Some fine points have already been made on this by Will above me, so I won't vent too much spleen here !raulduke wrote:heritage, heritage, heritage, everything is bloody heritage these days get real - we should be bulldozing these things, if the facade is particularly impressive, then retain it, otherwise, its got to go. we are only contributing to a sprawling cbd by living in the past and retaining these buildings, one might even argue that heritage policies are in a small part contributing to urban sprawl
no chew on that!
I've lived in Adelaide for most of my life and I have always loved it, just as most people here do. We all love it for different reasons and we are of different backgrounds and ages. I don't think anyone wants to see Adelaide become a boring clone, as Will stated frankly. I certainly do not.
I have travelled through much of North America and I did not once come across a city anything like Adelaide. Oh, I saw many impressive buildings and amazing concrete and glass panoramas, but Adelaide has a beauty that is quite delicate. Some of this beauty is due to the preservation of our unique history and some of it is in our proximity to unique environments, some of which are now threatened.
I post here, not as some sourpuss with an axe to grind, but as someone who has loved this city and spoken of it gleefully on my visits overseas. I have never felt inferior to bigger cities in Australia. I have never pined to be like them. And I have never pined to live anywhere else.
I stated in a different thread that:
To destroy our past is to devalue our future.
Part of our strength of character here is our heritage. It is our care for our environment.
Have you ever looked down upon Adelaide from Mt Lofty?
By night it looks like a scintillating circuitboard. By day it looks like a forest...the tops of tree lined streets and bounteous parks dotting the plains.
That's what I see when I look at Adelaide. It is a city with a difference. That's what I feel. As I age, I look around me and sense the winds of change and that change is scary as one gets older. All of your history and self belief can feel threatened by the new wave of change. Frankly, this site frightens me because it represents this change. I do realise that change can never be defeated. It is like standing in the path of a cultural juggernaut and crying meekly.
This holds true for everyone. It's a universal truth. Everyone will feel it sometime.
I say this:
Be proud of Adelaide and what it has been in the past and will continue to be. Do not devalue our past by knocking it down. Build on it and retain the character of this city. But most of all, never feel inferior to any other city. We cannot become truly confident by emulating what other cities do. If we are to take hold of a future for everyone, it should be on our own unique terms, not bowing to the pressures of international and greedy developers andcertainly not to the overblown egos of our local Government. Adelaide once was the first state to give women the right to vote. Let's innovate again, but not simply by building big and tall, but also by feeling proud of what this city is and what it used to be.
I've said my lengthy piece.
Thanks.