Millers Point

Saturday 7 March 2015

Fly through new Barangaroo South concept plans - unveiled by Lend Lease

Lend Lease has submitted its revised Concept Plan for Sydney’s Barangaroo South to the New South Wales (NSW) Department of Planning and Environment, with the new proposal moving James Packer’s $1.5 billion Crown hotel resort from its approved position on a harbour pier to the no rth-west corner of the Barangaroo South site. 

Known as Modification 8 (Mod 8), the revised proposal was conceived in response to the NSW Government’s request in 2011 that Lend Lease relocate the landmark hotel to a new on-land location, and its lodgement marks the end of a dispute between Lend Lease and the Barangaroo Delivery Authority .

The relocation of Crown hotel has led to a number of other changes to the master plan, including reducing the total number of proposed buildings at Barangaroo South to 13, and increasing the maximum Gross Floor Area (GFA) of the site by nine per cent to 535,186sqm to accommodate the additional hotel rooms of the proposed Crown Sydney hotel resort.

Other revisions to the master plan include changing the heights of three residential towers (two taller and one shorter than their original designs), which have been relocated further south to allow public space to be maximised at the ground plane.

According to the Urban Taskforce, the addition of these new high quality buildings – including three residential high-rises designed by Pritzker Prize winner Renzo Piano – will be a catalyst for a new wave of taller buildings across the Sydney CBD.

“Over recent decades the height of Sydney’s towers has been constrained by planning rules but the dynamic forms of Barangaroo’s towers sets a challenge back to the rest of the city to continue to grow,” says Urban Taskforce CEO, Chris Johnson.

“The Sydney CBD has a much smaller footprint that other Australian cities so to retain its number one status it has to grow vertically. With design excellence and the use of modern technologies tall buildings can give great value to cities.

“Clearly the ground level around tall buildings must respond to the scale of people and to solar access and wind issues. The latest concept plan proposal for Barangaroo South has addressed these issues very well.”


 


Public space remains a priority

Artist impression of Watermans cove at Barangaroo

The revised design maintains Lend Lease’s original ambition to dedicate more than half of the 7.68 hectare site to public space, including:
  • a new square located at the south east corner of the site at the main pedestrian entry point to the precinct from Wynyard Walk;
  • a vibrant, tree-lined waterfront promenade activated by restaurants, bars and cafes that gives public access to the entire 2.2km length of the Barangaroo foreshore;
  • a revised southern cove, with steps going down to the water, that will provide a great place where people can gather and celebrate the harbour;
  • a public pier that helps frame the cove and adds further activation and interest along the shoreline and reflects the site’s maritime history;
  • a new urban park located at the north eastern corner of the site that connects Hickson Road to the waterfront parkland of Central Barangaroo. This replaces the slightly smaller area of park in the north western corner of the site that is now the location of the hotel.
Artist impression of new urban park at Barangaroo South

“We have ensured that all of the public benefits that we originally proposed in our 2010 plan remain in Mod 8, such as complete harbour-front access and vibrant community spaces,” says Lend Lease’s Barangaroo South managing director, Andrew Wilson.

The preservation of over 52 per cent of the site (four hectares) as accessible public space was welcomed by Sydney Business Chamber executive director, Patricia Forsythe.
“The design ensures that there is a focus on green spaces as well as harbour-front access,” says Forsythe.

“The revised concept plan shows the benefit of balancing public access with high rise development.”
The introduction of new urban spaces was also well-received by Tourism & Transport Forum’s chief executive, Margy Ormond, who said they would allow Barangaroo South to “become a ‘must visit’ destination for visitors and locals alike”.

Revised Barangaroo South development plans display sizeable ambition

  March 7th 2015

Lend Lease's Barangaroo South managing director Andrew Wilson said the design was "elegant and simple".
Lend Lease's Barangaroo South managing director Andrew Wilson said the design was "elegant and simple". Photo: Peter Braig
                                                                
James Packer's $2 billion development at Barangaroo would be more than double the size of the previously approved hotel over the harbour, according to a plan officially lodged with the state government.

