Artists, gardeners and knitters have created a "guerrilla gallery" on Parramatta's historic St George鈥檚 Terrace to protest聽plans to demolish聽two of the city鈥檚 most significant heritage-listed buildings, reports Susan Price.
Green bans and the green ban movement
The Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union has placed 聽Green Ban as part of the campaign to stop the sell-off of the Powerhouse Museum in Ultimo,聽reports Jim McIlroy.
Jack Mundey, a path breaker in militant unionism and a pioneer of the Green Bans movement in Australia, leaves a lasting legacy and a set of challenges for ecologists and socialists, writes Jim McIlroy.
Key sites of radical struggle in Sydney鈥檚 history were included in a 鈥淩adical Sydney Walking Tour鈥 conducted by historians Rowan Cahill and Terry Irving, and sponsored by 麻豆传媒 Weekly, on April 13.
In the early 1970s, an unlikely alliance of builders labourers, environmentalists, residents and LGBTIQ activists united to support the Green (and Pink) bans which helped save huge swathes of Sydney, and other parts of New South Wales, from the wrecking ball.
Any book on the modern urban heritage movement would at least make mention of Jack Mundey and the 1960s Green Bans, but for Sydney-based architect James Colman, Mundey鈥檚 figure continues to loom large over his city.

Fifty years ago building worker activists took back control of their union, the NSW Builders Labourers Federation (BLF), from a leadership clique that ignored the members. Under the new leadership of , the re-energised BLF created high standards for workplace safety, decent pay, union democracy, accountable leadership, community engagement and, most famously, Green Bans.
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