Susan wakil health precinct

Susan wakil health precinct

Susan Wakil Health Precinct


Situated on Gadigal land, Arcadia Landscape Architecture has conceptualised and delivered the landscape and public realm for the Susan Wakil Health Building on Gadigal country at the University of Sydney.

Arcadia’s landscape is an interpretation of the cycle of healing, stirring the body, mind and soul to reflect the Gadigal people’s approach to healing through the engagement of all the human senses. This has been reflected in the project’s planting strategy, selecting key plant species for their underlying healing and medicinal elements, signifying the nature of the site’s current use.

The new state-of-the art facility was designed by Billard Leece Partnership and Diller Scofidio + Renfro, and integrates clinical, research and teaching environments for the University of Sydney’s Susan Wakil School of Nursing and Midwifery, Central Clinical School, the  Sydney School of Health Sciences and other components of the Faculty of Medicine and Health The Susan Wakil Health Building is set to welcome medicine, nursing and allied health students, researchers and staff for the upcoming March semester.

The Lower Wakil Gardens are in the foreground of the purpose-built facility as an extension of the building, creating fluid indoor and outdoor collaboration zones.

Indigenous connection to the land has been integrated in many ways, including Indigenous artwork and a planting strategy with the underlying theme that landscapes heal. The strategy has not tried to recreate a past landscape but rather reimagine the fundamental effects of the landscape character in a contemporary setting, to engage the senses and elicit a physiological response to place.

Key landscape architecture features of the Susan Wakil Health Building include:

Reimagination of Orphans School Creek: Once a crystal-clear stream, it provided food for fishing, hunting and gathering plants for the Gadigal people however is one of the causalities of previous urban development. The native species that were once abundant in this area have been reintroduced, and a detailed paving strategy connecting two water features, Upper and Lower Wakil, acts to interpret the creek that once weaved through the site decades ago.

Planting strategy: By reintroducing lost vegetation communities, such as the Sydney Turpentine Ironbark Forest, the site enhances a sense of scenic heritage through the distinctive characteristics found in bush habitat of colour, smell and texture. This gives the site a uniquely Australian quality. Native species used include actinotus helianthi, xanthorrhoea preissi, enchylaena tomentosa and carpobrotus glaucescens.

Judy Watson, juguma, 2020, University Art Collection, UA2020.6: As a gateway to the precinct, the dilly bag sculpture sits within a planted landscape that has a direct dialogue with the sculpture.  Judy Watson’s artwork celebrates Indigenous customs and culture through a large-scale woven metal sculpture representing the dillybag. The landscape surrounding the sculpture involves plants that are either used in weaving practices or edible plants, some medicinal, collected and stored in Indigenous vessels, whilst also complementing the sculpture’s form and framing sight lines to the artwork. There are also a number of feature Grass trees used, both to support the story of weaving and speak to the Gadigal People, whose Moety and name-sake is the Xanthorrhoea or Cadi/gulgadya tree.

The Susan Wakil Health Building was made possible by a $35 million gift from the Susan and Isaac Wakil Foundation to the University of Sydney.

Photography by Brett Boardman

Client: The University of Sydney
Location: Camperdown NSW
Indigenous Nation: Dharug (Eora) - Gadigal

Masterplan

Photos: Brett Boardman