The New South Australia

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crawf
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The New South Australia

#1 Post by crawf » Tue Sep 18, 2007 2:11 am

SA embraces a new era of optimism
Article from: The Advertiser

September 15, 2007 12:00am

LOOK east. South Australia is facing a new dawn.
SA is a state - a geographically defined economic region - on the move.



It is no longer being dragged along by a booming federal economy or prosperity on the eastern seaboard.

SA is defying interstate trends and defining its own economic growth, its own future.

For the first time since the Dunstan era of the early 1970s, SA – and the people of SA – are again proud, confident and independent.

They are no longer introspective, hesitant and apologetic. They no longer feel they are singing in the chorus line behind performers from Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane.

That period of inferiority and navel-gazing, created largely by the $3.2 billion State Bank collapse in the early 1990s, has been despatched to history.

Adelaide is at the hub of a dynamic regional economy, with much of the new-found prosperity and confidence being generated from the rural centres.

Politically, for the first time since the mid-1990s, SA has an effective Government challenged by a viable Opposition led by Martin Hamilton-Smith. :lol:

The Government has wrested back SA's triple A economic rating but it has been reactive rather than pro-active.

At last, after years of neglect, serious money is being earmarked for infrastructure.

The upgrading of South Rd, the Port River bridges, the northern expressway, the reconstruction of Henley Beach Rd, upgrades of port facilities and even the extension of the tram down King William St improve community facilities.

Business is being boosted by the explosion of investment in the mining and defence industries and niche industries like aquaculture and the apparently endless demand for SA wine.

Retail business is sound, cars continue to sell and the housing sector – new and resale – is commanding price growth which has even surprised the sluggish Sydney market.

The arts are growing, with the 2008 Festival of Arts, the Fringe, Womadelaide, SALA and new events like OzAsia and the Guitar Festival. Meanwhile, the number of shows at the Festival Centre have doubled in the past year.

The environment is keeping pace with changing community demands. Wind and solar power are making more than token energy contributions but despite promises of desalination plants and increased hill storage capacity, reliable water supplies cannot yet be guaranteed.

All South Australians should embrace this changing community mood, this new era of optimism and prosperity.

People must not retreat into introspection and negativism. Change must be accepted and celebrated. As a community, we must move decisively to capture and hold the benefits of the expanding global economy.

The comfort of isolation and insularity no longer exist in a world of high technology and instant global communications.

We must continue to march forward in an unfamiliar and, at times, uncomfortable world of communications and technology, or become bogged in the frozen and static past.

Responsibility for all editorial comment is taken by The Editor, Melvin Mansell, 31 Waymouth St, Adelaide, SA 5000

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Re: The New South Australia

#2 Post by Will » Tue Sep 18, 2007 9:02 am

I am convinced SA has entered a new era. However, it would be great if there were more article like this one in the paper, and even ads onTV, to remind everyone and convince them that SA has risen from the ruins.

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Re: The New South Australia

#3 Post by jk1237 » Tue Sep 18, 2007 9:39 am

I reckon our city and state will go 'crackers' from now. You can feel a different vibe just walking around town. The for lease signs on buildings have a giant 'leased' sticker over them now. Our grand old 1930s + King William St skyscrapers have all (but 2 to go)been turned into boutique hotels or student accomm, there are cranes everywhere. New bars popping up. Migration to the state has picked up, and I dont think we have even started to reap in money from the mining boom. We have awoken from our 1990's coma. :D :D :D :D

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Re: The New South Australia

#4 Post by stelaras » Wed Sep 19, 2007 9:03 am

now lets hope our mental faculties remain awake long enough and our political leaders make educated and logical decisions so that we can capitalise on these and put the state in an even better position many years from now!

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Re: The New South Australia

#5 Post by ynotsfables » Wed Sep 19, 2007 10:59 am

A few years ago everyone would laugh at me when i predicted great economic boom and population increase in this state. Everyone would quote zero population growth statistcs written up in the Advertiser, empty office buildings in the city etc.

What a lot of people did'nt realise was the long term silent achieving that was happening in the background. Mining, defence, wine, car, information tech industries they've been with us for quite some time. Arts, festivals, motor racing and not to mention education, are all world class. We have three universities in this state. We are quite an educated state in world standards. Then there is the Adelaide to Darwin rail link you just have to see Darwins growth to see how thats help benefit that city let alone what it would do for Adelaide by opening up a northern corridoor to neighbouring countries. Adelaide airport etc. Need i say more. We have almost everything here that most capitals have plus more.

This has been infrastructure and industry that was built with foresight. I always new that this was a time bomb ready to explode. We have to bare one simple thing in mind, in order to believe all of this will become a reality.
That is that we are the capital city of the great southern state of the great southern land in the far reaches of the southern hemisphere on the otherside of the world. What a place to be!

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Re: The New South Australia

#6 Post by Howie » Wed Sep 19, 2007 11:14 am

Will wrote:I am convinced SA has entered a new era. However, it would be great if there were more article like this one in the paper, and even ads onTV, to remind everyone and convince them that SA has risen from the ruins.
exactly... new ad's, new car number plates, why not shout it and make sure the message is heard.

