Inquiries to SMA are directed to Phil Martin, Managing Director of public relations firm Michells Warren or his senior consultant Kirsty McFarlane. They will tell you very little. Much of the information is 'commercial-in-confidence'. Remember that ultimately you are dealing with sports administrators used to a culture of secrecy about almost everything. They should remember that obsessive secrecy has a downside - in the absence of information, rumours grow.
Here's a typical example of the unnecessary secrecy pervading this publicly funded project. This is from the minutes of the Adelaide Park Lands Authority from 12th May this year, at which time the Park Lands Authority was as clueless as anyone else about the details of the project (APLA for all the fine words that established it is still well out of the loop - its advice is not needed and it has been shown up for the sham that it is.) ACC CEO Peter Smith spoke to APLA members on 12th May this year:
"To advise that Council resolved that the negotiations be held in confidence and that negotiations were currently being undertaken which he was not in a position to brief the Board with at this stage prior to the Council."
So much for the powerful APLA. The Adelaide Park Lands remain, at the government's will, a regulation-free store of no-cost land for development. No wonder that despite 26 applications in the last 30 years to heritage list the Park Lands, the government has never 'had the resources' to process a single application. The Park Lands remain unlisted despite regular tut-tutting from the State Heritage Council, another impotent body set up by the government to create the impression of responsible management.
I spoke to some friends in the landscape architecture area, and found there are several firms around town putting together schemes for SMA. Information was hard to come by there too, but reading between the lines - and it's only my opinion - a) each firm is on a paid consultancy rather than pitching unpaid (why not, there's endless cash) and b) terracing of Montefiore Hill below Montefiore Hill Rd and Pennington Tce is almost certainly part of it.
Even for non-Park Lands fanatics, this is serious stuff. If something like that goes ahead it will be against substantial opposition, although the passage of the Adelaide Oval Bill in its present form will make terracing and multi-storey carparks of any design quite legal. The land will not be Park Lands, it won't be zoned and its development will be entirely at SMA's discretion subject only to a general ministerial overview. Passage of the Bill into law will also allow any method in relation to procuring the project - paid, limited or closed tendering, cost plus construction (likely in view of Ian MacLachlan of SACA's claim that the cost won't be known until the work is finished. Cost plus contracts look attractive to some clients, but they heavily favour the contractor who has no incentive to look for value in subcontractors or suppliers.
Some people who voted yes out of concern for the future of SA cricket under SACA's existing debt must be wondering what sort of a beast they've created. I still can't understand why a cash-strapped government insisted on paying out SACA's debt despite MacLachlan's claims that the club was 'comfortable' with the debt. Given that the further redevelopment is fully funded, why not carry the debt forward if the club is comfortable with it? After all, they can't get into more debt. Paying off the debt indicates that the government was well in favour of the project but it certainly won't shift blame away from the government if the whole thing gets out of control.
I want cricket, footy and all sports in SA to be the best they can, but I'm quite worried, on initial indications, that this project will hinder rather than help the case of major sport in SA, in the shorter term at least and perhaps for longer if the redevelopment proves uneconomic with all the effects of that.
With the government guaranteeing SMA - ie guaranteeing its debts - the stage is set for some free-wheelin' spending. The terms of the Bill and some behaviour to date suggest that there's little in law or in the management structure, in my opinion, that protects the interests of the source of funds - the public - in the (I suggest likely) event that there are big troubles ahead.
Area where terraced carparks may be built:
http://360.io/gLwJbC