Thanks Rhino.Will wrote:In fact you have not offered solutions, just criticism as to why you don't like living here. Which begs the question, why are you still here?
Will - let's be crystal clear. You have suggested increasing height limits in the CBD; council amalgamations; and topless bathing. You agreed with other people about better advertisments, and 'improving' the City's Wikipedia entry. You want attractions in the CBD proper. You think we should be building world class museums and art galleries. You want to relocate the National Motor Museum to Adelaide.
I have suggested:
Re-building the sporting and entertainment facilities in the west parklands.
Building new high-speed roads.
Re-programming Adelaide's event calendar across the year, to alleviate the concentration in March. I nominated Womadelaide, and that suggestion just as easily might be Writers Week.
I've suggested holding these events annually. (And I'm sorry to tell you that both Perth and Brisbane have annual festivals. So does a place called Edinburgh, which has less than half our population).
I proposed securing 'art' or 'performance' exclusives to Adelaide.
If you read the 'Bringing Them Back Home' study which I referenced earlier, you will see that the main disadvantage of the State is perceived to be a lack of range and type of job opportunities. Professionals (say, lawyers and accountants) don't get to work with large company accounts because the large companies are headquartered on the eastern seaboard; consequently the work here isn't regarded as 'important' as the work on the eastern seaboard; and the salaries are lower.
It's a really complex issue. It's about culture. How many people turned out to look at the new airport terminal when it was opened ? Only in Adelaide.
People don't see the skyline. The average local isn't standing at Light's Vision and deciding that nothing much has changed. They see the things they use - new roads, new businesses, new shopping centres, new cafes, new nightclubs; new buses and new trains, new pieces of public art.
I'm sorry if you can't understand that it's not the building, it's what in it that counts. Especially when I say we need businesses to give people their first, second and third jobs (those 3000 young professionals you were so concerned about). And I mention buildings because you're very first idea is about height limits in the CBD; and because of your proposal about building world class museums and art galleries (and offered the Guggenheim as an example). Museums and art galleries are only world class because of what's in them, not the building. Taller buildings are only useful if they are full of thriving businesses. I'm sorry too, if you think I'm being negative. I'm here because I'm trying to be part of the solution.