Millers Point

Thursday, 15 January 2015

Sydney's oldest Catholic church dismisses closure speculation

Published 14 January 2015  

Inside St Brigid's Church, Sydney.
Father Ray Chapman, parish priest of Sydney's St Brigid's Church, confirmed on Tuesday that Australia's oldest Catholic place of worship will remain open and services will continue.


The reassurance was in response to parishioners who raised concerns over falling attendance at Sunday Mass.


"There are no plans to close the church and there are no plans to stop Masses ... There has been a decline because people have moved but to indicate that the church is going to close or Masses will be reduced is totally incorrect," Fr Chapman told reporters.


The mass relocation is part of the outcome of the Baird government's decision to sell public housing in the area after an assessment found that maintenance costs were too high. Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton explained on Tuesday that "For every house sold in Millers Point, you could build three houses in many other suburbs in Sydney."


According to the state government, the $500 million revenue from the sale of the 293 properties at Millers Point, as well as the Rocks, will be reinvested back into the New South Wales public housing system to assist the 58,000 applicants currently on the social housing waiting list. The Sydney Morning Herald noted that the exact nature of this reinvestment has not been made clear.


The media spoke with longtime St Brigid's Church worshippers who recalled a time when the congregation numbers were healthier. Parishioner and Miller's Point homeowner Kelli Haynes has been an active parishioner for over 10 years, and said that she has seen the attendance at Sunday mass drop from 50 people to less than 20.


In terms of the effect of the public housing sale, Father Chapman said that "maybe ten people have left." The parish priest explained that St Brigid's Church "is a small congregation but has been for a number of years." About 600 public housing tenants from the Miller's Point suburb where the church is located will be transferred to other suburbs.


RESOURCED: http://www.christiantoday.com.au/article/priest.of.oldest.catholic.church.dismisses.closure.speculation/19317.htm

Facebook swap shakes up public housing


BY Joe Bourke
January 15, 2015

Source: skyscrapercity.com
Source: skyscrapercity.com

 A Facebook community where people can swap their housing commission residences has emerged amid State Government public housing sell-offs, giving tenant their choice of accommodation.

‘Housing commission swap Sydney’ was established by Sameer Sayadi in December 2014 and in its first five weeks has gained almost 3,000 Facebook followers.

 As a former housing commission resident Mr Sayadi said that he understands what the tenants go through and that the page was established to give everybody an opportunity to find the most suitable home.

“My Mum still lives in housing commission and so I sort of understand and know what people go through – they don’t really have the option of picking their houses, it’s all up to the authority.

“Where my Mum is now, she’s not happy. She’d love to move out to another place on ground level because she currently lives on the top level. I want to create something where I can connect the two parties, and that’s all it is.” Mr Sayadi said.

 Greens Councillor Irene Doutney is a public housing tenant and said the page was a positive step for many who would otherwise have to wait many years for a change of location.

“We had one person in my building who waited for ten years to get a transfer, so I think anything where people take power in their own hands and form a community and try and co-operate within that community is a good thing.”

 “If you can work something out with another tenant then that’s a good ting because if you wait for the system to do it then you’re waiting forever.” Clr Doutney said.

 Mr Sayadi said that he hopes the community on the page will grow to a much bigger number so as to make the process easier for more people.

“3000 likes is nothing when there are hundreds of thousands of people in housing commission. It’d be good if I could get some sort of exposure so that more people could see it and connect.”

 “You can imagine, 50 000 likes and it’d be really busy. The housing commission authorities get bombarded by people wanting to swap and it gets very hard for them to deal with.”

 “If a page like this gets really successful then it takes a lot off the housing commission authority’s shoulder.” Mr Sayadi said

 Housing commission in Sydney has been a hot topic ever since the announcement of the planned Government sell off of the Millers Point housing estate and release of a controversial white paper released last year by the NSW Department of Family and community Services.

 Clr Doutney has been vocal on public housing, and said that it is essential in Sydney in order to keep the city diverse and take care of those in need.

“Most people in public housing won’t be able to survive in the private market and yet they’re diminishing the stock and not replacing it.

“[The Millers point sale] just makes the city even more monocultural for the rich. It just takes away the diversity and social justice aspect of having a community that’s got everybody in it, and those houses certainly will be sold to the rich and to corporations and international buyers and then that whole area has just been socially cleansed.” Clr Doutney said.

 With his Facebook page, Mr Sayadi hopes to make finding the right public housing easier for more people.

“The housing prices and living costs are really expensive and without housing commission, many more people would be living on the streets.”

 “It’s really hard, and housing commission is very important,” he said.


RESOURCED: http://www.altmedia.net.au/facebook-swap-shakes-up-public-housing/101884 

Monday, 12 January 2015

Millers Point: Australia's oldest Catholic church under threat, worshippers say

January 11, 2015
Nicole Hasham

St Brigid's was completed in 1835, and is the oldest surviving place of Catholic worship in Australasia.
St Brigid's was completed in 1835, and is the oldest surviving place of Catholic worship in Australasia. Photo: Dean Sewell
millers
Millers Point: a community under the hammer

  • Remembering Millers Point
  • NSW government rejects option allowing Millers Point residents to stay
  • The bubonic plague threatened the congregation of Australia's oldest Catholic church a century ago but, in the end, bureaucratic indifference may be its downfall, churchgoers say.
    
    Millers Point residents fear that their diminishing community may force the closure of the church.
    Millers Point residents fear that their diminishing community may force the closure of the church. Photo: Dean Sewell
        
    Worshippers at the historic St Brigid's church at Millers Point say the Baird government's decision to relocate about 600 public housing tenants and sell their homes has decimated numbers at Sunday morning mass. They fear for the future of the 180-year-old institution.

    "I've been a parishioner there for 45 years. Our numbers have depleted … it's very sad," said Dawn Caruana, a Millers Point public housing tenant.

    The sandstone church in Kent Street has hosted Caruana family christenings, confirmations and weddings, and the funerals of Ms Caruana's husband and young son who were killed in a car accident in 1979.

    Ms Caruana, 69, said the church community kept her afloat after the tragedy.

    "They rallied around and babysat, did the cooking, washing and cleaning on a roster – it was like one big family. And it went on for months," she said.

    "I would be devastated [to move away from the church]. I don't know how I'd cope."

    St Brigid's was completed in 1835, and is the oldest surviving place of Catholic worship in Australasia.

    When the plague broke out at Millers Point in 1900, the government resumed and demolished much of the suburb, but St Brigid's survived.

    Parishioner Kelli Haynes owns a home in the area and has attended the church for more than a decade. She said up to 50 people once attended Sunday mass, but it now attracts fewer than 20.

    When contacted by Fairfax Media last month, the church rejected suggestions it might close its doors.

     However Ms Haynes feared the closure was inevitable, or that services would become less frequent.
    A broader decline in church attendance may have contributed to falling numbers, but the drop had been most marked since relocations began, Ms Haynes said, adding that even if new residents joined the church, the congregation was losing "its relationships, its history".

    The government says proceeds from the sale of 293 properties at Millers Point and the Rocks will be reinvested into the social housing system. But it has failed to explain exactly how the money, expected to top $500 million, will be spent.

    The Department of Family and Community Services did not respond when asked how many Millers Point residents have been relocated so far.

