Perth: Water Beneath the City
Perth: Water Beneath the City
In this chapter of the virtual exhibition “Drought, Mud, Filth, and Flood: Water Crises in Australian Cities, 1880s–2010s,” the authors show the extent to which the people of Perth, Western Australia, have relied on the groundwater of the Swan Coastal Plain, and the implications of this reliance in a drying climate. In the context of private and public extraction of groundwater, the government in 2014 commenced a groundwater replenishment scheme to “recharge” the local aquifers with treated wastewater.
Drought, Mud, Filth, and Flood: Water Crises in Australian Cities, 1880s–2010s
In this exhibition, we invite visitors to consider the historical relationship of “water crises” of various kinds to the development of urban water systems, through the experience of the driest inhabited continent on earth, Australia. We have chosen a range of different departures from water-related business as usual—from shortage to flood, pollution to drainage—in the five mainland Australian state capitals from the late nineteenth century to the present. The part of this exhibition devoted to each city focuses thematically on just one or two kinds of crisis, while the timeline covers a wider range of events in each place.
About the ExhibitionAbout the author
University of Western Australia
Show moreUniversity of Queensland & La Trobe University, Australia
Show moreMonash University, Australia
Show moreUniversity of Western Australia
Show moreMonash University, Australia
Show moreUniversity of South Australia
Show moreUniversity of Queensland, Australia
Show moreUniversity of South Australia
Show moreUniversity of Sydney, Australia
Show moreUniversity of Western Australia
Show moreUniversity of Western Australia
Show more