My former brother-in-law was Con Makris' son. Every proposal that Makris Group put forward for this site was either flat-out rejected by the ACC (pre-SCAP days) or undermined via other means post-SCAP, not because of a vocal residential minority but by none other than Theo Maras who had long wanted his hands on this site, be it through his influence with the council or finding other means to cause delays on the project, he was the faceless man behind the ACC's demands for a multi-level carpark and a few ground level shops. Now that said, Makris Group did stall on the last proposed plans for this site, for two reasons: 1. they had focused their resources on building up their suburban shopping centre portfolio, and then 2. they were winding back their Adelaide footprint in anticipation for relocating the business to Gold Coast.urban wrote: ↑Sat Feb 01, 2025 1:58 pmabc is correct on this one. There were many proposals which received approvals over the years but the developers either sat on it, demolished previously occupied buildings then sat on it or just sold it to realise the capital gain that comes from having a site with a higher height limit than prior to the development application.
Le Cornu only occupied about a third of this site.
Another person that I was close with before they sadly passed away was a gentleman that held a very senior position at Wallis Cinemas for 45-years. His comments were that Bob Wallis relinquished this site to Makris for a peanuts on the condition that Makris get it built and allow space for cinema complex somewhere within this site. At the time, Bob Wallis wanted to close the Piccadilly and convert it back into a single auditorium for film premieres and live events. Wallis Theatres (as they were known at the time) had also been dealing with the same opposition from Theo Maras when they owned the site.
From my recollection, Wallis Cinemas owned the LeCornu portion of the site, Makris bought the remainder of this block and bulldozed the lot with plans to develop the entire block. To date, pictured is my favourite Makris proposal for this site; it's classy and full of character.