The long-awaited revised concept plan for Barangaroo South, required to move the hotel back onshore, will increase the total floor space of the precinct by 8.5 per cent, Lend Lease said.

This is largely due to the size of Crown's casino-hotel complex, which is seeking a total floor space of up to 77,500 square metres.

The final plans for all of Barangaroo, including yet to be lodged changes to the central portion of the 22-hectare site, have a total development floor space of more than 681,000 square metres. This is more than double the 330,000 square metres proposed in the original 2005 design brief.

Lend Lease's Barangaroo South concept plan, known as "modification 8", also sets out how the company's final residential towers will be incorporated into the reworked precinct.

Italian Pritzker Prize-winning architect Renzo Piano had been enlisted to design the three towers, collectively dubbed One Sydney Harbour, with a combined total of about 750 apartments.

"A city development of three luxury residential high-rise towers in such a location is, in this climate, a rare opportunity," Mr Piano said.

Lend Lease' Barangaroo South managing director Andrew Wilson said the "elegant and simple" 250-metre, 220-metre and 107-metre apartment blocks were intended to compliment Mr Packer's 270-275 metre "diva on the harbour".

"It was very important for us that the Renzo Piano buildings, the One Sydney Harbour collection, really supported that [Crown building] rather than trying to compete with that," Mr Wilson said.

Mr Wilson said Lend Lease was hoping the concept plan would be approved "pre Christmas". The three towers and Crown complex will also be subject to individual development applications, which have not yet been lodged.

Crown Resorts chief executive Rowen Craigie said it would now begin its own planning application processes with the Department of Planning and Environment.

The Crown complex is to be located on land earmarked for parkland before Lend Lease agreed to a state government request to move the hotel over the harbour back onshore.

Mr Wilson said the "rejigging" of the site while maintaining 50 per cent of the precinct as public open space was the "big puzzle we've been trying to solve".

Lend Lease looked at five different relocation options for the hotel, including Barangaroo Central and on top one of its commercial towers, before settling on its proposed waterfront site, he said.

"It's taken a long time to do but we have to get it right, because it's going to be here for decades," Mr Wilson said.

The concept plan had also delayed due to a dispute between Lend Lease and the NSW government over the profit share agreement for the site.

"We've all agreed it's the appropriate time to lodge and move forward," Mr Wilson said.

A Department of Planning and Environment spokeswoman said it was "reviewing the modification for adequacy and making arrangements for its public exhibition in the usual way on the Department's website".

RESOURCED: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/revised-barangaroo-south-development-plans-display-sizeable-ambition-20150306-13x9hx.html
 

National Trust says sale of Millers Point will devastate Australia’s heritage

James Gorman March 05, 2015 2:21PM

The sell-off of Millers Point has been deemed the most devastating attack on Australia’s heritage since the precinct was saved by the Green Bans movement in the 1960s. 
              
Almost 300 heritage properties will eventually be sold under the State Government’s contested revenue raising scheme which will see social housing tenants forcibly removed from their generational homes to make way for wealthy investors.

Homes at 121 and 94 Kent Street, and 44 and 58 Argyle Place in Millers Point. Ninety-nine
Homes at 121 and 94 Kent Street, and 44 and 58 Argyle Place in Millers Point. Ninety-nine year leases are being auctioned for the homes to raise money for new public housing. Source: News Limited
   


The NSW State Government plans to sell off nearly 300 public housing properties in and ar
The NSW State Government plans to sell off nearly 300 public housing properties in and around Millers Point, angering local residents and public housing residents, many of whom have been long time occupants. Source: News Corp Australia
    
National Trust of Australia (NSW) CEO Brian Scarsbrick warns the heritage buildings, some of which date back to 1820, are being sold with no contractual heritage protection. He sates all political parties should state their policy on this issue highlighting the nine properties which have already gone under the hammer.

“Australia’s rare heritage provides a vital ‘sense of place’ for communities,” Mr Scarsbrick.
“Selling off heritage buildings, some dating back to 1820 (only 32 years after the First Fleet arrived), with no contractual heritage protection, exposes that precious heritage to destruction and loss.”