    Meanwhile, the NSW Ombudsman has asked the department to improve its dealings with Millers Point residents after an investigation found its relocation practices wanting.

    The Redfern Legal Centre had complained that NSW Housing was not properly informing tenants of their right to an appeal in the event that alternative housing offers were rejected and their tenancy was being terminated.

    Some residents have refused department requests for relocation interviews. The centre alleged Housing NSW was coercing tenants by arranging property inspections – which tenants cannot legally refuse – then conducting relocation interviews during the inspection.

    The Ombudsman told Housing NSW to include appeal rights information in its statements to tenants, and to cease attempts to combine relocation interviews with inspections.

    A department spokesman said the Ombudsman noted there was no implication of wrongdoing by the agency or its staff. He said a leaflet explaining tenants' right of review was sent in the same envelope as relocation statements.

    Redfern Legal Centre tenant advocate Martin Barker said many Millers Point residents were ill or elderly, and to "try and force your way into their house isn't a reasonable way of approaching [a discussion about] their housing needs."

    RESOURCED: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/nsw/millers-point-australias-oldest-catholic-church-under-threat-worshippers-say-20150111-12k03f.html

    Thursday, 8 January 2015

    Happy New Year, Brown Couch readers

    Wednesday, January 7, 2015

    And we're back... well, almost. The Brown Couch will be running at holiday pace until the end of January.

    The most intriguing news from the holiday period was the story of the tenants and their houses at Welfare Street, Homebush West.

     
    The 12 properties were built in the inter-war years to house local abattoir workers and later passed into the hands of the Sydney Olympic Park Authority – along with some long-standing tenancies. Last year SOPA sold all the properties, by tender, to HBW No 1 Pty Ltd, part of the Centennial Property Group, which quickly arranged for each property to be on-sold individually – for almost double what it paid for them.

    There were angry scenes at the auctions and some of the tenants are digging in – it appears that they may be protected tenants under the Landlord and Tenant (Amendment) Act 1948, which affords greater protection against evictions (and rent increases) for the relatively few tenancies to which the Act still applies. Proceedings to determine the legal status of the tenants is on foot: the tenants are assisted by our colleagues at the Inner West Tenants Advice and Advocacy at Marrickville Legal Centre, which has a strong record in protected tenancy matters – read more about their work here. The other party is represented by Sevag Chalabian of Lands Legal – read more about his recent work here.

    John Birmingham has written a comment on the story so far, and has captured nicely the disparity of the forces involved; he also ties in the other big news of the holiday period, which was the Federal Government's decision to defund the peak housing NGOs National Shelter, Homelessness Australia and the Community Housing Federation of Australia. Read the joint statement of those organisations here.

    The decision to defund the housing NGOs comes as the Federal Government prepares White Papers both on the tax system and on the Australian Federation – with specific reference to government responsibilities for housing and homelessness services. The defunding is a rotten decision: bad for housing policy, bad for the millions of people who need housing policy to work better, and bad for our democracy.

    2014: The year Sydney built a city without a foundation.


    source: danielbowen.com
    source:

    By Elliott Brennan
    Premier Mike Baird came good on two of his longest standing promises last year. In 2011 as Treasurer of NSW he announced that the state was ‘open for business’, and whilst Barangaroo was certainly symptomatic of this Liberal drive, 2014 was the year that the effort went into hyper drive. How did Barry O’Farrell, Mr Baird and their government open the state for business? By opening the city of Sydney to a redevelopment frenzy, thus almost fulfilling his second promise to make Syndey “a city under construction.”

    The wheels have been set into motion for a raft of massive development projects that will have huge implications for Sydney. The Bays Precinct will potentially house 16,000 new dwellings, putting Leichhardt’s housing density quite literally through the roof.

    Parramatta Road is set to receive 60,000 new dwellings, or a potential 156,000 new residents. It is prophesied WestConnex will ease the congestion that the housing development would cause, but budget holes suggest that the exorbitant tolls needed to pay for the project will drive people by the masses back to the toll-free Parramatta Road.

    Harold Park in Glebe will bring another 2,500 people to the inner west. The Central to Eveleigh developments will create a population boom along a narrow corridor of the inner city, adjacent to that Green Square will bring 53,000 new residents of its own.

    All of these developments in combination may prove to be pie in the sky. But bearing in mind the harrowing prediction that Sydney will need 600,000 new homes for 1.6 million extra people in the next two decades, all of these new residents look set to rely on Sydney’s antiquated and failing amenities.

    It took the State Government and the City of Sydney a full year to negotiate the relocation of Ultimo Public School, which is already bursting at the seams. Bickering between two levels of government has pushed the whole project back a year and edged the inner city closer to exceeding the complete capacity of its education institutions. The stage is now set for the development of a new inner city high school with predictions that the higher education will reach capacity in the inner city by 2018 if nothing is done.

    Demand for social housing is already well over capacity with a waiting list of over 55,000 people that will only grow as the price of property increases. In response to this overflow, the State Government has slashed support for the sector in a harsh White Paper released at the end of last year. Under the new proposal, individuals with prior drug convictions will be banned from certain estates. And most controversially, the State Government has begun selling off the social housing at Millers Point.
    A world class city needs to provide shelter, healthcare, education, and transport for its citizenry.

    When Sydney grows beyond its capacity, none of these will be adequately provided. As the Government works quickly to sell off every last parcel of free land remaining in the city to those who will pay top dollar, the pockets of developers are lined and profits are maximised. But Sydney’s standing as a global city, or even humanitarian city is diminishing rapidly.

    In 2014 we set about developing a city. In 2015 we need to set about building the foundation for a city.

    RESOURCED: http://www.altmedia.net.au/2014-the-year-sydney-built-a-city-without-a-foundation/101708

    Tuesday, 6 January 2015

    Elderly Welfare St tenant to fight off eviction tribunal hearing

    John Higgins, a long time resident of Welfare Street, Homebush, is fighting against plans to evict him.
    John Higgins, a long time resident of Welfare Street, Homebush, is fighting against plans to evict him. Photo: Sahlan Hayes

