#567
Post
by stumpjumper » Fri Jul 23, 2010 9:14 pm
A rational consideration of our options, even at this stage with the western side of AO nearing completion, is still possible. But if we can somehow remove politics, sports partisanry and other short term issues from the mix, there are still a few areas of wide general interest that need exploring, imho.
If the main reason that the full redevelopment of AO should go ahead is that the Trans Adelaide ('the railway') site is to be used for the new RAH, then consider these likely risks/results (whatever you like to call them):
- The likely effect of the hospital move on the East End of Adelaide. RAH is a huge employer, a source of thousands of the patrons who underpin the success of the East End's small business from early to late. Note that the average hospital employee has more cash to spend than the average University of Adelaide student. In addition to the pubs, cafes, restaurants and boutiques, the RAH supports a large short term accommodation industry (constructed but not operated with vast public subsidy - remember the State Bank property dissolution?).
- Without the RAH as an adjacent teaching hospital, and without a merging of Adelaide Uni and UNISA, the future of Adelaide Uni's medical school, its associated medical science operations and the various clinical outfits such as the IMVS, Hanson Centre for cancer research and others becomes somewhat problematic. With the RAH at the railway site, how long will it be before UNISA begins to offer medical science courses? The question is not so much of competition, but efficiency and resource allocation and duplication.
On the other hand, a stadium on the rail site will not only invigorate the West End as it caters for new 'sports' business - patrons, participants etc - without risking existing businesses and investment in the East End.
Imagine - (free your mind for a moment from the morass of football/cricket/state and federal politics across the river) - for a moment what could be built over the next few years. Imagine a new general sports stadium (with cricket still centred at our unique Adelaide Oval). Integral with Adelaide Stadium, even sharing some of its structure, facilities and systems such as heating, ventilation and air conditioning, is a brand new Olympic pool to replace the long in the tooth swimming centre in the parklands. Add to this combined facility a new home, including accommodation, for the Australian Institute of Sport, using UNISA's lecture theatres and as well as the stadium perhaps, the much cheaper to use and extensive sports grounds in the west parklands and around Adelaide High School.
Transport isn't an issue here, with rail, tram, bus, car and pedestrian access on the doorstep, with ample room for parking and very little new infrastructure required beyond a 'Stadium' rail station.
This proposal, or something like it, considers the project as part of the city's entire infrastructure and usage matrix. Too many developments in Adelaide are 'selfish' - they are so driven by a site and its developer that they ignore the overall fit to the city. As a result, if the fit is poor, which it often is in terms of access or effect on existing usages, there are expensive, retrofitted afterthoughts reqwuired. In Adelaide Oval's case: access, parking and transport.
Now look south (and up!). Amazing! The venerable Newmarket Hotel has been gutted, with its classical three storey stone exterior used as a plinth for a 20 storey hotel. Once you're used to that idea, which is supported by the current planning regime, imagine not just a hotel but a casino, with a grand foyer featuring the Newmarket Hotel's incredible three storey winding staircase. Adelaide Casino wants to move anyway, and half a dozen lower floors of the new hotel might suit it perfectly, perhaps with a top floor for the high roller rooms. Finding a use for the old casino shouldn't be a problem. Think of a Performing Arts University as an annexe to the Festival Theatre complex. Such a reuse of the old casino should be no risk to the existing adjacent businesses on North Terrace, and in any case the transport connections to the new Adelaide Stadium precinct are immaculate thanks to transport wunderkind Conlon's tram.
And looking up from the new stadium - the piece de resistance, a skybridge from the plinth promenade level of the Newmarket Hotel/casino to the stadium itself.
There's an honourable way out for everyone at Adelaide Oval. Just stop. Everyone has a good reason to, and a properly, responsibly master-planned alternative will provide better facilities and be more economical, wasting less existing investment. There would be less risk ton existing business, and the proposal would not waste the magnificent gateway site sloping from the university to the river on what is fundamentally a utility, and for all the good things about a hospital, not a place anyone really wants to visit.
Now - dream on - a new national/metropolitan rail station at the old Adelaide Gaol. Next to it, a bus station at the Police Barracks which the police are keen to leave, with the Franklin Street site easily redeveloped...
But the present focus is our sports facilities. But while the rest can wait, anything we do should be part of an effective master plan, not just the vision of one stakeholder, conditioned (because it's South Australia) by local politics.