Millers Point residents Liz Henderson and daughter Elisha, who fear being forced out of t
Millers Point residents Liz Henderson and daughter Elisha, who fear being forced out of their Department of Housing home as the government starts to sell off the valuable public properties in The Rocks area. Source: News Corp Australia
     “We are deeply alarmed at the damage facing the 293 State heritage listed properties located at Millers Point”

“Already a third of the properties sold in the ‘test sale’ are subject to unauthorised works and Sydney City Council has issued stop work notices.”

Director of Advocacy, National Trust, Graham Quint likened the sale of Millers Point to the historical heritage features across the globe.

Director of Advocacy, National Trust, Graham Quint said Millers Point must be protected
Director of Advocacy, National Trust, Graham Quint said Millers Point must be protected Source: News Limited
 

“You just could not imagine the area of Montmartre in Paris being sold off without heritage protection, the old town centre of Prague or Bath in England being sold off and damaged,” Mr Quint said.
“It is happening right now in Sydney’s old quarter.

“History shows that selling properties in The Rocks area on 99 year leases results in only a five per cent — 10 per cent discount and the assets can return to the public estate at a greatly increased value after the lease expires.”

Minister for Heritage Rob Stokes said he was satisfied with the process being used to sell-off the heritage precinct.

“I am satisfied that the heritage provisions currently in place are adequate, as Heritage Council approval is required for any changes that effect the physical fabric of the place, including the buildings themselves,” Mr Stokes said.
Minister Rob Stokes defends the Millers Point sale
Minister Rob Stokes defends the Millers Point sale Source: News Corp Australia
    
 The Heritage Council can refuse consent, or choose to impose any conditions to an approval, if given.

“Furthermore, Conservation Management Guidelines for the properties have been in place for several years. The Office of Environment and Heritage has also asked the Land & Housing Corporation to commission new urban design policies to ensure that any repairs or restorations that may occur in the future recognise and protect the heritage values of the precinct.

“In addition, Conservation Management Plans for the properties offered for sale have been prepared and subsequently reviewed and endorsed by the Heritage Council.

Terrace houses in Merriman Street in The Rocks, Sydney, which belong the Department of Ho
Terrace houses in Merriman Street in The Rocks, Sydney, which belong the Department of Housing. The state government is starting to sell off the valuable public properties in The Rocks and Millers Point. Source: News Corp Australia
“While s118 of the Heritage Act requires each owner of a State Heritage Register property to meet extensive standards of maintenance and repair, the Land & Housing Corporation has also inserted a further condition that purchasers must agree to a maintenance schedule for each property, a condition that goes beyond Heritage Act requirements.

“In addition to each of these protections, potential future owners will also have to meet the standards applied in the Sydney Local Environmental Plan, as well as addressing the detailed heritage issues contained within the Heritage Development Control Plan, before submitting any proposal for repair or restoration that requires Council consent.”

RESOURRCED: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city-east/national-trust-says-sale-of-millers-point-will-devastate-australias-heritage/story-fngr8h22-1227249422380

The instant millionaires suburb: Selling just 10 houses in Sydney nets the government $23m... but critics say it is 'social cleansing’

An old housing commission terrace is just one of several recent harbourside properties sold under the hammer as hundreds more are expected to follow.
 
Located in one of Sydney’s exclusive suburbs, the three-bedroom home in Millers Point is the tenth of 283 state-owned properties to go under the government’s plan to sell off heritage-listed public housing and relocate 600 tenants.
 
Built in the 1860s, the 47 Kent Street home was recently sold in a private sale for a cool $1.64 million – taking the total proceeds of 10 property sales to more than $23.5 million.
 
CEO of Government Property NSW Brett Newman said the NSW government was committed to divesting the remaining government-owned properties in the precinct over the next two years.
 
But Barney Gardner from the Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group told Daily Mail Australia that relocating Millers Point residents will affect the state's social housing waiting list.
 