    
    John Higgins has lived in his house since he was a baby and has no plans to leave.
    Mr Higgins, 67, is one of the tenants refusing to vacate five homes in Welfare Street and Flemington Road in Homebush after wealthy property investors took over their previously state government-owned homes in June.
    "I'm not moving out. I'm in a big battle alongside my neighbours. We're standing together on this as protected tenants," Mr Higgins told Fairfax Media.
    Protected tenants have continuing leases and pay below-market rent, in this case about  $550 a month. They cannot be evicted except on certain specific grounds.
    Mr Higgins said he was offered $10,000 to move out in early December. He is the only remaining tenant to be offered cash, and to receive a notice to attend the tribunal for eviction proceedings.
    "I didn't take the money because I'm sticking by my neighbours. And we know our rights," he said.
    The five families were listed as protected tenants in the sales contract when their homes were among 12 purchased from the Sydney Olympic Park Authority for $5.8 million in June.
    The selling agent acting for the first buyer, HBW1 and the Centennial Property Group, served all tenants with negotiable termination notices in November. Seven of the families moved out within the 30 days specified. CPG sold the 12 houses to individual buyers a few weeks later for a total of $10.5 million.
    On the day of the sale, the property group's selling agents, Strathfield Partners, said they had no intention to evict anyone.
    However, a legal letter obtained by Fairfax Media reveals the new owners informed Mr Higgins of their plans to evict him just three days before Christmas.
    In the letter, Sevag Chalabian of Lands Legal argued Mr Higgins ceased to be a protected tenant when the Sydney Olympic Park Authority bought the site in 1989 because this constituted a new residential agreement.
    Mr Higgins and his lawyers at the Inner West Tenants' Advice & Advocacy Service disagreed and were scheduled to defend his tenancy status at the the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal in the first week of January.
    "We're still on our lease from 1948. It's the only one my dad or me ever signed," Mr Higgins said.
    Advocate Martin Baker told Fairfax Media they believe Mr Higgins is a protected tenant under the 1948 act as a child of the original lease owner.
    "Our client is a protected tenant and is entitled to remain in his home. The eviction proceedings commenced were misconceived and would have been vigorously defended," Mr Baker said.
    But within the final days of 2014 or  the first few days of the new year, the tribunal hearing was adjourned and is yet to be rescheduled.
    Strathfield Partners managing director Robert Pignataro declined to explain why they had adjourned their actions to evict Mr Higgins.
    "We're not evicting anyone like we said at the auction," Mr Pignataro told Fairfax Media.
    "But if the so-called protected tenants want to leave their tenancy, the old owner, Centennial Property Group, is happy to come to an agreement [for financial compensation] with them."
    If and when the case is rescheduled, the first hearing would focus on whether Mr Higgins was a protected tenant. If it is proved that Mr Higgins is a protected tenant, his eviction would require court action rather than tribunal proceedings.

    Sunday, 4 January 2015

    Remembering Millers Point

    January 3, 2015   Drew Rooke


    
    Six generations of history: Colin and Terry Tooher at their home in Millers Point earlier this year.
    Six generations of history: Colin and Terry Tooher at their home in Millers Point earlier this year. Photo: Tamara Dean
                                    "C'mon mate. I'll show ya round," says Colin Tooher while chewing the last mouthful of a sausage and onion roll. He is wearing blue work shorts, a loose sky-blue T-shirt, and stained runners with a pair of Sydney Roosters football socks pulled to his knees. Locals know him as the Millers Point Mayor. He has lived in the same house in Windmill Street since he was born in 1950.

    We've just attended a community meeting in the Abraham Mott Hall on Argyle Place to discuss what action will be taken in response to the NSW Coalition government's recent announcement that 293 public housing dwellings in the prized harbourside suburbs of Millers Point and The Rocks will be sold off. Col's house is among them.

    The meeting saw impassioned speeches from the independent Member for Sydney, Alex Greenwich, the City of Sydney lord mayor, Clover Moore, and numerous locals, who accused the government of transforming Sydney into an enclave for the rich. The speakers argued the need to protect this state heritage area, which in 2007 was described as "a priceless asset of the people of New South Wales and Australia" in Housing NSW's Conservation Management Guidelines. It's a "priceless asset" because of the extraordinary range of intact architecture that dates from the 1830s, when Millers Point was established as one of Australia's first residential suburbs by dockworkers, seaman, merchants and labourers.


    
    Encroaching city: Skyscrapers loom at the edge of Millers Point.
    Encroaching city: Skyscrapers loom at the edge of Millers Point. Photo: Lisa Maree Williams


    Sense of history: Millers Point was one of Australia's first residential suburbs, home to by dockworkers, seaman, merchants and labourers.
    Sense of history: Millers Point was one of Australia's first residential suburbs, home to by dockworkers, seaman, merchants and labourers. Photo: Brett Hemmings
     The local community also has a unique degree of ancestral continuity with colonial Sydney.
    "See this black asphalt here?"

    "Well, it wasn't always like this," says Col, walking along Argyle Place. He points over to a recently filled hole in the road. "Come have a look 'ere." He stands over it, inspecting it like a jeweller would a diamond and then throws his hands in the air. "They've covered them all up now, you see. These roads used to be made of wooden bricks for the horse and cart to bring the goods off the wharves up into town. You wouldn't 'av known that, would ya?' Col laughs.
    
    We continue on through the Kent Street intersection, stopping on the corner of Argyle Lane. Rising in the distance like an urban monolith is a multistorey apartment block – the entrance to Sydney's skyscraper forest.

    Col turns around and faces the row of shops between Argyle Lane and  High Street. "I'll tell you something about these," he says. "On the corner there was Mrs Smith's pies. And mate, absolutely tip-top. Who knows how many of them they'd sell a day." Next to that was the newspaper shop, then the bootmaker and, at the end, the deli. Across the road was the barber and the butcher. Pants were the only thing Col had to go into town for. "It was like a kid from the bush goin' into the big smoke," he says.

    Col admits that the place is different nowadays. "But it's still like an ol' country town – one of the only places of its sort left in Sydney."

    Col leads the way down the narrow footpath that passes their front doors. The houses face south and are blocked from sunlight; the air here is chilly. Like most others in the area, these houses have posters reading "Save Our Homes" and "Save Our Community" stuck to the walls and windows.

    Col stops at the end of the block of houses, next to the staircase that leads down to the empty Munn Street Reserve below. In the distance, at the bottom of the sandstone hill, are the restaurants and bars of Cockle Bay Wharf and the southern edge of the Barangaroo construction site, soon to be home to James Packer's new $1.3 billion casino and resort hotel, a development the state government has insisted has nothing to do with the Millers Point sell-off. "We used to get on our billy carts 'ere and race 'em all the way down there," Col says.

    A barbed wire-topped fence lines Merriman Street. Col presses his head against it and wraps his fingers tightly around the links, as if he is about to rip the fence free. From here it's a 20-metre drop down into a craterlike concrete hole that is to be the car park for Barangaroo. "What a nice bloody view," Col laughs.

    This is where Millers Point ends and Barangaroo begins. Across the harbour, waterfront mansions on the tip of the Balmain peninsula shimmer in the afternoon sun.

    The fence rattles as Col pushes himself away from it. We walk north to the cul-de-sac at the end of  Merriman Street, past the ghost of the Sydney Ports Harbour control tower, through Clyne Reserve with its lone slippery slide and ship-shaped play equipment, and follow the pathway around the headland to Dalgety Road.

    Standing outside her home is Paddi O'Leary. She's been a resident here for 14 years and worked as a counsellor for the Salvation Army before a serious accident left her unable to work.
    "How are ya, Paddi?" Col yells out.

    Paddi gives a smile and a wave back. "Still fightin', Col. Still fightin'."

    The public housing units on this street are made of the same brown brick as most others in the area. They're double storey – two units on ground level, two units above –   with white-washed wooden railings on their verandahs. There is one unit that stands out though, number 33. The front window and door are boarded up. On the plywood boards is written: "Empty three years. Take 1 week to fix?" Chalked onto the bricks is another message for those in Parliament House: "This is not a dump. Some family could live here."

    It is the same story for more than 40 properties in Millers Point.

    "That's the government for you," says Col, taking a hard draw of his cigarette. "They say they need to sell off our homes to speed up the public housing waitin' list. What've they been doin' with all these empties, though?"

