Generous Typologies: A Walk Through the CBD with EmAGN
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In partnership with Open House Melbourne and the Australian Institute of Architects’ Emerging Architects and Graduate Network (EmAGN) presents this year’s walking tour, Generous Typologies: A Walk Through the CBD with EmAGN.
This walking tour traces a spatial gradient through the Melbourne CBD to reveal how architecture choreographs generosity: how it is spatially constructed across different typologies while shaping a city that supports both shared life and individual retreat.
Varying between scales, we consider how civic buildings express collective responsibility through openness, accessibility, and engagement; how semi-private spaces mediate access and encounter in settings where the public is welcomed, but within a curated frame; and how, at the intimate scale of inner-city dwellings, generosity becomes deeply personal as homes negotiate intimacy within density.
Across each stop, we pay close attention to doors, foyers, lifts, corridors and courtyards—the spatial devices that determine how we enter, gather, work and dwell—to better understand how generosity emerges. In these moments of design, collective openness and personal privacy are not opposites, but carefully calibrated conditions that shape how the city invites us in.
What's On
Generous Typologies: A Walk Through the CBD with EmAGN provides opportunities to reflect on how generosity is expressed spatially in the city, through circulation, thresholds, materiality and program.
Guided by architects and urban designers, this walking tour will allow a peek into a curated selection of sites within the Melbourne CBD, with short presentations at each stop unpacking the building’s typology, design intent and relationship to the public realm, inviting the audience to explore how architecture contributes to a city that balances collective openness with personal retreat.
Images: (1) Parliament Gardens. Photo: Sophie Davis. (2-3) Bourke Street Apartment. Photos: Tom Blachford. (4-5) Orica building. Photos: Sophie Davis. (6) Sunda Bar by KTA. Photo: Ari Hatzis.