The 47 Kent Street terrace is just one of several recent harbourside properties sold under the hammer
The 47 Kent Street terrace is just one of several recent harbourside properties sold under the hammer
‘Why aren’t they offering these homes to the people on the list first? I don’t understand what the rush is for when there are others who need a roof over their heads more.
 
‘I have lived here most of my life and if they want to evict me – they'll need to fix the waiting list first - then I’ll move.’ 
 
However, last September, the Minister for Family and Community Services Gabrielle Upton said the sale of the Millers Point properties will return hundreds of millions of dollars to the public housing system to help the 58,000 people currently on the housing waiting list.
 
'This is all about reinvesting money back into the public housing system by selling properties that are very costly to maintain,' Ms Upton said. 
 
'The age and heritage nature of the Millers Point properties mean they often cost four times as much to maintain as the average social housing property.' 
The government said that for every house sold in Millers Point, it can build three houses elsewhere.


Built in the 1860s, the sale of the latest Millers Point home was sold in a private sale for a cool $1.64 million
Built in the 1860s, the sale of the latest Millers Point home was sold in a private sale for a cool $1.64 million
 

The elegant Georgian-style sandstone terrace on Kent Street is one of several recent heritage listings offered for sale for the first time in more than a century
The elegant Georgian-style sandstone terrace on Kent Street is one of several recent heritage listings offered for sale for the first time in more than a century
 
The latest sale comes after the first heritage-listed home at 119 Kent Street went under the hammer last year for $1.9million. The second at 23 Lower Fort Street sold for $2.685million.
 
The elegant Georgian-style sandstone terrace on Kent Street is one of several recent heritage listings offered for sale for the first time in more than a century. 
 
With prime views of harbour views overlooking East Balmain and easy access to the tourist hot-spot the Rocks and the CBD, the terraces are hotly sought after by developers.

But Mr Gardner, who has lived in the area for more than 65 years, said the heritage of Sydney’s first neighbourhood will be lost with the sales with critics claiming it is a 'social cleanse'.
 
‘The thing we’re really angry and upset about is the fact that some of these properties have been vacant for as many as seven years,’ he said.
 
‘There are properties on Kent Street that have been vacant for so the last three to five years – meanwhile we have all these people sleeping rough on the streets who are still waiting.’
 
‘The government is calling it “relocation” but I call it “eviction by dereliction”.'


The three-bedroom home in Millers Point is the tenth of 283 state-owned properties sold under the government’s plan to sell off heritage-listed public housing
The three-bedroom home in Millers Point is the tenth of 283 state-owned properties sold under the government’s plan to sell off heritage-listed public housing
 
With prime views of harbour views  and easy access to the tourist hot-spot the Rocks and the CBD
With prime views of harbour views and easy access to the tourist hot-spot the Rocks and the CBD
Mr Gardner said the Millers Point residents have all been issued with an eviction notice but he hopes more people will ‘stand up and fight with us to the end’.
 
‘We’re delaying removal as best as we can. We’ve been here for a long time and all we’re asking is to leave us alone and let us live our lives,' Mr Gardner told Daily Mail Australia.
 
‘We’ve repeatedly asked the government to come down and talk to us - tell us why they’re doing this but they won’t consult us.
 
‘How can anyone treat vulnerable people like this? We just want people to know who we are and what this area means to us. 
 
'I remember spending my childhood days in this area - going fishing in the harbour and doing races on the streets. It's a great neighbourhood and now we're slowly losing our homes.
 
'It's hard for some of the more elderly people here, they don't have the energy, but I'll fight this to the end, it's my home.'
11 Fort Street in Millers Point sold for $3.95 million in September, setting new record for terraces in the suburb
11 Fort Street in Millers Point sold for $3.95 million in September, setting new record for terraces in the suburb

No Surrender: A mural at Lower Fort Street protesting the NSW government's moves to sell off social housing and evict 600 residents at Millers Point
No Surrender: A mural at Lower Fort Street protesting the NSW government's moves to sell off social housing and evict 600 residents at Millers Point