    Locals say the area's slide began in 1985 when control of the public houses was transferred from the Maritime Services Board to the NSW Housing Commission (now known as Housing NSW). The houses, locals lament, were no longer maintained to the same standards and many became neglected and derelict.

    Since then, there has been interest by successive state governments in selling off the public housing at Millers Point. In 2008 the Labor government sold 29 heritage-listed homes on 99-year leases to private tenants, which Col saw as the beginning of the end of Millers Point as a working-class heartland in the middle of Sydney.

    The most recent sell-off announced by the Coalition government is only an acceleration of this process.

    The Department of Family and Community Services says that maintenance on the Millers Point properties in just the past two years has cost the government $7 million. That is $7 million that could be added to the revenue raised by the sell-off, which, the government says, will result in several hundred million dollars to reinvest in the social housing system to help clear the backlog of families waiting for affordable housing.

    "But there's been no guarantee made by anyone that this will really happen," says Col. "It's all just pollie chatter." And, Col asks, even if it does save the government money, what about the uprooting of a community of mostly elderly people, who rely on each other to survive and who feel a deep sense of belonging to the place in which they live?

    The afternoon storm rolls in and the smell of fresh rain fills the air. "Comin' from the west," Col says. He walks across to Windmill Street, the street his family has lived in for six generations.

    "Before I go, I'll tell you one thing," Col says to me. "My wife Terry and I got a calculator out last week and figured out that with everyone living in this community now, there's over 2500 years of combined history." That only includes, he adds, the people he and Terry could count off the top of their heads.

    Despite the community's ongoing fight, the government's plan is going ahead and the first houses have already been sold for upwards of $1.9 million at secret auctions that were closed to the public. Once the remaining properties are sold, who'll be left to tell the next visitor that hidden beneath the layers of modern asphalt they're walking on are wooden bricks, laid by the ancestors of people who once called this place home?

    This is an edited extract from Meanjin Volume 73, Number 4.

    RESOURCED: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/remembering-millers-point-20150102-12cp8k.html
     

    Saturday, 3 January 2015

    ROCKING THE FOUNDATIONS - A HISTORY OF THE GREEN BANS MOVEMENT




    Published on Jul 14, 2013
    An outstanding historical account of the Green Bans first introduced by the New South Wales Builders Labourers Federation in the 1970s in response to community demand to preserve inner-city parkland and historic buildings. One of the first women to be accepted as a builders labourer, filmmaker Pat Fiske traces the development of a quite singular union whose social and political activities challenged the notion of what a union should be.

    "Who built Thebes of the seven gates? In the books you will find the names of kings. Did the kings haul up the lumps of rock?

    Saturday, 27 December 2014

    How the top end of town muscled in on Welfare Street

    Rose Powell, Jacob Saulwick
    December 27, 2014 
    
    Gerald Donnelly, a former abbatoir worker, and wife Grace in the house in Homebush they have rented for 33 years.
    Gerald Donnelly, a former abbatoir worker, and wife Grace in the house in Homebush they have rented for 33 years. Photo: Nic Walker
    Some of Australia's wealthiest and best-connected business people are behind the company that issued elderly tenants with negotiable termination notices  for 12 previously government-owned houses in Homebush. The company sold the houses within months of acquiring them, almost doubling its investment.

    Centennial Property Group offered cash settlements and asked the tenants to leave the properties on Welfare Street and Flemington Road in Homebush shortly after buying the properties from the state government's Sydney Olympic Park Authority in June.
    Seven families moved out but five are fighting to stay, including Gerald and Grace Donnelly. The five families armed with sales documents that specify they are protected tenants. They also have letters from the previous owners, the state government's Sydney Olympic Park Authority, which say there was no intention to end their tenancies.


    Alex Waislitz, part-owner of Centennial Property Group.
    Alex Waislitz, part-owner of Centennial Property Group. Photo: Luis Enrique Ascui
    CPG's owners include Alex Waislitz, a long-standing adviser to the Pratt family and worth hundreds of millions of dollars in his own right. The other owners are Deborah Clarke, and Michael and Clive Baskin through their company Baskin Clarke, which is described on their website as an "ethical financial advisory firm".
    One of the directors of the company is Lance Rosenberg, the former head of stockbroking house Tricom. Mr Rosenberg successfully overturned a ban on acting as a company director in the wake of the near-collapse of his stockbroking company Tricom during the global financial crisis. On its website, CPG lists its executive team as Lyle Hammerschlag, Jonathan Wolf and Kim Kitchen. Mr Hammerschlag is the son of former Freedom Furniture boss Ivan Hammerschlag.
    The Homebush deal is a spectacular outcome for the publicity-shy Centennial Property Group. The group won the state government tender for the property in June, and added $4.7 million to the property price tag in just six months. 
    Lance Rosenberg.
    Lance Rosenberg.
    The company purchased the single-title block from the state government's Sydney Olympic Park Authority for $5.8 million. After subdividing the block and having seven of the 12 families leave, the company sold the houses separately to investors at auction last Saturday for a total of $10.5 million.
    Selling agent Robert Pignataro, of Strathfield Partners, told Fairfax Media last week that it had not been difficult to find buyers.
    "We gave one a coat of paint and polished the floors and put some furniture in there – that was the extent of what we did," Mr Pignataro said.
    They asked the existing tenants to move out in 30 days.
    "We are not looking at kicking any of them out – they can either stay [at the same rent] or opt to negotiate with us to receive a lump-sum cash settlement, which will be attractive," Mr Pignataro said.
    But as the families who are refusing to move are protected tenants, the new owners will face a lengthy legal battle if they try to coerce the residents to leave or raise their rent.
    Senior policy officer at the Tenants Union of NSW Chris Martin said it would be much harder for the new owners to dislodge the remaining tenants if they were protected.
    "Unlike mainstream tenancies, you can't have your lease terminated without grounds. So new owners would need to be able to prove the tenant needed to go, and they won't be able to raise rents to the market value," Dr Martin said.
    One of the families fighting for their home are Bruce and Lyn Begnell. 
    "We were meant to vacate the house on December 13. But the five of us are protected tenants and we sought legal advice and were advised we didn't need to leave," Mrs Begnell said.
    Mr Begnell is 80, legally blind and unwell. Mrs Begnell says she has letters from his doctors and cardiologists about the stress moving would cause.
    "The whole thing is so dodgy. The Sydney Olympic Park has to be held to account."
    The team behind CPG was contacted for comment but remain tight-lipped on who made the decision to request the tenants leave or how they got the property so cheaply given their exit value.
    A spokeswoman for Mr Waislitz confirmed he was one of the shareholders of CPG, but said he was not involved in the day-to-day running of the company.
     
     



    Wednesday, 17 December 2014

    Millers Point government sell-off hits a snag

    December 17, 2014
     
    Toby Johnstone 

    Three state-owned terraces on Kent Street, Millers Point, passed in at auction on Monday night.
    Three state-owned terraces on Kent Street, Millers Point, passed in at auction on Monday night
    The state-government's sell-off of public housing at Millers Point hit a snag on Tuesday night when all three properties on offer passed in at auction.