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Re: The New South Australia

#7 Post by crawf » Wed Sep 19, 2007 11:51 am

The new Adelaide visitor guide looks great, glad to see finally they have information on the popular suburbs such as Norwood & Unley - the only downturn is the amount of adds in there. The new slogan for SA, is just the best in my opinion, represents SA very well and is clever.

As for number plates, I really wish the State Government would hurry up and release the slogan "SA: A Brilliant Blend".

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Re: The New South Australia

#8 Post by Cruise » Wed Sep 19, 2007 2:44 pm

crawf wrote: As for number plates, I really wish the State Government would hurry up and release the slogan "SA: A Brilliant Blend".
well i cant see new plates being that far off, new car plates now start with X so theres not many letters left in the alpahabet.
Im Well aware we started in R but after Z plates are we going to go to A plates?

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Re: The New South Australia

#9 Post by Paulns » Wed Sep 19, 2007 3:03 pm

Totally agree on the number plates... "The festival state'', a little out dated now, time for a change!!!
Anyway what ever happened to, "SA, Going all the way"????!!! lol :D
"SA GOING ALL THE WAY".

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Re: The New South Australia

#10 Post by Howie » Wed Sep 19, 2007 3:15 pm

How about.. just

[Sensational Adelaide] ;)

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Re: The New South Australia

#11 Post by Shuz » Wed Sep 19, 2007 3:39 pm

NSW have A + B plates, so I dont know what we'll have. I think we'll revert back to the Rs as most would be unregistered by now and unused, so they would reissue them?

Sensational Adelaide promotes SA as a city/state which for rural communities would be unfair. I'd rather the Brilliant Blend plates... I made a mock-up around here somewhere. *edit* A-ha! found it...
Image

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Re: The New South Australia

#12 Post by Ben » Wed Sep 19, 2007 4:28 pm

From the Messenger:
Mining boom means city boom

Aaron Coultate

18Sep07

THE mining exploration boom in South Australia's outback is the catalyst behind a record year of development in the Adelaide CBD, industry experts say. Figures provided to the City Messenger show 742 development applications with a total value of $575 million were lodged with the City Council between January 1 and August 31.

The biggest applications were for office towers, apartment blocks and sporting ground upgrades.

Last year's record total of $525 million worth of development applications has already been eclipsed.

Knight Frank managing director Don Crouch was not surprised by the figures.

``The exploration boom is what's driving it ... there's a new found confidence in Adelaide,'' he said.

``It's all at the stage of exploration and feasibility studies, but exploration booms naturally lead to resource booms.''

He said BHP Billiton's proposed $7 billion-plus expansion of the Olympic Dam copper and uranium mine at Roxby provided confidence.

``It's not new money (in the city). It's existing Adelaide developers with new found confidence,'' he said.

Mr Crouch doubted the city's skyline would rise higher than the 137m Westpac tower.

``It's not a big issue. As long as developments are relative to the appearance of our city,'' he said.

``Taller developments might be appropriate in Sydney, but we're not in Sydney.''


With four months of the year to go, the council is close to doubling the entire value of development applications in 2005 ($343 million) and 2004 ($391 million).

Still in the pipeline are the $75 million upgrade of Adelaide Oval, the $55 million revamp of Victoria Park and a $250 million apartment/shopping complex at North Adelaide's LeCornu site.

Property Council executive director Nathan Paine echoed Mr Crouch's sentiments, saying there was a renewed confidence in the local economy.
``Mining, resources, defence contracts, it's all contributing,'' he said.

``You have to remember that were coming off historic lows.''

City CEO Stuart Moseley said the office market in particular had been ``far more buoyant for far longer'' than expected.
Mr Moseley said the ``leading indicators'' showed this boom would continue.

``In practice it can't (continue) of course so it will come to an end at some stage.''
I find his comments unfortunate and inacurate Sydney does not have a "tall" skyline but a dense one. Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth and the Gold Coast all have taller buildings then Sydney's tallest. And our day of a new tallest will come and I think it will happen in the next 5 years (a proposal that is).

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Re: The New South Australia

#13 Post by Paulns » Wed Sep 19, 2007 5:16 pm

Mate we can only hope people like that mentioned in the article dont keep influencing what happens in adelaide..
We need a new fresh and exciting approach to building and if that means more awesome looking taller buildings like the one approved, well I for one are all for that and look forward to a brand new better Adelaide skyline!!! :D

By the way I dont mind that Brilliant blend number plate!!
"SA GOING ALL THE WAY".

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Re: The New South Australia

#14 Post by Diamond » Wed Sep 19, 2007 9:49 pm

As someone said in another thread, "SA - other states have inferior uranium" sounds pretty damn good to me! :lol:
Vladimir Putin - TIME Magazine's Man Of The Year 2007

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Re: The New South Australia

#15 Post by bmw boy » Thu Sep 20, 2007 12:18 am

Has it actually been said they will be the new plates... or this all just speculation?

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