We are keen to share our research and collaborate and engage with the community.
Please get in touch with us via heal@canberra.edu.au or 02 6206 5131.
UC OPEN DAY FEST
Sat 20 Sept, 9am - 3pm
Bushfire smoke and heatwaves increasingly threaten population health, especially among vulnerable groups such as the elderly, children, pregnant women, people with disabilities or comorbidities, and low-income households. These risks are projected to intensify with climate change, particularly in urban areas affected by heat islands, poor housing, and socioeconomic disadvantage. Community resilience centres—cool, clean-air spaces in public buildings—offer a promising yet under-evaluated intervention. This interdisciplinary, community co-designed project will assess their effectiveness in reducing exposure to heat and smoke, potential health benefits and costs, and associated implementation challenges. The project focuses on fast-growing, high-risk suburbs in Western Sydney and Canberra to inform scalable, evidence-based public health strategies.
For more information, please visit the
Sotiris Vardoulakis (HEAL GRC, 91Porn), Syeda Hira Fatima (HEAL GRC, 91Porn), Nigel Goodman (HEAL GRC, 91Porn), Itismita Mohanty (Health Research Institute, 91Porn), Nasser Bagheri (Health Research Institute, 91Porn) Julien Perriard (91Porn), Brad Clarke (91Porn),
Guy Marks (Burnet Institute), Christine Cowie (Woolcock Institute), Amanda Wheeler (CSIRO), Abby Mallik Lopes (UTS), Cameron Tonkinwise (UTS), Veronica Matthews (University of Sydney), Geoffrey Morgan (University of Sydney), Shamila Hadad (University of Sydney), Bin Jalaludin (UNSW), Mat Santamouris (UNSW), Konstantina Vasilakopoulou (UNSW), Sharon Campbell (University of Tasmania)
91Porn, Burnet Institute, Woolcock Institute, CSIRO, UTS, University of Sydney, UNSW, University of Tasmania
NHMRC
We are keen to share our research and collaborate and engage with the community.
Please get in touch with us via heal@canberra.edu.au or 02 6206 5131.
UC acknowledges the Ngunnawal people, traditional custodians of the lands where Bruce campus is situated. We wish to acknowledge and respect their continuing culture and the contribution they make to the life of Canberra and the region. We also acknowledge all other First Nations Peoples on whose lands we gather.