    There were 11 potential buyers gathered in the Ray White auction room in Double Bay to compete for three heritage-listed terraces on Kent Street

    Up until last night the government had no issue finding buyers for other Millers Point properties, some of which were so popular they sold for more than $1 million above the price guides.
     
    Even with views of the harbour the terraces struggled to rouse buyer interest.
    Even with views of the harbour the terraces struggled to rouse buyer interest.

    The first property up for grabs on Tuesday evening was a three-bedroom terrace at 47 Kent Street. The three-level property with harbour views listed with Di Jones was previously scheduled for auction on Monday night but was postponed due to the siege in Martin Place.
     
    After 10 minutes of silence an opening bid of $1.35 million was begrudgingly accepted by the auctioneer, followed by a $1.4 million bid, which was still $100,000 shy of the $1.5 million price guide. No vendor bid was exercised and the property passed in at $1.4 million.

    When the next property at 43 Kent Street came up for auction one punter tried for a low-ball bid of $1.32 million, which was not accepted by the auctioneer. The terrace was recorded as passing in with no bids. 
    It is understood that the properties were being sold with an unregistered plan of subdivision.
    It is understood that the properties were being sold with an unregistered plan of subdivision.

     The terrace next door at 41 Kent Street faired no better - the auctioneer called three times for an opening bid of $1.4 million but buyers kept their hands down.
     
    It is understood that the properties were being sold with an unregistered plan of subdivision, which effectively means buyers were bidding for a land title that did not exist yet.
     
    Buyers were advised that "the Plan of Subdivision will be lodged for registration in the very near future and the Contract for Sale will most likely be a 42 day completion".
     
    A spokesman for Government Property NSW said that the sellings agents were continuing to negotiate with interested parties and added that he did "not believe the amended subdivision plan was a material influencer on the sale".

    Buyers will not be able to settle on the property until the subdivision is registered with Land and Property Information NSW.

    The last three properties to be sold by the state government in Argyle Place also required subdivision. However, the state government managed to register those titles just days before the auction.
     
     millersMillers Point: a community under the hammer
     
    Following those successful auctions the Minister for Family and Community Services, Gabrielle Upton, put out a statement announcing the sale.

    "There's been a strong market response to the release of the government-owned properties in Millers Point with a total of $21.9 million raised so far from nine sales," read the statement.

    "The NSW Government is preceding with plans to sell the remaining 284 properties so funds can be reinvested back into the public housing system."

    No such statement was sent out following the unsuccessful auctions on Monday night.

    RESOURCED: http://news.domain.com.au/domain/real-estate-news/millers-point-government-selloff-hits-a-snag-20141217-128pvj.html 
     

    Monday, 15 December 2014

    The Urban Taskforce has released a statement saying that the 40-year-old Sydney Harbour Control Tower is out of place in Sydney’s low-rise Millers Point, and that heritage laws put forward by community groups are a bid to compromise new developments.

    The Urban Taskforce has released a statement saying that the 40-year-old Sydney Harbour Control Tower is out of place in Sydney’s low-rise Millers Point, and that heritage laws put forward by community groups are a bid to compromise new developments.


    This follows from the National Trust’s bid to save the 87-metre historic tower when its owner, the Barangaroo Delivery Authority, sought planning approval to demolish the structure as it was not in keeping with its vision for a naturalistic headland park in Barangaroo north, designed by renowned landscape architect Peter Walker.




    Sydney’s ‘concrete mushroom’ in Millers Point shouldn’t be heritage-listed, says Urban Taskforce




    “Some heritage bodies see the tall concrete control tower as a romantic connector to the days when Sydney Harbour was a bustling port,” says the organisation’s CEO, Chris Johnson. “But the tower represents the worst period of shipping use when the beautiful finger wharves were bulldozed to create vast concrete flat tarmacs for the growing use of containers that led to semitrailers clogging the city streets.


    “The extensive container wharves were never listed as being of state heritage significance and neither should the concrete surveillance tower that looked into the back gardens of local residents. Technology has replaced physical surveillance with radar based systems and the heavy container port activity has been moved to Botany Bay.


    “The calls for heritage listing seem to be a throwback to the calls to keep the container wharf shapes rather than support the re-shaping of the original headland that is now in place. The essential character of Millers Point is of low- rise buildings that relate to the waterfront and this end of the Barangaroo project must respect this.”


    Originally established to give maritime controllers a vantage point of the harbour and wharves, the National Trust notes that the tower continues to play a “pre-eminent role in the history and maritime operation of the Port of Sydney – the primary commercial port of Australia”.


    A report, recently obtained by the Sydney Morning Herald and commissioned by the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage, show some of the plans the Heritage Council has for the structure.
    Options for re-use include an adventure tower with a pop-out platform offering bungee jumping, abseiling or a "vertigo experience", a viewing tower with panoramas over the harbour, and a restaurant.







    Source: SMH
    However Johnson, along with other detractors such as Paul Keating, believes the tower has no heritage value and is not deserving of a heritage-listing.


    Johnson adds that the Heritage Council’s Statement of Significance struggles to address the aesthetic significance of the Control tower by referring to it simply as an engineering structure, and that referencing and recognising the architects’ designs in Canberra is inadequate.


    “The much taller and visually prominent Sydney Tower in the middle of Sydney’s CBD is not listed as state significant and neither is the control tower at Sydney Airport,” he observes.


    “The Urban Taskforce would normally be very supportive of tall structures in the right locations. In this instance the tall buildings are appropriately located at the southern end of Barangaroo with the northern end being mid and low-rise buildings that relate to the historic setting of terrace houses and warehouses. It is a misuse of heritage legislation to now support an intervention that the heritage organisations 40 years ago should have been fighting against.


    “It seems that some community groups who are against new development are keen to use the heritage laws to compromise the new development. Heritage significance must be assessed on its merits rather than becoming another tool to attack new development.”


    The tower was bought for $2.6 million by the Authority, who has proposed a heritage interpretation strategy for the precinct’s new cultural area. This will take the form of a circular roof opening integrated into the park’s new green roof, which would create a shaft of light in the same shape and size as the Harbour Tower’s column.


    RESOURCED: http://www.architectureanddesign.com.au/news/sydney-s-concrete-mushroom-in-millers-point-should

    Saturday, 13 December 2014

    Public housing at what price?

    December 13, 2014
    Peter Manning

    Proposals to sell off public housing in The Rocks area are controversial.
    Proposals to sell off public housing in The Rocks area are controversial.
                         
    On Monday and Tuesday the Baird government will auction off three more houses in Kent Street from the public housing estate at The Rocks.

    Families that have lived there for three and five generations or more – some paying rent for more than 100 years – will compulsorily lose their homes, their friends and their community.

    The 293 families involved can thank Pru Goward, now the NSW Minister for Planning, for she was the minister who replaced the disgraced Greg Pearce when Barry O'Farrell sacked him over a perceived conflict of interest more than a year ago.

    When the Housing Corporation that deals with public housing – and The Rocks has been Australia's first and oldest such project – was transferred to Goward as then Minister for Community Services, Goward took the opportunity to ignore its recommendations to build a new facility to avoid evicting the elderly tenants.

    Goward made the decision to evict the lot from Millers Point. Her office ignored the fact that the public housing was protected under the NSW Heritage Act, which included its residents not just the buildings, and failed to consult the Heritage office.

