Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle


The 1955 Plan for the Metropolitan Region, Perth and Fremantle was prepared for the Government of Western Australia by Gordon Stephenson and Alistair Hepburn. The plan was the first regional plan for Perth, and provided the basis for land use zoning under the Metropolitan Region Scheme. Even though not every recommendation of the report was adopted it is considered to have provided the underlying template for the modern development of Perth. The plan was superseded by the Corridor Plan for Perth in 1970.

Background

The 1928 Town Planning & Development Act provided for local authorities to prepare a town planning scheme, but did not include provisions for the creation of any overarching regional scheme. In 1952, the report of an Honorary Royal Commission of the Legislative Council recommended metropolitan planning for the centres of Perth and Fremantle. This led to the commissioning of architect Gordon Stephenson in 1953 to produce a plan for the metropolitan area of Perth and Fremantle.

Structure

The 1955 Report was structured around 11 chapters:
  1. Historical Development
  2. The Region in Relation to the State
  3. People
  4. Work
  5. The Land and its Use
  6. Outdoor Recreation and Open Space
  7. Communications and Public Services
  8. Standards of Development
  9. Central Areas: Perth and Fremantle
  10. Some General and Additional Proposals
  11. Implementation
The report was also accompanied by a large format map volume.

Analysis

A 2012 academic review of the Plan stated that Stephenson's ideas were those of a modernist town planner, influenced by Le Corbusier and the modernism movement. Stephenson's plan was identified by George Seddon as giving primacy to the automobile, and responsible for making Perrth the worst adapted capital city for public transport.
Chief Justice Wayne Martin described the plan as creating “a region of what is essentially dormitory suburbs linked by freeways in search of a soul.”

Legacy

The recommendations of the 1955 Plan foreshadowed or directly contributed to the following outcomes: