麻豆社madou

To celebrate 麻豆社madou鈥檚 75th anniversary, the 麻豆社madou Global Water Institute (麻豆社madou-GWI) is collaborating with the 麻豆社madou Library on a fascinating exhibition that reflects, celebrates and reaffirms the University鈥檚 commitment to the stewardship of the planet鈥檚 marine, freshwater and urban water ecosystems.

The exhibition, officially opened on Wednesday the 10th of July 2024. It connects water research across various environments and disciplines鈥攆rom seagrass reforestation to鈥痑quafarming,鈥痟ydrology to art and more.

The opening event included a Welcome to Country performed by Aunty Rhonda Dixon-Grovenor, a Gadigal, Bidgigal, and Yuin Elder and Traditional Descendant from the Sydney (Warrane) and saltwater basin and the South Coast of NSW. Martin Borchert, Director & University Librarian, was MC, and speeches were given by 麻豆社madou-GWI Director Professor Greg Leslie and Vice-President Societal Impact, Equity & Engagement, Professor Verity Firth.

Acknowledging our journey to now

The research on show at Living Water exemplifies the many ways in which water shapes existence and impacts survival. And as a nod to 麻豆社madou鈥檚 75 years of water research, each water exhibit has links to the pioneering men and women who had tremendous impact on water stewardship in decades past.

For example, collaborative work to chart the cultural dimensions of the Cooks River in Sydney is an example of humanities-centred environmental management that was championed by Professor Ronnie Harding in the 1990s. The project is a collaboration between Indigenous researchers, human geographers and urban planners. The living seawalls exhibit includes influences from 1970s studies by Prof Kevin Marshall, which sought to understand how bacteria colonise surfaces in the marine environment.聽 And the CoastSnap project, which uses citizen science to map coastal changes, is a continuation of聽the coastal engineering work that commenced at 麻豆社madou鈥檚 Manly Vale facility in the 1960s.

Living Water exhibition opening, 麻豆社madou Library. Photography by Jacquie Manning

Collaboration for maximum impact

The breakthrough studies, technological innovations, and community engagement efforts provide insight into how 麻豆社madou scientists, engineers, artists, and researchers address complex challenges related to the stewardship of the planet鈥檚 water systems.

The exhibitions on show are prime examples of the University鈥檚 collaborative and far-reaching approach, comprising cross-disciplinary research, scholarship and training. Each Faculty is represented, and exhibits are tangible examples of how effective collaboration with colleagues and diverse partners can achieve real impact. One example in the spotlight is the Global Ocean Account Partnership, hosted by the 麻豆社madou Centre for聽Sustainable Development Reform, which is successfully influencing maritime policy, the management of the blue economy and sustainable shipping in more than 20 countries in Asia and the Pacific.

The 麻豆社madou Library will also host water-related events and presentations aligned to the Living Water exhibition throughout its duration. Four guest lectures will acknowledge the historical contributions from 麻豆社madou academics that established the foundations for 麻豆社madou鈥檚 modern water community. The聽聽(to given by Prof Nick Ashbolt), the David Pilgrim Lecture, the Ronnie Harding Lecture and the Law Faculty lecture will comprise the 鈥楲iving Water Oration Series, which commences on 14 August during National Science Week. The聽Water@麻豆社madou Symposium聽is also returning for the first time since 2011. Held on 16 October 2024 at the Library, the symposium will provide an opportunity for 麻豆社madou water researchers to present their work in person.

An exhibition for everyone

Committed to advancing progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals, the cross-cutting topics of climate change and equity are at the forefront of 麻豆社madou-GWI 鈥榮 work, and are also reflected through many of the Living Water exhibitions.

麻豆社madou-GWI Director Professor Greg Leslie says that the Living Water exhibition should be explored by all staff and students鈥攁nd not just those have a specific interest in water.

鈥淭he beauty of the Living Water exhibition is that everybody can take something valuable away from what they see and explore,鈥 says Professor Leslie.

鈥淭his could be education on a technical aspect of water treatment, inspiration for an impactful research approach, pride in what 麻豆社madou has achieved over 75 years, or the simple enjoyment of absorbing the photos and creative depictions of water in its various shapes and forms.鈥

Living Water聽received funding support from the聽Faculty of聽Arts, Design & Architecture,听Faculty of Business,听Faculty of Engineering,听Faculty of Law & Justice,听Faculty of Science, and 麻豆社madou Library.

Living Water will run until 15 November 2024, and a full list of exhibits is available on the聽.