    Sydney historian Shirley Fitzgerald described Goward's actions as "appalling" and "rapacious".
    When O'Farrell fell on his sword in April this year following an ICAC hearing, the new Premier lifted Goward to Planning Minister and Gabrielle Upton was given Community Services and responsibility to see Goward's project through.

    Upton has yet to produce a business plan for the Millers Point sell-off but last week rejected a report to her from a leading economics consultancy (commissioned by the residents) stating that the original idea of Pearce – purpose-built accommodation to house the elderly long-term residents – would be the cheapest solution.

    Upton at first said she would consider the report and then changed her mind and rejected it outright. It seems there is simply too much money at stake for investors, and the Baird government, for putting residents before investors and developers.

    This is not the first time there has been a battle for The Rocks. Labor and Liberal governments have came up with reports in 1930, 1953, 1960 and 1970 to develop the area and move the residents out. But every time the community housing argument won the day.

    The Sydney Cove Redevelopment Authority met its match in 1970 with a spirited resistance from the Rocks Resident Action Group led by feisty local resident Nita McRae. She called on Jack Mundey's Builders' Labourers' Federation to stop the bulldozers.

    I interviewed Nita in 1974 and she told me she rang Jack and said: "Is it the policy of your union to have members pull down other unionists' houses?". It was a rhetorical question. The BLF slammed a "green ban" on this working-class area, full of maritime workers and their families, and the project was dropped. Nita died 12 years later.

    The success of the BLF action – one of more than 40 "green bans" around Sydney halting projects worth more than $3000 million – may well explain the excessive secrecy with which the Baird government has gone about selling off its Rocks properties.

    Reporters have been told that real estate agents have been gagged from speaking to the media and that all information must come from government spokespeople. Under instruction from the government, McGrath Real Estate also refused to reveal the location of the first auctions in August.
    But Labor's upcoming candidate for the local seat of Sydney, Edwina Lloyd, has had a field day firing up not just Rocks residents but any believers in public or mixed housing. Lloyd described actions towards the evicted residents as "disgusting" and "bullying".

    The fight for the Rocks – there are still 280 homes to go — comes at an awkward time for the government. The battle for the Sydney Harbour Park headland, following the cave-in to shooters in National Parks, questions the government's environmental credentials. The historic Callan Park hospital site in Rozelle is now also under review by the government. More importantly, the Rocks hardline stance taken by Goward and Baird, putting profits before people, threatens not only the notion of heritage and mixed housing but also the perception that developers have won over the Liberals just as they did Labor in their worst period.

    Peter Manning, a journalist and academic, wrote the book Green Bans with Marion Hardman for the Australian Conservation Foundation in 1974.

    RESOURCED: http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/comment/public-housing-at-what-price-20141213-125uxj.html

    Monday, 8 December 2014

    Sydney MP Alex Greenwich and Labor hopeful Edwina Lloyd square up over Millers Point sell-off

    James Gorman 
    December 08, 2014
    
    Public housing in historic Millers Point is being sold-off by the State Government.
    Public housing in historic Millers Point is being sold-off by the State Government. Source: Supplied
                     
    The gloves are off in the state seat of Sydney as sitting MP Alex Greenwich and his Labor opposition Edwina “Eddie” Lloyd do battle over the Millers Point public housing community.         

    Ms Lloyd is demanding an explanation from the independent Mr Greenwich over an email he sent to the embattled Millers Point community accusing her of political point scoring.

    But Mr Greenwich said he had been responding to accusations levelled against him by Ms Lloyd that he had failed to commit to the retention of public housing in the historic precinct.

    Mr Greenwich said Labor was to blame for initiating the Millers Point sell-off while it was still in power and insists they should apologise for their past actions.  
    
    Labor candidate Edwina Lloyd.
    Labor candidate Edwina Lloyd. Source: Supplied
         
    Sydney independent state MP Alex Greenwich.
    Sydney independent state MP Alex Greenwich. Source: News Corp Australia
         
    Ms Lloyd said she was deeply concerned by the comments and was still awaiting an explanation as to why they were made.

    “Residents at Millers Point, Dawes Point and The Rocks received an extraordinary emailed letter from Alex Greenwich,” she said.

    “The emailed outburst attacked the Labor Party and attacked me.

    “In his email to residents, Mr Greenwich says, ‘I ask that you don’t allow that Labor candidate for Sydney to use your community for deceptive political point-scoring.’

    “It is completely improper for Mr Greenwich to tell the people of Millers Point that they can only deal with him.
    “The people of Millers Point have a choice and they should be talking to everyone.”  
    
    The sell-off of public housing terraces has already begun.
    The sell-off of public housing terraces has already begun. Source: Supplied
     Mr Greenwich dismissed Ms Lloyd’s comments and kept up his attack on Labor.

    “It is important to remember that the Labor Party really needs to apologise to the community of Millers Point for getting them to where they are now,” he said.

    “Over 16 years the Labor Party engaged in a process of eviction by neglect, failing to provide the maintenance they were responsible for.

    TENANTS MARCH ON PARLIAMENT HOUSE

    APARTMENT DWELLERS SET FOR UNWANTED EXODUS

    “Labor started the sale process in Millers Point.

    “I will work with anyone – I will work with Fred Nile if it means we can retain public housing.”
    By Wednesday, Ms Lloyd had switched her Millers Point attack to Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton.  
    Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton.
    Family and Community Services Minister Gabrielle Upton. Source: News Corp Australia
        “Minister Upton has been missing in action and asleep at the wheel - and she has made a complete mess of the Millers Point sell-off,” Ms Lloyd said in a statement.

    “The whole thing has been done in a mad rush, without even trying to find suitable alternatives to retain public housing in the inner city.

    “As a result of her botched ‘relocation’ process, the State Government will fail to get full value for the sale of its housing assets, the city will lose much-needed social and affordable housing, and many elderly and vulnerable people are being put under unnecessary pressure and stress.

    “It’s time Minister Upton was ‘relocated’ – straight to the backbench.”

    RESOURCED: http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/newslocal/city-east/sydney-mp-alex-greenwich-and-labor-hopeful-edwina-lloyd-square-up-over-millers-point-sell-off/story-fngr8h22-1227151247240?nk=d95f33bf4d2a1238bf5c2368ac733afd

    Friday, 5 December 2014

    Sydney’s Concrete Poetry

    Friday, December 5, 2014

    Today's guest appearance is from Mary Sutton, a resident of Millers' Point. We are very pleased to be able to share her presentation made to the Getting Serious about Sirius event at NSW Parliament House in November. It is a long read, but well worth it- so settle in and enjoy!


    Sirius is prominently located right in the middle of The Rocks, a Sydney conservation precinct. I'm pleased to speak today about the historical importance of the Sirius apartment complex and its site. I'm Mary Sutton and I've always loved the Sirius building for its;-impressive sandstone hill site,
    -bold architecture,
    -innovative adaptation of art, and
    -collaborative design

    All elements that have seamlessly combined to provide treasured homes for the residents since Sirius was constructed in 1979. 


      Sirius was built following a lengthy period of discussions and negotiations. Sirius arose out of The Rocks 1970’s Green bans, a movement prominently associated with Jack Mundey, a later patron of the Friends of the Historic Houses Trust. 

