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We bring together global thought leaders to drive cross-disciplinary research into urban planning and water management in Australia and overseas. Collaborating with our university, industry, and government partners, we help cities respond to today's pressing water problems for the benefit of current and future generations. Our impact is diverse: end-users are empowered with new research, effective tools, and an opportunity to join the global transition to water sensitive cities.
Resources
885 results found
Urban metabolism for planning water sensitive cities
Adoption guidelines for stormwater biofiltration systems – Summary report
CRCWSC Impacts and Benefits – conference opener 2015
The second Water Sensitive Cities Conference held in Australia’s river city, Brisbane from 8–9 September 2015. Presented and managed by the Cooperative Research Centre for Water Sensitive Cities (CRCWSC), the two-day conference showcases the CRCWSC’s growing internationally-recognised body of research and our collaborative efforts to create sustainable, resilient and liveable water sensitive cities and towns.
The value of restoring urban drains to living streams
Efficient Discovery of Recurrent Routine Behaviours in Smart Meter Time Series by Growing Subsequences
Presentation by Jin Wang at 19th Pacific-Asia Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, Vietnam, 19-22 May 2015
Stormwater runoff from green urban areas: Modellers’ guideline
Researchers Workshop – Resource Recovery from Wastewater
The purpose of the first Researchers Workshop for 2015 will be to focus on developing strategies to deliver research impact from the first tranche of CRCWSC projects. This theme will continue into the Industry Participants Workshop, where the discussions will involve utilising research in geographic regions and will conclude with a focus on planning for the second tranche of research projects that will commence in 2016.
Kalkallo: a case study in technological innovation amidst complex regulation
How influencing behaviours can accelerate the transition to a water sensitive city: Behaviour Assessment Database
CRCWSC Industry Note (2015): What is the best mix for our urban water supply?
CRCWSC Annual Report 2013/14
Strategies for preparing robust business cases
Social-technical flood resilience in water sensitive cities — quantitative spatio-temporal flood risk modelling (Project B4.1)
Outdoor human thermal comfort in Melbourne’s botanic gardens
Innovation through experimentation: designing policy change programs
Development Of A Transport And Fate Model For Organic Micropollutants At A Stormwater Biofilter Site
CRCWSC Industry Note (2014): Valuing stormwater management: Who is willing to pay?
There are many characteristics that impact a person’s willingness to pay for public goods. Willingness to pay for environmental services, such as stormwater quality improvement or cooler temperatures in suburbs, varies significantly across households with different incomes. Insights on community preference and the value placed on various environmental strategies are helping to inform decisions on project
investment and policy design.