Benchmarking, visioning and strategy development

Introduction

Benchmarking, visioning and strategy development are essential first steps in creating a water sensitive city. Benchmarking an urban area (e.g. metropolitan city, regional city, local government area, region) can identify that area’s current water sensitive performance and diagnose strengths and weakness relating to water sensitive systems and practices.

Working together to develop a compelling shared vision establishes understanding, motivation and commitment among stakeholders to drive their water sensitive city transition.

Water sensitive city visions and transition strategies identify priorities and actions a city should focus on to improve water sensitive performance. Transitioning towards a water sensitive city requires significant changes across the structures, cultures and practices of urban and water system planning, design, management, engagement and decision making.

A water sensitive city vision and strategy identifies priorities and actions for achieving these changes, and for assessing specific on-ground solutions to be implemented. They are influenced by the biophysical environment, ecology, climate, history, geography, demography, existing technologies and institutional structures.

Research findings and reports

You will find a range of research reports on benchmarking, visioning and strategy development under the categories below.

Benchmarking, envisioning and transition planning for Australian cities

Other

The CRCWSC’s benchmarking, visioning and strategy development research has been applied to:

  • Benchmark the water performance of Australian cities and regions, and create water sensitive visions and strategies. This benchmarking and visioning process has been applied to cities such as Adelaide, Townsville, Greater Sydney, Bendigo, Greater Perth and the Gold Coast.
  • Develop a community-led water sensitive vision for the suburb of Elwood to address issues including flooding.

Tools and guidelines

We have developed industry guidance informed by our visioning and strategy development research, for example:

Infographics

Infographic 1

Themes from Australian water sensitive cities visions (Hammer et al., 2020. Transitioning to water sensitive cities: insights from six Australian cities. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 4.)

Infographic 2

WSC Index benchmarking result represented in a concentric bar graph using the City State Continuum framework. (CRCWSC, 2018. Test whether your city is water sensitive (and prove it). Melbourne, Australia: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities p. 1.)

Infographic 3

WSC Index benchmarking results for City of Moonee Valley (CRCWSC, 2019. Moonee Valley Water Sensitive Cities Benchmarking. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 3.)

Infographic 4

Urban water management and transitions continuum: historical and aspirational states of urban water systems (de Haan et al., 2015. Transitions through a lens of urban water. Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, 15, p. 3.)

Infographic 5

Water Sensitive Cities Transition Planning Process (Hammer et al., 2020. Transitioning to water sensitive cities: insights from six Australian cities. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 10.)

Infographic 6

Preliminary Transition Dynamics Framework (Hammer et al., 2020. Transitioning to water sensitive cities: insights from six Australian cities. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 26.)

Infographic 7

Alternative pathways that a transition can take (Dobbie et al., 2017. Mechanisms for unpacking socio-institutional pathways for change: a research compendium from A4.1. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 7.)

Infographic 8

Six phases in the transition towards water sensitivity (Brown et al., 2016. Moving toward water sensitive cities. a guidance manual for strategists and policy makers. Melbourne: CRC for Water Sensitive Cities, p. 15.)