Floating Flats Go Up at Sydney Olympic Park 
 
22 January 2009 
 
Bicentennial Park is now home to an intriguing art installation that draws the issue of 
housing in big cities into focus. 
 
The Flats, by Claire Healy and Sean Cordeiro, is based on the contemporary Eastern 
European housing phenomenon dubbed Splavovi, in which the remains of Soviet industry 
are fashioned into floating houses that adorn the waterways of cities such as Belgrade. 
 
Forty-four-gallon drums are welded together on angle-ironed frames and topped off with a 
wooden deck, a small wooden cabin, and perhaps a little garden and some used car tyres 
wrapped around the Plimsoll line. These quaint housing structures, which use only the 
available materials at hand, are the stopgap answer to Belgrades housing shortage. 
 
Floating on the Bicentennial Parks Lake Belvedere, the title of the work alludes to the name 
given to Homebush Bay by a scouting party shortly after the arrival of the First Fleet in 
1788. The Flats creates a pun that alludes to our shared colonial history of the Park and the 
possible future dream of private real estate developers. 
 
Claire and Sean are artists-in-residence at Newington Armory. As well as this current 
project, they are busy developing their work for the 2009 Venice Biennale, for which they 
have been selected to represent Australia. 
 
We wanted to create an installation that not only recognises Sydney Olympic Parks innate 
assets but also reinforced in the publics mind why the Park is a community treasure, said 
Claire and Sean. 
 
In a sense, the artwork is more of an intervention than a sculpture. Unlike a figurative 
statue or fountain, The Flats is not immediately read as a self-contained work of art. This 
side stepping of categorisation will invoke the viewer to question the sculptures place in the 
Park and therefore what the Park means to them and why, said Claire and Sean. 
 
The Flats was commissioned as part of Sydney Olympic Park Authoritys Temporary Public 
Art Program. 
 
This program offers artists the opportunity to make subtle, temporary interventions into 
public domain areas of the Park, said Manager Arts Programming Tony Nesbitt. 
 
Art is essential for making this place special. Artworks in the public domain can respond to 
the surrounding physical environment, as well as the history of the place. 
 
The Flats is a marvellous fit with the Lake Belvedere setting, where thousands of visitors 
enjoy the Park every weekend over summer. The use of industrial refuse to build the house 
also resonates strongly with the Parks industrial past  Bicentennial Park was, of course, 
once a rubbish dump, Mr Nesbitt said. 
 
The Flats is on exhibition daily until the end of May. 
 
Media contact 
 
Photographs of the artwork are available on request. 
 
Sean Cordiero and Claire Healy are available for interview. 
 
For more information, contact: 
Phillip Adams 
0425 256 831 
phillip.adams@sopa.nsw.gov.au