http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/stor ... 01,00.html
AN URBAN design expert hired by former premier Don Dunstan more than 30 years ago says he is "flabbergasted" Victoria Square has still not been redeveloped.
Comments posted on the AdelaideNow website show South Australians have thrown their support behind changes to the city's heart.
Boris Kazanski, now based in Berlin, says decades of talking about the need to rejuvenate the controversial square have "produced zero".
Mr Kazanski, an Adelaide-trained architect who has worked in Italy, Britain and Germany, says a $20,000 prize being offered by Adelaide City Council and the State Government for ideas on Victoria Square is "plain stupidity".
He said the competition - which should be advertised globally - should carry a $500,000 cash prize if South Australia is serious about "revitalising the city".
"It sounds like a lot of money, but it is worth it if we want to show how important the square is, and we want to have the right pedestrian ways, motorways, public transport, landscaping, art and public access," he said.
As revealed yesterday, the council and the Government have joined forces to encourage the public to come up with innovative ideas for future use of the square.
"You are just getting hot air blown around," Mr Kazanski said.
"I'm flabbergasted every year, not because nothing has been done but because every few years there's a new individual who says 'we're going to do this', someone is invited to do a design, and the public are invited to comment and then a new mayor steps into the position."
In Adelaide to visit his seriously ill 95-year-old mother, Mr Kazanski - recruited by Mr Dunstan in 1973 - believes the State Government should hire a permanent architect to lead the project.
Asked what he thought the possibilities were, he suggested an underground carpark potentially linked to the Central Market would provide much-needed revenue to help fund above-ground initiatives.
"We do need to close Wakefield/Grote St and once that is done, we can reconstruct the geometry of the square and look at appropriate functions and facilities," he said.
"It could be something that accommodates concerts, garden shows, film festivals, arts festivals - a myriad of activities guided by commercial and cultural activities."
Hmmm interesting...I like the idea about making it global but then again I support local ideas too...