The 2022 Sustainability Summit navigates the path between caring for people and caring for the environment.
                October 21st, 2022
In some ways, the focus on human centric “design” is what has led us down this path towards urgent climate reform. The prioritisation of people’s needs, wants and desires – particularly those who hold spaces of privilege – has often come at the expense of the natural world and its ways and systems of ensuring its own continuation. As we sit at this pivotal point in human history, when action is needed quickly and resolutely, we need to ask ourselves what role human centric design takes, and how it should be considered against a backdrop of social sustainability, regeneration and climate justice.
Quite unsurprisingly, the gravest consequences of environmental damage promise to fall to those least equipped to handle it. From our low lying Pacific Island neighbours to our communities built on floodplains and fire paths, some of the world’s most vulnerable are facing serious threats to their lives and livelihoods. In slightly less extreme circumstances, the pandemic has also brought home the importance of community, the need to have accessibility, contact and assistance all within reach of homes and town centres. While we’ve seen many towns and communities rise to challenges thrust upon them, it is clear that this is in spite of their architecture and infrastructure, not because of it.
And so, we must re-examine the value chain, we must ask who we are designing for, and what role we have as local and global citizens in bettering the lives of those around us. We need to question the role architecture has in these conversations, and the complex interplay between restoration and regeneration and its effect on people and communities.
Join us as we put these questions and more to a panel of experts and pioneers at the 2022 Sustainability Summit. Professor Leena Thomas will moderate a panel of architects, designers and local government representatives as we explore the nexus of policy and design, of people and environment, of community and personal design outcomes. We will dive into what good value chains look like, and how these result in real-world consequences that improve society and increase biodiversity.
Session information
Thursday November 10, 3:05pm-4:05pm AEDT
1 formal CPD point
You’ll learn:
Session speakers:

Professor Leena Thomas (Moderator)
Professor of Sustainable Architecture, UTS

Gavin Ashley
Head of Better Cities and Regions, HIP V. HYPE

Tammy Beck
Executive Director, Williams Ross Architects

Councillor HY William Chan
Councillor, City of Sydney

Dr. Esther Charlesworth
Founder, Architects Without Frontiers (AWF)

Michael Hegarty
CEO, dwp|design
Event Information
The 16th annual Sustainability Summit will be held on Thursday November 10 as a hybrid event. Join in person at the Shangri La Sydney, or online wherever you have an internet connection. Get your ticket now and be in with the chance of winning from our sustainable prize pool.
The Sustainability Summit and Awards are proudly presented by Best of the Best and Carbon Neutral Partner Autex Acoustics, and category partners Big Ass Fans, BlueScope, Bondor, Electrolux, ForestOne, GH Commercial, Holcim, Kaolin, Network Architectural, Next Timber by Timberlink, Sika, Siniat, Stormtech, Verosol and Wood Solutions.
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
          
          
          
              Welcomed to the Australian design scene in 2024, Kokuyo is set to redefine collaboration, bringing its unique blend of colour and function to individuals and corporations, designed to be used Any Way!
          
          
          
              A curated exhibition in Frederiksstaden captures the spirit of Australian design
          
          
          
              The undeniable thread connecting Herman Miller and Knoll’s design legacies across the decades now finds its profound physical embodiment at MillerKnoll’s new Design Yard Archives.
          
          
          
              London-based design duo Raw Edges have joined forces with Established & Sons and Tongue & Groove to introduce Wall to Wall – a hand-stained, “living collection” that transforms parquet flooring into a canvas of colour, pattern, and possibility.
                    
                    
                    
                        McIldowie Partners, in association with Joost Bakker, has been awarded The Learning Space at the INDE.Awards 2025. Their project, Woodleigh Regenerative Futures Studio, redefines the educational environment as a living ecosystem that nurtures sustainability, innovation, and community.
                    
                    
                    
                        At Moonee Ponds Primary School, Clarke Hopkins Clarke’s transformative design uses Autex acoustic solutions to shape a calm and creatively charged learning environment.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
                    
                    
                    
                        Melbourne interior designer Brahman Perera creates three-level trackside space exploring synthesis of craft and technology.
                    
                    
                    
                        A new book documents the city’s historic building interiors, from 1800s coffee palaces to post-war modernist spaces.