Millers Point

Wednesday, 25 June 2014

PETITION - Support the Retention of Public Housing in Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks.

We Need 10,000 Signatures to have this Issue Debated in NSW State Parliament.

If you would like to support us by gathering signatures.
 
1.  Send an email to savemillerspoint@gmail.com and we can forward you a copy of the petition to print out and sign off.
 
 2. Copy the contents below and paste content into a word document and print document.

 3.  Print out the image below.

Return Petitions to: Barry Gardner, 14 High Street, Millers Point NSW 2000 
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Download Petition:  Double click on the Petition, so it opens then, Right click on Petition, select Save Target As, then save to the destination folder. then Print off Document.



 
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PETITION


We the undersigned support the retention of Public Housing in Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks. The key points of The Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group are important and should be fully implemented by; Housing NSW, City of Sydney, NSW Government and all relevant authorities and government bodies;


1.    Stop the sale of Public Housing in Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks


2.    To maintain the properties in good condition


3.    To make vacant properties in Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks available to those on the waiting list
4.    Maintain the history and culture of the oldest public housing neighborhood in Australia and its diverse community
 


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Authorised and printed by Barry Gardner, The Millers Point, Dawes Point & The Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group, 14 High Street, Millers Point NSW 2000.






Sunday, 22 June 2014

Millers Point will 'stick together' to fight sell-off

Saturday, June 21, 2014       
 
Barney Gardner, spokesperson for the Save Millers Point residents action group, told a Sydney forum of more than 100 people on June 14: “The Baird Coalition government is continuing with the policies of [former premier] Barry O'Farrell and [former housing minister] Pru Goward.”


Photo: Save Millers Point Community Housing/FB.

The New South Wales government is pushing ahead with its plan to sell off 393 public houses in the historic Millers Point neighbourhood of inner-city Sydney and force public housing tenants to move.
"The government calls it ‘relocation,' but really it's 'forced eviction'," Gardner told the June 14 meeting. "Never before has an entire suburb been moved. Millers Point is 'ground zero' for the government's policy of destruction of public housing.”

The government is harassing residents and trying to pressure them into accepting relocation to other suburbs. In part, by refusing to carry out repairs at Millers Point, the government is implementing "eviction by dereliction”.

"A number of friends and neighbours have already been pushed into moving out," Gardner said. "But already there are 60-80 empty dwellings here. Why aren't people on the public housing waiting list being offered houses in Millers Point?

"We also have a lot of support from the general community. Other suburbs are very worried about the threat to public housing tenants.

"This government is intent on getting rid of public and social housing once and for all. But, here at The Point, the fightback begins.

"Redfern Legal Centre and other community organisations have backed us all along the way.
"We also have strong support from unions. The Maritime Union of Australia has assisted us from the start. They have close historic ties to the waterfront here.

"The Fire Brigade Employees Union has supported us. And Unions NSW is moving to endorse our campaign.

"We have launched a public petition, seeking 10,000 signatures to force a debate in state parliament. We plan to organise mass handouts of flyers at railway stations, and need volunteers for letter drops.
"This community has existed for over 200 years. The National Trust has heritage-listed us as a 'living community.'

"Our message is clear: Stay solid, stick together, and we will escalate our campaign from here.”
Other speakers at the meeting included independent state MP Alex Greenwich, Labor shadow housing minister Sophie Cotsis, Sydney City Council deputy mayor Robyn Kemmis and Maritime Union of Australia state secretary Paul McAleer.

The Save Millers Point campaign is planning a Spring Picnic on Sunday September 14, 10.30am, at Argyle Place, Millers Point, to help publicise the struggle to stop the evictions.

https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/56693 

Sunday, 15 June 2014

Support the Millers Point Campaign T- Shirts are Available

The “NO SURRENDER!! MILLERS POINT IS NOT FOR SALE!!”
T-Shirts designed by Reg Mombassa are now available ONLINE.

Go To: Click Here

Only $30. Sizes XS, S, M, L and XL
Shipping for 1-2 Shirts $15
Shipping for 2-4 Shirts $25.

Pay by Credit Card, PayPal or Bank Transfer.

Click Here

T-Shirts are also available at the following locations: 

Captain Cook Hotel
33 - 35 Kent Street
Millers Point (The Rocks) Sydney
Phone: 02 9247 3786

The Hero of Waterloo Hotel
81 Lower Fort Street
Millers Point (The Rocks) Sydney
Phone: (02) 9252 4553

Reg Mombassa Unisex-t-Shirt
 
 
Millers Point official supporter Unisex T-Shirt. Available in X Small, Small, Medium, Large & X Large sizes. Material made from 100% Cotton. All proceeds of the sales go towards the Millers Point, Dawes Point & the Rocks Public Housing Tenants Group Fighting Fund. Designed by Reg Mombassa for the Miller's Point, Dawes Point and the Rocks PHT group.
The Millers Point context is strengthened by the contribution of the local community, which is firmly committed to the preservation of the suburb’s unique character and sponsored the heritage listing nomination to ensure the protection of Millers Point. The area is held in deep affection by the residents, many of whom have family connections that can be traced through proceeding generations of the Millers Point population, and/or have links to maritime industries. The historic, social and physical fabric of Millers Point cannot therefore be considered as separate components, but rather as interwoven traits making up the precinct so that an unusually high and rare degree of social significance can be ascribed to this area.
It is a living community with clearly discernible links to the maritime industries that formed the village's core from the early part of the nineteenth century, and one that has long-term memories of the precinct's fabric and relevance. The gentrification of an area comes at the cost of removing families from homes and individuals from areas which they were born into and their families have lived for generations. Bubonic plague broke out there at the turn of the 20th century, and many buildings were demolished. More were knocked down to accommodate the Harbour Bridge. In the 1970s the Askin government tried to demolish all housing in the area, only to be stopped by a determined community and green bans imposed by the Builders Labourers Federation.