      Richard Roddewig, in his book ‘Green Bans: The Birth of Australian Environmental Politics - A Study in Public Opinion and Participation’, writes
      ‘In 1975, a major compromise was reached. Green Bans were lifted on three specific sites. The Sydney Cove Redevelopment Cove Authority, in conjunction with The Housing Commission of New South Wales, proposed to develop on one of the sites as eighty housing units, in a medium-rise, nine-story building, for affordable income persons’.

      A welcoming brochure was produced in 1979 for the newly housed residents by The Housing Commission of New South Wales. The brochure proudly noted that:
      ‘The stepped roofline and face of the building were planned to blend and harmonise in good neighbourly fashion with the general roofscape of The Rocks. Shading precast concrete sills surround bronze anti-sun glass resiliently mounted to reduced noise and glare.
      The new building has been named “Sirius” in honour of the First Fleet, HMS “Sirius” and her commander, Captain Arthur Phillip. Off the main entrance foyer is a large community room,the “Phillip Room” with generous outdoor plaza, tasteful furnishings, kitchen facilities & toilets.
      The Housing Commission’s apartment building makes a spectacular addition to the transformation and restoration of The Rocks, Sydney’s most historic neighbourhood, near where in the early days the Tank Stream, flowing into the bay, provided drinking water for the tiny new colony. Cave shelters, humpies, stone cottages~all were stuff of the Colony’s history.’

      As my fellow speaker Charles Pickett, a curator and noted architecture author has just commented
      ‘A small number of public housing towers were ground-breaking architecturally and widely influential. Some public housing complexes were so successful architecturally that they eventually became sought-after and expensive addresses. Le Corbusier’s Unite d’Habitation at Marseille, Lafayette Park, Detroit by Mies van der Rohe and London’s Barbican Estate are perhaps the best known. For much of the twentieth century the Australian housing authorities also worked at the cutting edge of housing theory and practice. Sirius is a success story of public housing design.
      Sirius is a special building – not generic in format like much public housing, Sirius shows the potential of architecture geared to its site and its residents. It deserves to continue to be a part of The Rocks. ’

      Most mornings I stroll along Gloucester Walk in The Rocks with Sirius sitting high on the prominent land of Bunkers Hill. The Sirius building always looks imposing. I think of the Sirius building as ‘concrete poetry’. 


          Photographs taken from the 1979 residents ‘welcoming brochure’ (above and below) depict the simple, but innovative, off-form concrete walls, combined with acid-etched picture windows, to produce Sirius’ distinct stabled building block appearance, reminiscent ‘of a Native American pueblo’.

            Sirius shares ‘the magnificent panorama of the harbour in all its moods, the exciting city skyline, and nestling against the Harbour Bridge approaches…..just across the water from the famed Opera House.’

            Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to showcase what some may call an ‘unpolished diamond’ to the seven members of the NSW Government's Legislative Council Housing Select Committee.
            Thank you to The Hon Paul Green [Chair] and the members of the Upper House Committee for taking the time to see first hand why the Sirius building is an architectural, heritage and mixed tenure, social housing success - a cost effective asset for Sydney - the best example I know of 'Concrete Poetry'. 

            The Sirius apartment building is named after Governor Phillip's First Fleet vessel, HMS Sirius - a vessel scarcely larger than a Manly ferry - an adventurous little vessel that traversed the world's seas with its unwilling passengers to arrive in Sydney in January 1788. 

            Sadly, this crucial supply vessel was sunk at Norfolk Island whilst landing vital food supplies and lost forever to the fledging Sydney Cove community on 19 March, 1790. George Raper, a naval officer and illustrator, recorded this melancholy event in his wonderful drawing held by the National Library of Australia and depicted in the drawing (below courtesy of National Library of Australia) you have today. 

              We are now gathered because of a second equally significant 19 March Sirius event – an announcement by the NSW Government earlier this year on that date that is writing another chapter in the history of the Sirius building. 

              What I'd like you to consider today is what makes Sirius and its site so notable. I must start by noting that the Sirius building sits prominently on land owned by the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority (SHFA) and part of the answer to the question, I think, lies with the vision of SHFA "to make unique places in Sydney that the world talks about". 

              ‘Does the Sirius building and its location satisfy this SHFA vision?’ you might ask. ‘Is the Sirius building and its location a ‘unique place in Sydney that the world talks about’? It seems ‘yes’.
              We have heard much today of the uniqueness of the Sirius building, particularly its architecture and concrete construction and its international recognition as such.

               There is also much historical evidence of the uniqueness of Sirius’ Bunkers Hill location, as depicted in:
              * the earliest colonial drawings of
              -John Eyre,
              -Jacob Janssen,
              -Thomas Watling,
              -Richard Read,
              -Joseph Lycett,
              -Conrad Martens, and
              -Frederick Garling,
              * Governors' Phillip, Hunter and King's official Colony papers, and
              * all the way through to the sights and sounds as you stroll along Gloucester Walk today, as many Sydney and international visitors do. 

                Richard Read ‘View from Bunkers Hill Including Dawes Battery, Fort Lachlan & South Head Lighthouse’ c.1820 Mitchell Library (above)
                Conrad Martens ‘View Sydney Cove from Bunkers Hill July 2, 1836’ Mitchell Library of NSW (above)
                From what we've just heard from some of the other speakers, there is no doubt in my mind that the Sirius building and its location are unique places in Sydney that the world talks about – something that SHFA and the residents of Sydney and Australia can quite rightly be proud of.
                The Sirius building and its location are social, tourism, educational, cultural, commercial and conservation assets for NSW.

                The world has talked of Sirius' and it location in many ways, including:
                1. The opportunistic sailor who foundered the colonial whaling industry and sometime Liverpool, Hawkesbury River and Hunter Valley farmer, Ebenezer (Eber) Bunker, is said by Governor Hunter to have ‘cultivated in a style one would expect from a sailor’, (SMH 2/3/29). Captain Bunker was granted the site on which the majority of the Sirius complex now stands, for some services to Governor King, a site that was known until at least the 1830's as Bunkers Hill. 

                Eber Bunker was a master mariner and landholder credited with being the "father of Australian whaling".  The Sydney Morning Herald of 2 March 1929 records, ‘On his vessel being moored in Port Jackson in 1791 he had an interview with Governor Phillip and astounded that gentleman by his calculations of the possible great profits for a whaling industry for the new settlement…..Within six months he had secured 600 barrels of oil to enhance the interests of the Colony ( and no doubt himself).’ 

                Bunker’s arrival in New South Wales in 1791 was as master of the ship “William and Ann" (with 185 involuntary passengers aboard), one of the whalers chartered to bring early prisoners to ‘Botany Bay’. He then went whaling in the South Seas and he later accompanied the "Lady Nelson" in the vessel "Albion" to establish the Derwent settlement in Tasmania in 1803. 

                Bunker brought his family to the Colony in the "Elizabeth" in August 1806. He became a landholder at Bunkers Hill, Liverpool, Bankstown on the Hawkesbury and the Hunter Valley. Bunker had built a stone house and stores atop Bunkers Hill (replacing his earlier wattle and daub c. early 1800’s structure) and from this high ground in The Rocks with views to the Heads, Kirribilli and the Parramatta River, Eber ran his global whaling empire.

