Wednesday, 6 March 2013

Another day, another Canberra bash?


Martin McKenzie-Murray’s piece in today’s Fairfax papers rehashes an all-too-familiar list of gripes with the nation’s capital. It’s spread out, boo! It’s full of whinging lazy public servants, boo! It’s cold, boo! It’s sterile, boo!

I’ve read these sentiments so many times, from so many sources - not to mention all of the roundabouts - that it has become clear the national perception of our national capital isn’t going to shift any time soon. Fair enough. I’m not interested in trying to convert the detractors into fans a la a proselytising Christian banging their proverbial head against atheism’s intransigent brick wall. I just feel driven to put in words some of what can be said for this place, from the perspective of someone who has chosen to make this town home, and who holds not a small amount of love for this ‘meeting place’.
  
So what’s to love about Canberra? A city with a ridiculously high percentage of bureaucrats and their attendant staff, a designed city, destined to be criticized for failings in the design. I admit I found it hard nut to crack, but one once opened full of delectable goodness.

I love Canberra for a multitude of reasons. I love the design of Parliament House, the way the building emerges from the grass-covered hill, topped by that magnificent flagpole. Ours is the world’s most unique and distinctive house of government and I think it’s fantastic. Canberra is clean, it smells clean. It feels safe. There is an abundance of nature – sometimes we do have kangaroos hopping down the road, there are possums nesting in our shed, and our trees welcome myriad avian visitors on a daily basis. It’s family friendly with schools and parks and cultural institutions aplenty. Food and wine and coffee are not half bad, we attract a decent number of sporting events and concerts. Local secrets, like how good breakfast is at a bite to eat at the Chifley shops, what it means for your prospects at uni if the fluff flies early, or how you can spend hours browsing for first editions and other rare delights on the shelves of Canty’s in Fyshwick, add to the charm.

To me, the open spaces, clean air and low population enhance my quality of life. Each of the far-flung town centres, from Tuggeranong to Gunghalin, has its own quirks and secrets. We may not have a great buzzing nightlife, but our kids can play outside, our commutes are short – a Canberran will complain if it takes us more than 20 minutes to get anywhere – our workplaces are flexible and our friends come from all over the country and the world, brought here by accident of birth, to study, or to work.

And it is home. I met my husband here, over a coffee machine. My kids were born here. My work is here, my family, many of my friends, a good chunk of my personal history. To me it is not a “vision turned sterile”; rather, it is my home. I know this home town has its faults as any town has its faults. But I am not the only one who holds this oft-maligned principality in affectionate esteem.

Last night I took my au pair over to the Parliamentary Triangle to look at the architectural projections of the Enlighten Festival. Our national institutions were gloriously illuminated with original artworks, in a languid slideshow of creativity and beauty. We parked at the National Library, meandered past Questacon and the Portrait Gallery over to the NGA, and walked back to the car beside the lake, then drove up the hill a bit to OPH. It was a warm autumn evening, a weekday, and we arrived a bit after 9pm. And there were hundreds of people there, all taking the same photos, catching their breath as each spectacular image appeared on the walls of these striking buildings. It was wonderful, and it was free. 

I guess I’m wondering, since it seems to some that Australia has forgotten our birthday, maybe it’s because the people who make it a national pastime to find fault with Canberra weren’t on the invite list. After-all, wouldn't we all prefer to celebrate special occasions with friends and loved ones?




2 comments:

  1. I agree. Canberra is a really nice place to live.

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  2. Great place to live ... moderate climate (most of the time); trees, the "bush" intruding into the suburbs; clean, fresh air and drinkable tap water; yet the "big city" feel available if you want it ... who needs more? Family here is an added bonus.

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