Sydney's waterfront should not simply be for those who can afford multi-million dollar apartments. Suburbs such as Millers Point are communities made up of residents who have existed there for generations. Forced removal will destroy this community and cause distress to the current residents. Residents on welfare and pensioners are as entitled to inner city housing as any other citizen.


Our communities are invaluable no matter where they are located.  And we should fight to preserve them. Not destroy them for yet another soulless, generic development. Millers Point is irreplaceable.

Saturday, 14 June 2014

Hidden history in Sydney's Millers Point

The ingenuity of the historic Millers Point workers’ flats will be lost when the public housing’s harbour views are sold off. #savemillerspoint



By Laura Harding
http://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/contributor/laura-harding#.U5wYj8-KDIU

We are repeatedly told that we are a suburban nation, and we most certainly revere the “garden suburb” – an early-20th-century planning idea that grew in response to the ills of industrialisation, pushing housing far beyond the boundaries of the corrupting city, to where fresh air, sunlight and cheap land abounded.

We rarely acknowledge Australia’s hidden housing tradition: the model urban housing schemes that viewed the city as something to be made rather than feared. These, too, date from the early 1900s, when Sydney was ravaged by poverty and plague, and the slums of Millers Point and Observatory Hill had been resumed and vested in progressive government agencies such as the Sydney Harbour Trust.

The trust was tasked with reconstructing the city’s wharfage and rehousing the workers in hygienic and dignified conditions. In doing so, it transformed the city.

The High Street workers’ flats are one component of a public-spirited and socially progressive story that has been overlooked in favour of the aspirational lure of individualism implicit in the suburban “dream”.
#savemillerspoint

The flats occupied the site of an old government quarry. A platform was carved into the exposed bedrock, making a new urban terrace, a “high street”, with an arresting V-shaped form that pitched symmetrically to a point on the axis of the Observatory dome, where the trust built a kindergarten and playground. The quarried stone was used to reclaim a 30-metre-wide street, Hickson Road, along the harbour edge below, which was lined with emphatic brick shore sheds that linked a series of hardwood finger wharves. A bridge connected High Street to the shore sheds, allowing the workers to walk to work, suspended above the teeming traffic and filthy wharves. The Barangaroo casino will soon emerge from the vast container tarmac that destroyed the wharves in the 1970s.

The workers’ flats are skilful and inventive model housing. The trust was principally staffed by engineers and brought a rationalist’s eye, technical prowess and constructive heft to the question of housing. Faced with strong resistance to the idea of monolithic tenement buildings, they developed a series of flats that masqueraded as terrace houses – a specifically Australian form of urbanism. The staggered walls and gables that serrate the High Street roof forms don’t separate individual houses, but groupings of four individual flats. #savemillerspoint

The upper and lower flats were divided by ingenious concrete panel and slab systems, to prevent the spread of fire and noise – some of the earliest use of this now ubiquitous technology in Sydney housing. Each flat had its own ventilated laundry, bathroom and scullery at the rear to ensure hygienic living conditions could be maintained.

The lower flats had a courtyard for clothes-drying and access to a rear lane for rubbish collection. The upper ones were given rooftop drying platforms. A minor engineering marvel, these platforms were made of solid hardwood beams, packed tightly side by side and bonded by steel tie rods. Brick chutes and concrete tubes allowed rubbish to be dropped to the lane below. This lane, with its syncopated chutes, latticed eyries and washing launched into the air by nifty pulley mechanisms, is a raw but captivating domestic scene. “Plain, useful, almost grim in their simplicity,” said The Sydney Morning Herald in 1912, they carry “a twinkle of imagination that may make the repose of the tired labour pleasant”.

Following their tenure as workers’ residences, the High Street flats were transferred to the Department of Housing in the mid-1980s. Although neglected, they have remained a substantive part of the city’s public housing stock until the recent announcement that they, along with the trust’s other model housing projects, will be sold to the market in 2015.

The cost of maintaining old structures underpins the economic argument for these sales, not to mention the windfall uplift in property values afforded by the adjacent gentrification of Barangaroo.

Among the Millers Point properties there are some more generic “terrace” housing types that lend themselves to a new life as market housing, but the most extraordinary and experimental of the trust’s model projects simply don’t. They are small, and their architectural typology is geared to housing as many people as possible through minimum means, not the burgeoning accoutrements of “lifestyle”.

