Legacy Park Community Hub

Legacy Park Community Hub

The area between the Soldiers Memorial Oval and the Domain Athletic Centre in Hobart, Tasmania was developed into a much-used Community Hub.

The Playce Landscape Architects’ design delivered communal facilities including barbecues, a nature-based Playscape, and two Wood Fired Ovens.

The park was named Legacy Park in March, 2019.

The overall masterplan includes axial references the site in its broader context (kunanyi / Mt. Wellington) and the Derwent River, with conceptual cues taken from the prospect, refuge, and geological structures within the Lost World, and summit of kunanyi / Mt. Wellington.

The immediate contextual response was to the established bush landscape of the Domain, and the site as the termination of the Soldiers Memorial Walk, from the Cenotaph.

Material cues were taken from the memorial Cyprus trees and adjacent Eltham Pavilion, with the aim of creating a coherent language to the built-form in the area.

The Playscape was developed as an inclusive play space, for children of different ages and abilities.

It invites children to climb and clamber, providing opportunities for imagination when playing.

The spaces are intended to be flexible and allow for a variety of scales of interaction, with a primary activity area alongside the main toilet and oven pavilion, with secondary activity areas adjacent to the smaller BBQ pavilions.

The project has provided much needed facilities to help service the existing activities around the Soldiers Memorial Ovals.

It has reactivated an otherwise vacant carpark site.

The Wood Fired Ovens and BBQ facilities fill a void within the Hobart CBD for bookable shelters for the public, and the play area is unique within Hobart.

The Wood Fired Ovens are for the use of everyone in Hobart, from community groups and organisations to small gatherings of families or friends.

The Wood Fired Ovens are fired up every second Sunday for free community use.

The main pavilions’ forms a central hub to activity within the site, containing toilets, storage, and wood fired ovens.

Open space, accessible paths, and play areas link the site and remaining pavilions and activity areas.

The project team comprised of Playce Landscape Architects who were the lead consultant, and developed the masterplan for the site, and playspace design and documentation.

Field Labs were a part of the Playce team, and worked on the overall conceptual design response, together with the design and documentation for the pavilion structures.

Gaetano Palmese of Gaetano Palmese Architects was engaged by Hobart City Council in the role of ‘Superintendent’s Representative’, with contract administration oversight from post-tender, through construction, to completion of the project.

The project was shortlisted in the 2019 Tasmanian Architecture Awards in the Public category, and given an Award for Public Architecture in July 2019.

Project Details

Completion Date – 2019

Project Team

Landscape Architecture

Playce

Playce work to create the most fun and inclusive spaces possible for people of all ages.

www.playce.com

Superintendent’s Representative

Gaetano Palmese Architects

Gaetano Palmese is a well-established architect based in Hobart, Tasmania.

www.gaetanopalmese.com

Photography

Max Combi

Born and bred in Valtellina, Italy, Massimo is a commercial photographer now based in Hobart and specialising in architectural photography.

www.maxcombi.com

Matt Sansom

Matt is a photographer specialising in architecture and interiors.

He attended the University of Tasmania, where he received a Bachelor’s degree in Environmental Design and a Masters degree in Architecture as the top graduate.

Matt works full time in architectural practice in Hobart with a particular interest in local mid-century modernist works.

www.mattsansom.com.au

Photo Gallery

Click on a thumbnail image to enlarge.

Design © 2021 Playce. All Rights Reserved.| Images © 2021 Max Combi and Matt Sansom. All Rights Reserved.

Get the Builtworks Letter

In every edition of the Builtworks Letter, you’ll get the behind-the-scenes backstory as to how buildings are designed, built, and brought to life. You’ll hear compelling stories, learn surprising ideas, meet engaging characters, and discover unique voices.