ACC Online

Find out what is happening at ACC and in the neighbourhood.

ACC Online

connecting our community
Posts in books and telly
Placemaking
IMG_0437.jpeg

We were recently the recipient of a placemaking grant from Darebin Council and I am personally pretty excited about this because it brings together my first professional job (urban planning) with my current role (community development).

Placemaking is both a process and a philosophy of urban design that capitalises on a local community's assets and potential. Placemaking involves deliberate interventions that enhance the urban experience at the pedestrian scale - to create public spaces that promote health, happiness, and well-being.

Exactly the sorts of lofty things we’re all seeking in these unsettling times right?

To understand what placemaking means in reality you could think about some of the physical changes we’ve made around ACC in the last few years … and how those changes impact on your perception of the space, your sense of belonging to it, and by extension to the organisation itself.

This new Council funded placemaking project that we’re embarking upon is a small scale portable venture - but not a solo undertaking. It is a collaboration with Darebin Libraries and also with Fairfield Bookshop.

And this week we (read Lee) got stuck into turning our idea into reality. By the end of next week phase one should be complete, and we hope to be ready to launch ‘it’ on the street … that street being Station Street in the first instance.

So keep your eyes peeled! We’ll keep you updated on the progress and we’ll provide more details soon.

Plywood, books and sticky notes … what will it all become?

Plywood, books and sticky notes … what will it all become?

The weekly list: great podcasts to listen to on your daily walk

Walking each day during lockdown I am discovering new podcasts to listen to.

  • The Rewatchables - a good friend put me on to this - a group of American movie buffs (Bill Simmons, Sean Fennessey, Chris Ryan) sharing their favourite films and the things they love watching again and again. They cover many great films (Inception, The Godfather, The Shining …..) and have categories they work through to analyse and share great movie trivia and movie making secrets. The banter is fun, but what is best is that it makes you want to sit down and watch those films again armed with the new insights they have left you with. Stories of the directors, actors and reasons why some scenes are as great as they are; and why you remember them long after you see the movie!

  • Bookclub (BBC Radio 4) - is a podcast where the author chats with readers about the book they have written. I am listening to the one with Gail Honeyman - author of “Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine”. A book I am yet to read myself but know that many book clubs have on their reading list! There are many great authors to listen to and you would be sure to find one you admire and would like to hear discuss their work.

  • Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness - Jonathan is one of the fab five from “Queer Eye”. The lovable hair stylist tackles many issues relevant to America but I am listening to the episodes dealing with self love and personal growth. It is Jonathan just chatting away unfiltered with interesting people that he admires or he is interested in knowing more about their field of expertise. It is like listening to close friends catch up. If you adore Jonathan you will laugh along. He is a character so be warned his honesty is unchecked!

Restocked and ready to rock and roll

Our book library was back … and then it disappeared again … and now it is permanently back. Hooray.

And it has been restocked with lots of books for kids and adults.

Pop past and check it out!

And, while on the subject of books, have you read anything you’d recommend lately? It would be great to get some suggestions together for a community post about good books. So, please comment with your recommendations if you are reading on Facebook or Instagram … or send us an email by clicking here.

IMG_0024.jpeg
K-drama

Hi, Leanne here again.

I can’t even remember why I started watching the Netflix made series Crash Landing On You a couple of weeks ago - but for whatever reason - I just wanted to share that it was one of the BEST decisions of my television viewing life … ushering me into the time-vortex of Korean drama.

16 episodes, each around 80 minutes long - hours of subtitled TV that you can’t afford to turn away from for an instant. Packed with humour, romance in spades, life, death … oh, it is just too much!

I recommended it to mum and dad who binged it. And my sister who binged it. I got Clive (my husband) and India (my oldest) to watch it. And whilst they are still getting through (and over the gut wrenching, heartbreaking romance of) this first series, I’ve already finished it (I just couldn’t resist the next episode - and then the next) and am rewatching it with them … and in the last couple of weeks I’ve also watched 2 other K-dramas as well.

At approximately 20 hours of TV per series it’s quite a commitment! No wonder I’ve been up til 2am.

Anyway … I can’t believe I reached my 40s before discovering that this fabulous viewing was hiding in plain sight in my Netflix feed! I’m hooked.

K-drama. I highly recommend it!

Crash Landing On You … just this poster makes my heart flutter!

Crash Landing On You … just this poster makes my heart flutter!

books and tellyLeanne
TV follow up …

We’re loving getting feedback from you on our posts and weekly news.

Following our post about good TV shows to watch, we’ve had some suggestions, including this quick note.

It was good to see your TV suggestions. We've enjoyed The Stranger (British made mystery, thriller) and The English Game (drama based on the early days of the English Football Association which is a heartwarming story of two key players from Old Etonians and a team from a northern mill town). Both on Netflix.

If you too would like to chip in and share anything … we’d love to hear from you! Just email us.

IMG_9873.jpeg
IMG_9874.jpeg