Whyalla | Developments & News
#The Ocean Eyre : Whyalla (900 homes)
900 new homes for Whyalla
RHIANNON HOYLE, REAL ESTATE EDITOR
April 07, 2007 12:15am
Article from: The Advertiser
MORE than 900 houses will be built in the largest development to be announced in Whyalla for three decades.
The Ocean Eyre land release, bounded on two sides by Jenkins and Risby avenues, will be launched on April 13 and released over four stages.
The resources boom, coupled with a demand for new housing, has resulted in an upsurge of residential development in Whyalla.
Ocean Eyre developer Richard Wood said the project would be a significant boost to the whole Whyalla community.
"We're providing affordable land for people to build new homes on, whether to live in or to use as an investment," he said. "It's a statement of confidence in the future prosperity of the city."
Property in the regional city has been performing very strongly in recent times, with the median house price having climbed more than 33 per cent – to $220,000 – over the past year alone.
Mr Wood said the expansion of OneSteel, the proposed desalination plant and the booming mining industry had instilled a significant level of confidence in the town.
"It will be a model development using urban design principles that are energy and water efficient," he said.
The development is being sold through the John Martin and Peter Calliss First National Real Estate offices.
Stage 1A and 1B will be released next Friday priced from $70,000.
Stage one will involve the sale of 29 allotments.
RHIANNON HOYLE, REAL ESTATE EDITOR
April 07, 2007 12:15am
Article from: The Advertiser
MORE than 900 houses will be built in the largest development to be announced in Whyalla for three decades.
The Ocean Eyre land release, bounded on two sides by Jenkins and Risby avenues, will be launched on April 13 and released over four stages.
The resources boom, coupled with a demand for new housing, has resulted in an upsurge of residential development in Whyalla.
Ocean Eyre developer Richard Wood said the project would be a significant boost to the whole Whyalla community.
"We're providing affordable land for people to build new homes on, whether to live in or to use as an investment," he said. "It's a statement of confidence in the future prosperity of the city."
Property in the regional city has been performing very strongly in recent times, with the median house price having climbed more than 33 per cent – to $220,000 – over the past year alone.
Mr Wood said the expansion of OneSteel, the proposed desalination plant and the booming mining industry had instilled a significant level of confidence in the town.
"It will be a model development using urban design principles that are energy and water efficient," he said.
The development is being sold through the John Martin and Peter Calliss First National Real Estate offices.
Stage 1A and 1B will be released next Friday priced from $70,000.
Stage one will involve the sale of 29 allotments.
It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
The red dust in Whyalla is a result of the industry. Moving the industry to Port Lincoln would result in Port Lincoln also being covered in red dust.bdm wrote:It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
It is also not easy for people on low incomes to buy homes in more expensive places such as Port Lincoln....
What a pathetic, ill informed post.bdm wrote:It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
Whyalla happens to be a bustling, friendly town, on the way up. The Steelworks are spending millions of dollars to greatly improve the problem with dust.
As for the stupidest location in the world ?.......how the hell do you work that out.
It happens to be only 3 hours drive from Adelaide, which i consider a shithole.
There are Iron Ore mines only 50 kays away, which provide very high wages for many Whyalla residents. And supplys the Steelworks with raw feed, which also provides many jobs.
Its located on the shores of Spencer Gulf, which provide some of the best fishing in Australia. It has some excellent camping grounds, beaches and so on, only a stones throw away.
bdm, i'll live in Whyalla anyday, over many locations. I'll have my good wages, safety for my kids and my fantastic leisure life. If you live in Adelaide, you can have your rat race, low wages and polluted suburbs.
One ill-informed response to an ill-informed post.Jayse wrote:What a pathetic, ill informed post.bdm wrote:It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
Whyalla happens to be a bustling, friendly town, on the way up. The Steelworks are spending millions of dollars to greatly improve the problem with dust.
As for the stupidest location in the world ?.......how the hell do you work that out.
It happens to be only 3 hours drive from Adelaide, which i consider a shithole.
There are Iron Ore mines only 50 kays away, which provide very high wages for many Whyalla residents. And supplys the Steelworks with raw feed, which also provides many jobs.
Its located on the shores of Spencer Gulf, which provide some of the best fishing in Australia. It has some excellent camping grounds, beaches and so on, only a stones throw away.
bdm, i'll live in Whyalla anyday, over many locations. I'll have my good wages, safety for my kids and my fantastic leisure life. If you live in Adelaide, you can have your rat race, low wages and polluted suburbs.
The steelworks had to be put in SOMEWHERE near a large population to sustain it.bdm wrote:It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
well said up to the last paragraph which was just slandours. I myself be from Port Pirie have had to face similar arguments as Whyalla residents.Jayse wrote:What a pathetic, ill informed post.bdm wrote:It's well planned, very well planned; but so is Elizabeth.
It is the stupidest location in the world and a lot of the industry that was put there could have been put elsewhere.
It should be abandoned so people can buy GOOD houses in a GOOD environment. Not in a red, dusty shithole. Why not put the industry and housing into Port Lincoln? That place is beautiful.
Whyalla happens to be a bustling, friendly town, on the way up. The Steelworks are spending millions of dollars to greatly improve the problem with dust.
As for the stupidest location in the world ?.......how the hell do you work that out.
It happens to be only 3 hours drive from Adelaide, which i consider a shithole.
There are Iron Ore mines only 50 kays away, which provide very high wages for many Whyalla residents. And supplys the Steelworks with raw feed, which also provides many jobs.
Its located on the shores of Spencer Gulf, which provide some of the best fishing in Australia. It has some excellent camping grounds, beaches and so on, only a stones throw away.
bdm, i'll live in Whyalla anyday, over many locations. I'll have my good wages, safety for my kids and my fantastic leisure life. If you live in Adelaide, you can have your rat race, low wages and polluted suburbs.
The only person that needs to back up their statement is you. To say that Whyalla is much better than Adelaide is ridiculous, in fact it's almost funny. How can you compare a city of parks, gardens, statuary and wide boulevards with a city that has lost 14 000 residents, a place where the colour brown predominates and is covered in red dust...Jayse wrote:Back that statement up Will, as i didWill wrote:
One ill-informed response to an ill-informed post.
Here?Jayse wrote:bdm, i'll live in Whyalla anyday, over many locations. I'll have my good wages, safety for my kids and my fantastic leisure life. If you live in Adelaide, you can have your rat race, low wages and polluted suburbs.
Or Here?
More photos of Whyalla - taken in 2003
More photos
http://www.hotkey.net.au/~krool/photos/sa/whyalla.html
After seeing those photos, Whyalla has a long way for it to become a premier city again. Everything looks so outdated and that reddish colour on everything would drive me insane, so glad I live in the beautiful lush green Adelaide Hills then that barren dustbowl.
Ok, to be fair, next time im in Adelaide, i'll take photos of the streets after streets, and suburb after suburb of graffitied walls, and fences and buildings. Ecpecially around the Henley and Grange area, among many many other run down, sorry dirty suburbs. That make Whyalla look even lusher than your first postcard picture of the Torrens.
Graffiti of which is very hard to find in Whyalla. Not to mention the thousands of sorry homeless people in Adelaide, of which are also very hard if not impossible to find in Whyalla.
Graffiti of which is very hard to find in Whyalla. Not to mention the thousands of sorry homeless people in Adelaide, of which are also very hard if not impossible to find in Whyalla.
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