During Stage 2 of Gunyama, the City of Sydney engaged Djinjama to ensure that the design considered and reflected the Gunyama Indigenous Interpretation Strategy, and that opportunities for further alignment with the strategy were identified. The Indigenous Interpretation Strategy acts as a high-level visioning document that provides a framework to support the integration of landscape, public art and signage to create a unique place identity that responds to Country. The Strategy is an interpretive overlay integrated into the built environment, with a key objective to respond to, and complement the existing design concepts underpinning the architecture, landscaping and public artwork.
Djinjama produced concepts, detailed design and construction documentation of key cultural elements of the project that provide colours, textures and material palettes from Country, materials and furniture specifications, culturally significant plants, and a cultural planting schedule and plan. As part of the interpretive responses for the park, Djinjama designed explanatory signage, ground plane graphic and typographic interpretations, and nesting boxes for non-human kin. Each of these interpretations communicated the project’s overarching concept of Cultural Seasons.
Play Area. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Learning Circle. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Cultural Signage. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Ecological Signage. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
GCultural Planting. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Cultural Interpretations. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Cultural Interpretations. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Nesting Box. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Cultural Interpretations. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Play Area and Shade Canopies. Photography by Ant Geernaert.
Djinjama honours our connections to Country, community, culture and kin through our work. Djinjama’s projects actively interact with lands, waters and air, and as such we actively protect the rights of Country to be healthy in our work. We respect Traditional Custodians who have long cared for Country and aim to elevate First Voices in all our work. We are grateful to Elders and Knowledge Holders for their continued sharing of wisdom, story, language, and knowledge.
Cultural Sensitivity Warning
For some First Nations communities it is customary not to mention names or reproduce images associated with the recently deceased. Members of these communities are respectfully advised that there may be people who have passed away mentioned in writing or depicted in image in on this website.