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Municipal infrastructure in Canberra, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Concrete bus shelters are considered an icon of Australia's capital city Canberra.[1] Installation of the cylindrical bus shelters began in 1975 and continued into the early 1990s. At least 477 were purchased, of which 455 remained in use by ACTION buses as of 2016[update].
The bus shelters are an example of brutalist architecture, and were designed for the National Capital Development Commission. They have proved to be hard wearing, but problems with their windows and a lack of lighting make them uncomfortable to use at times. Several variants of the design were developed, and some were installed in other cities.
While the bus shelters initially received a mixed response from the public, they are now well regarded. The shelters have been the subject of artwork and have been reproduced in the form of earrings and tattoos. Owing to their functionality and popularity, shelters are relocated to newly established suburbs when bus stops are closed.
The bus shelters were designed in 1974 for the National Capital Development Commission by the architect Clem Cummings.[2] Cummings' design was for a cylindrical shelter made from concrete, with window frames on each side and a bench made from fibreglass. The windows were made from Lexan. ArchivesACT has stated that the design is an example of brutalist architecture.[2]
Various minor amendments were made to the design after the first series was installed; for instance, "Series II" shelters had a precast concrete floor and no backrest for the bench. The Series II shelters located near schools did not have a bench. At least five different series were produced. A design for a windowless variant of the shelters was developed in the 1970s, but none were produced.[2] Since they were first installed, the shelters have been painted cream colour, and their fibreglass window frames and benches have been orange.[1]
The shelters' Lexan windows proved to be a weak point. They were easily damaged by vandals, and could be pushed out of their frames or burnt. The ACT Transport Branch experimented with a different type of Lexan, but it also proved unsatisfactory. Consideration was given to using wire glass, but this option was rejected after glaziers advised the government that such windows would be more dangerous than Lexan if they were shattered. Efforts to replace damaged windows were eventually abandoned, and many of the shelters are now windowless. This has led to complaints about the shelters being cold and drafty.[1][2]
Lighting has not been installed in the bus shelters. However, in 2021 the ACT Government was experimenting with adding solar-powered lights to two of the shelters at a location in the suburb of Mitchell.[3]
The first 98 "Series I" shelters were installed during 1975 as part of a broader project to upgrade Canberra's bus network.[2] At this time it was intended that the shelters would eventually be installed at almost all bus stops in the city.[4] Another 207 shelters were installed between the 1976–77 and 1979–80 financial years. Shelters continued to be sporadically purchased and installed during the 1980s and early 1990s.[2] By the time construction was complete, at least 477 shelters had been installed.[1] Bus shelters installed in Canberra since the early 1990s have been made from steel and glass.[5]
During the 1980s and 1990s, murals were painted inside some of the bus shelters by school children and community groups; this effort was sponsored by ACTION as a way of discouraging vandalism and promoting community art. ACTION ran an annual mural painting competition between 1987 and at least 1992.[6] By 1992, murals had been painted inside about 200 bus shelters.[7]
As of 2016[update], 455 of the concrete bus shelters remained in use. A total of 64 of the shelters were relocated after 2007 when they were replaced with glass shelters which include advertising.[1] Other shelters were relocated in the mid-2010s when ACTION's bus stops were upgraded to improve their accessibility for people with disability.[8]
The ACT government intends to retain the shelters for as long as possible. The director of Capital Works at Transport Canberra and City Services told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2016 that "they just last forever because of the material they're made out of, [and] the way they're designed".[1] Bus shelters at stops which are no longer serviced due to route changes continue to be relocated elsewhere, including to newly-established suburbs.[3]
Several concrete bus shelters built to Cummings' design have been installed outside of Canberra. Locations with the shelters include Bredbo, Burradoo, Maitland and Tallong in New South Wales as well as Surfers Paradise in Queensland. Two of the shelters in Surfers Paradise have been converted into public toilets.[1]
During the 2024 Australian Capital Territory election the ACT Greens promised to build approximately 200 new concrete bus shelters. The party argued that the design was better suited to Canberra's climate than glass bus shelters and could be decorated through community art projects.[9]
Canberrans' views on the bus shelters were initially mixed. A 1976 National Capital Development Commission paper noted that the bus shelters had been "generally ... well received". However, The Canberra Times received letters which were critical of the design and one of its journalists, Shirley Despoja, labelled them "lunatic".[2][10] In 1990 the local politician Bill Wood, who was advocating to retain the remaining timber bus shelters, labelled the concrete shelters "quite undesirable".[11]
Public attitudes to the bus shelters have since improved, and they are now well regarded.[12] ArchivesACT has written that "over the years, the concrete shelters have become an admired element of Canberra's urban landscape" and they are "arguably Canberra's most endearing piece of urban architecture".[2] The ABC and The Canberra Times have described them as "iconic".[1][13] The Canberra Times also stated in 2021 that the shelters are a "a much-loved symbol of Canberra", and residents of new suburbs are pleased when they are installed.[3] They are often called "bunker" bus shelters by Canberrans.[13]
The artist Trevor Dickinson has become well known for his drawings of the shelters, created as part of a project to record all of them. An exhibition of Dickinson's work was hosted by the Canberra Museum and Gallery in 2018.[13][14] An ACTION bus was also wrapped with some of Dickinson's drawings to coincide with the exhibition.[15] In 2020 Dickinson released a 166 page book entitled Beautiful Bus Shelters of Canberra which includes his photographs of all of the bus shelters and paintings of 52 of them. The Canberra Times has credited Dickinson as having "almost singlehandedly elevated the bus shelters to icon status".[12]
A range of other reproductions of the bus shelters have also been created in recent years. These have included earrings and tattoos.[12] They have also been used as costumes in the past.[16] When a damaged bus shelter was offered for sale by a concrete recycling company in 2020, they received a large number of offers from people interested in installing it on their property. The company eventually decided to retain the bus shelter as a "smoko hut" and souvenir.[17] Canberra radio host Nigel Johnson also notably got a tattoo of a bus shelter in 2023.[18] In December 2023 a property developer lodged a development application for a 15-storey apartment building in central Canberra with balconies modelled on the concrete bus shelters.[19]
In 2021 the ACT Chapter of the Australian Institute of Architects awarded the bus shelter design the Sir Roy Grounds Award for Enduring Architecture.[20] In issuing the award, the Institute described the shelters as 'a remarkable design for a functional pre-cast concrete shelter, with a radical cylindrical form and fibreglass windows, suggesting space-age technology' and stated that the 'architectural integrity and enduring quality of the design is evident through its simplicity, functionality, and materiality'.[21]
Despite their iconic status, none of the concrete bus shelters have been heritage listed.[13] Dr Hanna Jaireth, a member of the ACT Heritage Council, noted in 2016 that the shelters would qualify for heritage listing in the future if "they were to become rare and endangered".[22]
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