                  Watercolour Eber Bunker, c.1810. Courtesy State Library of New South Wales

                  Eber Bunker’s achievements in having the world talk about him also included presenting the first West Australian black swan to the King of England and some cumbersome limited use weaponry to Hawaii's king to support a request ‘to be kind to the missionaries’, (SMH 2/3/29), together with naming Bunkers Islands in Queensland and various New Zealand islands. 

                  Eber Bunker’s house stood on Gloucester Street at Bunkers Hill from 1806, later hemmed in by taller, more elegant terraces, with his house being demolished around 1912 as part of the Rocks reconstruction works (Sirius was built on the central part of this land in 1977-1979).

                  2. The HMS “Sirius” association represents a tangible link to the most significant vessel associated with early migration of European people to Australia and to the “Sirius” midshipman, Captain Henry Waterhouse, a godson of Prince Henry, the younger brother of King George lll. Some short time after his arrival in the Colony, Captain Waterhouse was granted land on which the northern apartments of the present Sirius complex now sit. HMS “Sirius” was guardian of the first fleet during its epic voyage to Australia between 1787 and 1788, which brought the convicts, soldiers and sailors who became Australia’s first permanent European settlers.

                  HMS “Sirius” was also the mainstay of early colonial defence in New South Wales and the primary supply and communication link with Great Britain during the first two years of the settlement (Source: Heritage Council of Australia).

                  The careers of the first three governors’ of the colony of New South Wales, Arthur Phillip (1788-1792), John Hunter (1795-1800) and Philip Gidley King (1800-1806) are closely associated with the history of HMS “Sirius” as all three sailed as senior officers on board HMS Sirius during the voyage of the first fleet to New South Wales. Hunter was also Captain of HMS “Sirius” during its last ill-fated voyage in 1790, when it was totally wrecked at Norfolk Island. The loss of HMS “Sirius” at Norfolk Island on 19 March 1790 was a disaster for the fledgling colony during a period of crisis, when the settlement at Port Jackson was in danger of collapse and abandonment.

                  It has been argued by some that the adaptability, ingenuity and grim determination to survive, demonstrated by the colonists at Port Jackson and Norfolk Island following this disaster, became an enduring trait of the Australian people.

                  3. Wharf Owner Robert Campbell, Cumberland Place, Bunkers Hill and Waterhouse Land.

                    F Garling’s c.1840 “Sydney Cove” a view towards Bunkers Hill (center), Lower Fort St and Dawes Battery Mitchell Library
                    Captain Waterhouse left Australia permanently in 1800 and leased his grant covering part of the Sirius site to Campbell Cove's famous wharf owner Robert Campbell. In the 1830’s the town leases, grants and permissive occupancies of the past were formalized and Robert Russell produced section plans showing the owners of the land (SHFA Heritage and Conservation Register). This part of the site remained unoccupied land until the 1840’s, as did much of Bunkers Hill land surrounding Bunker’s house in current Gloucester Walk. In the 1820's Robert Campbell developed the prestigious landholding of Cumberland Place, designed by Francis Greenway, on his Bunkers Hill land, adjacent to his Waterhouse grant and nearby wealthy Dawes Point wharf and landowners. Garling captures Bunker’s Hill c.1840 above.

                    4. The Mitchell Library's benefactor, David Mitchell, was born in 1836 in Campbell’s Bunkers Hill’s elegant ‘cottage ornee’ at Cumberland Place (since demolished) and Mitchell spent his childhood there before moving with his large library to modern digs in Darlinghurst. Mitchell famously collected colonial documents associated with Bunkers Hill, (Sirius' site) and all aspects of Colonial Sydney maps, art and memorabilia to found the Mitchell Library Collection.

                    5. Australia’s first Prime Minister Edward Barton lived as a child in the 1850’s in one of the Young’s townhouses. This four storied townhouse (three stories with a basement kitchen) was one of a terrace of three houses built by Adolphus Young on land developed adjacent to Bunker's land on Gloucester Walk in the early 1840’s and may have been designed by John Verge’s protĂ©gĂ©, John Bibb, (who also built the nearby Mariners Church). The imposing terrace of three homes survived until the early 1900's Rocks reconstruction project. This land forms part of the Sirius site today.

                    6. Innovative concrete technology and an early example of Australian public town planning can still be readily viewed as the Federal Electrical Company (Ajax Building) on the corner of Gloucester Walk and George Street – also a part of the “Sirius” Captain Waterhouse's land grant. This concrete technology and the Arts and Craft movement design of the building, was developed by the recently formed New South Wales Housing Board’s architect, William Henry Foggitt, in association with the Public Works Department, for The Rocks reconstruction works during the period 1912-15. Occupiers included Young and Stewart cordial manufacturers.

                    In January 1915, the Sydney Morning Herald reported this was the first building in Sydney to be constructed entirely of reinforced concrete. The building was a warehouse, with an office building on the top of the southern end of the building. Several bays of the building’s southern end and the office building were demolished when the Sirius complex was built. This inspirational concrete technology was later used on Millers Point’s High Street flats. Concrete's innovating impact was a feature of the inspirational Sirius building constructed by Anderson & Lloyd, described as a ‘bold and exceptional experiment’ in ‘Concrete’s Rearview’.


                      7. Sirius now sits on the location of a major employer in the Rocks, Rowans Bond and The Federal Electrical Company, (Ajax Building) that utilised modern loading and storage technology. 

                      8. Sirius was the 1986 setting for the movie of Ruth Park's popular novel ‘Playing Beatie Bow’.

                      Sirius in 2014- the continuing conversation
                      The most recent example of the world talking of the Sirius building, and its rare and important position in Sydney, was in response to the NSW Government's 19 March 2014 announcement of the sale of the Sirius building, which was reported in local and international press. 

                      People have also commented recently about the Select Committee's hard won recommendation, I think directed at the Sirius building, that the NSW Government, when selling multi-unit properties in the Sydney area, include in the contract for sale, a requirement that at least 10 per cent of all dwellings on that site be allocated as social, public and affordable housing.

                      Each unique aspect I've cited has stamped its mark on the Sirius building and its location as a rare and important place talked about in the world's press and by visitors. For me, I'm attracted to the description of the Sirius building as simply "concrete poetry".

                      I imagine that SHFA and all of Sydney must regard the interest in the Sirius building and its site, and modern day Bunkers Hill including Gloucester Walk, as an inspired and visionary success.
                      In concluding, you have heard much today about the Sirius building and its location and I invite you to walk around the Rocks and take time to ponder all that's been said.

                      Consider the "concrete poetry" of the Sirius building, its location and its history. Its connection to Sydney's past and the value of its contribution to the present and what may be its future. 

                      If you would like to continue the conversation, the Minister for Heritage, the Hon. Rob Stokes address is 52 Martin Place, Sydney 2000 and I'm sure he'd be interested in hearing your view.
                      Thank you for your time.



                      
                      Photograph of Sirius Level 8 Balcony by Mary Sutton ~ March 12 2014 Site Visit with the Legislative Council Housing Select Committee


                      RESOURCED : http://tunswblog.blogspot.com.au/2014/12/sydneys-concrete-poetry.html