Town Planning and Development Act 1928
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Town Planning and Development Act 1928 was an Act of the Western Australian Parliament which laid down specific controls over planning at a metropolitan and local level as well as establishing more general controls over the subdivision of land. The Act was based on an earlier Canadian legislation. It took 13 years for the Act to pass through the parliament. The Act formed the basis of the planning system of Western Australia into the early 21st Century when the Act was repealed and replaced by the Planning and Development Act 2005.[1]
[edit] References
- Hedgcock, D. O, Yiftachel. 1992. Urban and Regional Planning in Western Australia. Paradigm Press: Perth.
- Western Australian Consolidated Acts
- Department for Planning and Infrastructure
[edit] Notes
- ^ Hedgcock and Yiftachel. pg 3