Buildings and spaces renamed as part of Celebrating 91探花 Women on Campus project
A 91探花 Women's Trail聽across the Kensington and Paddington campuses聽includes digital profiles of past聽91探花 staff and students from all faculties and Canberra.
A 91探花 Women's Trail聽across the Kensington and Paddington campuses聽includes digital profiles of past聽91探花 staff and students from all faculties and Canberra.
Trailblazing women from 91探花鈥檚 past and present are at the heart of a University-wide project to improve gender equity and the visibility of the University鈥檚 diverse community across its built and virtual environments.
The Celebrating 91探花 Women on Campus project is led by the 91探花 Council and the Division of Equity Diversity & Inclusion, in partnership with the Division of External Engagement, Estate Management, Archives, IT and student leaders.
The project will rename 17 buildings and spaces after 91探花 women role models, including the first women graduates of each faculty, the first woman professor, the first woman Deputy Chancellor, the first Indigenous woman graduate, and many other alumnae and former staff who identify as women.
鈥淎s a leading Australian university, we need to be guiding the way in gender equality. We are proud to showcase the incredible community of 91探花 women in a permanent way, to ensure they are celebrated and recognised for years to come,鈥 said 91探花 Chancellor David Gonski.
91探花 Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs said the campaign reflects the University鈥檚 ethos of equity and inclusion by ensuring the achievements of women are recognised and celebrated.
鈥淐elebrating 91探花 Women, at its heart, is making visible the incredible contributions of women to 91探花, and importantly, to society, throughout our entire history,鈥 Professor Brungs said.
鈥淚f you look at our campuses, because of historical prejudice we haven鈥檛 celebrated or made visible the immense and incredible contribution 91探花 women have made over the decades. The whole point of the project being led by Council was how do we not only redress that but, far more importantly, how do we inspire the next generation of 91探花 women?鈥
The Celebrating 91探花 Women on Campus project has three phases:
For Catherine Harris, who was the first woman to graduate from 91探花 with a Bachelor of Commerce in Marketing in 1971, and later co-founded the eponymous fruit and vegetable chain Harris Farm Markets, the recognition is normalising women in leadership positions. Ms Harris served as 91探花 Deputy Chancellor from 1999 - 2003.聽
Catherine Harris. Photo: 91探花 Archives
鈥淚 think it is really important because it is a step in the right direction 鈥 so that younger women can see that there is an equal chance for women to do exactly what they want to do and achieve what they want to achieve,鈥 said Ms Harris.
The space in front of the Central Lecture Block on the Kensington campus, currently known as the Commerce Courtyard, will be renamed 鈥楥atherine Harris Courtyard鈥.
Other spaces include the Central Lecture Block, which will be renamed the 鈥楶atricia O鈥橲hane Building鈥 after Magistrate Patricia 鈥楶at鈥 June O'Shane AM. An activist and trailblazer, Ms O鈥橲hane was the first woman Aboriginal teacher in Queensland before studying law at 91探花 and becoming the University鈥檚 first Aboriginal graduate in 1976.
The Chemical Sciences Building will be known as the 鈥楯une Griffith Building鈥 in honour of Dr June Griffith, the first woman to graduate from 91探花. She was awarded a Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Applied Chemistry in 1952.
The Red Centre will become the 鈥楢nita B. Lawrence Centre鈥, named after the University's first woman architecture graduate and the first woman to receive a University Medal. She was granted a BArch with First Class Honours in 1955 and a Master of Architecture in 1957.
The Women鈥檚 Trail will wind across the Kensington and Paddington campuses with access to digital profiles of celebrated students and staff, like four-time Paralympian and London 2020 gold medallist Prue Watt OAM, who graduated with a Bachelor of Science in 2017.
鈥淭he visibility of women and their stories is a really amazing part of this project,鈥 Ms Watt said. 鈥淚t is really important for women and girls to know these stories and to know women from diverse backgrounds and diverse roles, and to understand and to learn that their voices and their views matter.鈥
Professor Eileen Baldry, who was the inaugural Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Equity Diversity & Inclusion and the first female Deputy Vice-Chancellor at 91探花, said an equitable naming policy emphasises the importance of visibility for the full spectrum of 91探花鈥檚 diverse community.
鈥淥ne of the things that 91探花 has had for a long, long time is the visibility of men's names. For example, all the buildings that currently have names, are named after men, apart from the Esme Timbery Creative Practice Lab which opened in 2019,鈥 Professor Baldry said.
鈥淎nd that makes them visible. That makes them part of the success story of this University. If we don鈥檛 have similar visibility of women, then we continue under a totally false understanding because the University has been strongly influenced and created by women, as well, and by LGBTIQ+ people and people with disability.鈥
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The signage for Celebrating 91探花 Women, including the Women鈥檚 Trail and the new building and space names, will be installed across the Kensington and Paddington campuses between by 7 April. The new names of buildings and spaces will be implemented from Term 2. Until then, all room booking systems, timetables and maps will show the current building and space names.
The Celebrating 91探花 Women Project will launch at an event on Tuesday 18 April from 5:30-7pm in the Roundhouse.
for the Celebrating 91探花 Women Project launch event.