A hundred years ago the Sydney Harbour Trust remade the city to support the booming maritime economy and its workers. Next year, we will relocate 400 public housing tenants to support the booming value of property.

This is the problem with hidden histories – we don’t learn from them. How inept it will be if the fate of these radical social projects is to become a gutted heritage curio, to house a privileged few of the wealthiest among us, while we wring our hands over the provision of affordable housing in our cities, in ignorance of this astonishing architectural legacy.

Source reference:  http://www.thesaturdaypaper.com.au/2014/06/14/hidden-history-sydneys-millers-point/1402668000#.U5wAWc-KDIU

#savemillerspoint

$150M Development Proposal To Expand Four Points Sheraton Hotel Lodged




Source: Cox 
A major project application has been lodged with the NSW Planning Department to expand the Four Points By Sheraton Hotel at 161 Sussex Street Sydney. The redevelopment includes construction of a 25 storey tower, comprising hotel rooms and commercial floorspace and function space.

The proposed redevelopment is possible because the current hotel does not utilise the full lease site.

The land is subject to a 99 year lease to May 2087 and currently has approximately 3,903 square metres of undeveloped site area. The existing hotel structure only occupies some 60% of the site.

There are large areas over the Western Distributor and above the Slip Road zone that while they are
 within the site boundary, have not been development.


Development Opportunities- Source: Cox

The proposal is currently on public exhibition until 10 October and comprises:
  • 231 rooms in a new 25 storey tower at the southern end of the site
  • A new structure over the Western Distributor for expanded meeting and banquet facilities
  • Upgrade to porte cochere and building entry on Sussex Street
  • Expanded entry for event facilities on Sussex Street
  • Upgrade retail frontages on Sussex Street
The proposed development has been declared State Significant Development (SSD) as it has a capital investment value estimated at $148.5 million and is located in the Darling Harbour State Significant Site precinct.

The Environmental Assessment prepared by JBA argues that the redevelopment of the Four Points By Sheraton Hotel has been proposed to respond to the current demand for hotel accommodation in Sydney. “It has been determined that there will be no adverse environmental impacts and that the potential impacts are able to be managed through the proposed mitigation measures” the reports concludes.

#savemillerspoint

Source Reference: http://blog.blockbrief.com/150m-development-proposal-to-expand-four-points-sheraton-hotel-lodged/

#savemillerspoint

Barangaroo Site For Sale

A world-class hub: Barangaroo North.
A world-class hub: Barangaroo North.


By June 13 2014
#savemillerspoint
A development site at the northern end of the Barangaroo peninsula, Millers Point, has been offered for sale amid rising demand for mixed use space in the area that is independent to the Lend Lease project.

A consortium of three private investors are selling their long-held 1-3 Munn Street offices, which adjoins the new headland park at what has been dubbed Barangaroo North. The price for the buildings offered with ground lease is estimated at $40 million.

James Parry, managing director of capital markets at Knight Frank,  is advising on the sale and  said it was rare for these heritage-style assets to be offered.

He said the tenant, Universal Music, had come to the end of their lease and the owners felt it was time to sell and gain traction from the adjoining Barangaroo development.

‘‘Inner city properties like these are now being seen in a new light with the proximity to Barangaroo. They can be converted into a hotel to cater for the over flow from Crown and also the new huge number of office workers that will be in the area,’’ Mr Parry said.

‘‘The are also no height restrictions or floor to space ratio restrictions on the site, making it attractive for developers. Hotel operators, office tenants, serviced apartments or strata developers are interested, but residential is not allowed.

‘‘That said, the owners have decided not to get planning approval, so it’s unclear just how much development potential there is and the price will reflect this.’’

Currently on the property are two heritage-listed sandstone bond store buildings that have been converted to 3843 square offices with parking, with a fully leased income of about $2.6 million a year.

The ultimate owner of the freehold is the Barangaroo Development Authority (BDA).

Mr Parry said BDA would consider re-negotiating the ground lease to be longer, would be interested in negotiating to move the car spaces to a nearby car park and would be interested in potentially buying the heritage buildings for a cultural centre or swapping this parcel of land for one of their parcels.#savemillerspoint

The sale comes as the office towers at Barangaroo start to take shape, in what will be considered a major financial hub of Asia Pacific.

Tenants include Lend Lease, Westpac, KPMG, PricewaterhouseCoopers(PWC), HSBC and law firm Gilbert + Tobin.

There was also market speculation that technology groups such as Google and Apple could lease office space, while Westpac could also increase its exposure, if it moved the remaining staff from the nearby 275 Kent Street head office.

Lend Lease’s chief executive Steve McCann said recently that the group had completed the leases to PWC and HSBC at competitive rents and market incentives which are lower than some of the numbers that have been quoted by agents.

He said it was a positive outcome and showed that the Sydney office market was improving.
‘‘We can offer the businesses the efficiencies they now require with activity-based working offices,’’ he said.

Following completion of the sale of the 10 per cent interest, Lend Lease's equity commitment to the towers trust company will fall from $500 million to $300 million.

There remains about 103,000 sq m to lease in the three office towers, with T1, the new home of PWC and HSBC, only 34 per cent leased.