol an other oil terminals between Hall Street and Douglas Parade, while a circuitous line looped from Yarraville round along the West Bank of he Yarra River, over Stony Creek via a trestle bridge then on to the Vacuum Oil terminal, now Mobil.

The majority of the railway sidings have been decommissioned and the track s Ince removed. Remnants of the old Branch Railway sidings can be found in the eastern side of the backwash, running parallel with the Yarra River.

Summary

December 1803 A party from the schooner Cumberland follows the creek for one and a half miles. "It was salt and ended in a swamp."
  • 1835 Batman searching for pasture drops anchor opposite Stony Creek backwash.
  • 1848 Creek briefly known as Murderer’s Creek after the discovery of Lucke’s battered corpse!
  • 1850s Quarries opened up for ballast and building
  • 1870s Noxious industries established: tannery, meat processing and glue works.
  • 1919 Alfred Luizzi drowns attempting to cross in a flood.
  • 1920s Market gardens established.
  • 1940s Urbanisation spreads.
  • 1970 West Gate Bridge collapses killing 35 workers.
  • 1987 Ink spill into backwash kills mangroves.
  • 1993 Friends of Stony Creek formed.
  • 2001 Allied Containers constructed a bridge across Stony Creek without regulatory approval and Meadow Lea spill.
  • 2002 Pivot Fertiliser Spill
  • 2006 Fire destroys revegetated area at Hyde Street Reserve
  • 2011 Stony Creek Future Directions Plan released
  • 2013 Detergent spill
 


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2020/02/12

Books I'd like to buy.

 Day Sleeper Dorothea Lange – Sam Contis.
"A collection of pictures so contemporary in feel, it's difficult to reconcile them with the Lange we know" – Wall Street Journal Magazine
"Untethered from the heavy responsibility of telling the stories of people in dire situations, [these photographs] delight in the texture of cotton shirts and weathered hands, more ambivalent and playful than [Lange's] state-sponsored work. – The Independent
In this book Sam Contis presents a new window onto the work of the iconic American photographer Dorothea Lange. Drawing from Lange’s extensive archive, Contis constructs a fragmented, unfamiliar world centred around the figure of the day sleeper – at once a symbol of respite and oblivion. The book shows us one artist through the eyes of another, with Contis responding to resonances between her and Lange’s ways of seeing. It reveals a largely unknown side of Lange, and includes previously unseen photographs of her family, portraiture from her studio, and pictures made in the streets of San Francisco and the East Bay. Day Sleeper will be featured alongside other works of Contis’ in the exhibition Dorothea Lange: Words & Pictures at the Museum of Modern Art, February–May 2020.
Day Sleeper Dorothea Lange – Sam Contis – MACK


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2019/06/05

Chelsea, NYC

2019-06-04 14:14:19

Chelsea Market in Chelsea New York City, New York, is an upscale market in a revamped industrial building in the meatpacking district of Manhattan. Chelsea Market was constructed in the 1890s and was originally the site of the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco) factory complex where the Oreo cookie was invented and produced. The complex was redeveloped in the 1990s and features a retail concourse at ground level with office space above. Chelsea Market is currently owned by Alphabet Inc., parent company of Google.*

We wandered through on a Monday, early afternoon and the place seem busy enough. I personally would describe the place as hipster, or at worst a tourist cliche. The space is highly designed in a way I feel that perhaps 10 years ago was new and ground breaking but now is a little predictable. The vendors seemed to be predominantly food vendors with Mexican, Italian and other food styles well represented. Outside this building however, I see many empty shops. Leaving me to wonder about the state of the economy in the USA.

Despite all this I felt compelled to take out my phone camera and make this picture. I was drawn by the  retro analogue TV with it's white noise. No doubt chosen for its retro look. I felt it surmised the space well as just that, white noise. It wasn't until the next day the I realised the woman on the right was wearing glasses on her head.

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2019/05/19

TYAT

Sunshine, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 2009-05-19


This space has changed markedly in the last 19 years. A business case for the Tullamarine airport rail link is being developed. What this means is, this space and the now vacant land to the left out of shot is most likely going to be redeveloped in some way. Over the years I photographed here often. Now I have an archive of work that examines its changes in use and appearance. For example, it used to be way to access the station along that path bottom left of the frame. After the Regional Rail Construction and completion of the new train station, access was blocked to the station.

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2019/05/18

Renderings

Moonee Ponds Creek 2019-05-01 11:50:23
It's hard to know when to bring big analogue cameras to these locations. The light this day was perfect; almost.

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2019/05/07

Ten Years Ago Today

This image from ten years ago was made with my then state of the art C902 Sony Ericsson phone camera. The image would most likely have sat dormant in my archives if not for this current series of TYAT [ten years ago today] images I am now posting.
The idea itself is made possible by software, Lightroom, and also has its roots in Wordless Wednesday. This is an idea I learned about while interacting with another WordPress blogger.
The picture made on my way from work to the nearest train station, Auburn, intrigues me with the arrangement of the shapes and lines and how I organised them in the 'viewfinder'. It has had minimal post production applied to it. This time however the lighting was suitable enough  to allow this scene to be easily captured and presented here.
2009-05-07 16:33:40



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2019/05/03

Winter is coming!

Melbourne's CBD from the Dynon road bridge looking south east. The light got really harsh not long after.
2019-05-01 12:00:27


2019/04/24

Twenty First Century Publishing?


A screen grab from Craig Mod's Website.


From April 15th Craig Mod is shunting off on a 1,000 kilometer walk across a chunk of Japan. Six planned weeks, possibly a few more.
The trails and sub-trails he'll be walking are numerous, but broadly speaking, he is walking from Tokyo to Kyoto along the historic Nakasendo highway. He wrote a bit about the planning over on Ridgeline: “Exquisite Boredom and the Long Walk.“