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Walter Burley Griffin’s plan of the City Central District

Walter Burley Griffin1911

National Archives of Australia

National Archives of Australia
CANBERRA, Australia

Walter Burley Griffin (1876–1937) graduated from the University of Illinois as an architect and land planner in 1899. He worked in Frank Lloyd Wright’s Oak Park studio from 1901 to 1906, where he met fellow architect Marion Mahony. In 1911 Marion and Walter established a joint architectural practice and were married.

In the same year Griffin entered the Australian Federal Capital City Design Competition, and was awarded first place in May 1912. The extent to which Marion and Walter collaborated on the design of Canberra is unclear. Certainly, Marion beautifully created the drawings realising Walter’s vision for the capital.

Griffin’s winning design for Australia’s national capital reveals his attention to the topographical and symbolic elements of place. The symbolic importance of landforms is evident in his plan for the national capital, and he later proposed a colourful planting scheme for Mount Ainslie, Black Mountain and Red Hill.

This image shows Griffin’s Plan of the City Central District drawn on the Map of Contour Survey of the Site for the Federal Capital of Australia, which was provided to all competitors.

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National Archives of Australia

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