[PRO] Re: 292-300 Rundle Street | 67m | 21 Levels | Mixed Use
Posted: Sat Oct 22, 2022 10:13 am
What a joke. If you people had your way the whole CBD would be a low rise precinct. If you want low rises, move to the suburbs.
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Loving the emoji choicesAlgernon wrote: ↑Fri Oct 21, 2022 5:46 pmLazy choice of materials: "glass goes with everything". Nope. The East End is brick. Absolutely crap and lazy design.
4 levels of car parking. Because car parks are going extinct apparently.
office space in the East End. Why.
"buh buh a contextual relationship with prminent buildings" : google translate bullshit->english "there's a couple of tall buildings a few hundred metres away, let us get away with one in a heritage zone"
Zero setback to Rundle Street. Ok sorry. maybe 3m.
I've seen some crap proposed in Adelaide in my life but oh my...
Sydney has rules that prevent shadowing over Hyde Park, which is why a lot of buildings there have sloped roofs.gnrc_louis wrote: ↑Sat Oct 22, 2022 11:48 amAre there equivalent historical parts of the Sydney and Melbourne CBD where height limits are severely restricted? Only place I can think of off the top of my head is maybe The Rocks in Sydney?
One thing about high rise is that the higher your live the less the street noise bothers you. I live in South Korea where there's a lot of street noise and night activity, but our apartment is on the 9th floor so when we do hear it it's not much of a problem because it sounds distant, even on the 9th. My wife's mother lives in a 16th floor apartment and street noise really isn't much of an issue at all for her.Mpol02 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 06, 2022 4:16 pmAdelaide residents aren’t conditioned I don’t believe, to understand that when you move into the city to live, it’s going to simply be noisy and you need to live with that. Venues, events, bars, restaurants all of it. If this development hinders any of that because they don’t like it, then I’d rather it not happen.
SBD wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 4:18 pmI accept the desire to provide residential car parking, but 56 spaces for 27 apartments seems excessive. Even for family apartments, I don't see why it shouldn't just have one space each in the building and a small number of visitor parks, and supported (secured) bike parking near street level.
I wonder what height clearance will be allowed to provide for the 4WD (those brands all have one) and the boat it tows.Jaymz wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 6:15 pmSBD wrote: ↑Mon Oct 24, 2022 4:18 pmI accept the desire to provide residential car parking, but 56 spaces for 27 apartments seems excessive. Even for family apartments, I don't see why it shouldn't just have one space each in the building and a small number of visitor parks, and supported (secured) bike parking near street level.
I agree, that does seem excessive and goes against much of the concept of CBD living.
However, I was under the assumption that these are going to be marketed as luxury/high-end apartments. If they are to entice ppl to downsize from their inner-city mansions, then they'll probably want somewhere to park his and hers Beemer/Audi/Merc/Porsche.
Good luck getting people to move into new CBD developments then. This is Adelaide, not London or Manhattan.ChillyPhilly wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 2:30 pmIdeally, carparking can be banned for residential CBD developments.
Should be the other way around. Remove all parking for non residents. Perhaps allow the existing multi level parks to operate and then never approve another one.ChillyPhilly wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 2:30 pmIdeally, carparking can be banned for residential CBD developments.
How do "true city dwellers" deal with what I (a suburbanite) would call the "weekly shopping"? Not many of the major residential towers have what suburban people would recognise as a "supermarket" within a very short walk (the distance to the back of the shopping centre carpark). Going to the shop is still different to just using pick and deliver services. If the intent is to significantly increase the city population, then many of the additional people are likely to come from suburban and regional areas where families have at least two cars. Forcing them to only have one on site, but allowing it to have all-weather access to the home is likely to be helpful for a transition. I expect that in Adelaide, it's still more practical to have your own car than to rent one for trips (including to a daytrip to wineries or national parks on the weekend) which aren't practical on public transport. Once people don't touch their car for a month, they've perhaps fully adapted.Hex wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 9:37 pmShould be the other way around. Remove all parking for non residents. Perhaps allow the existing multi level parks to operate and then never approve another one.ChillyPhilly wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 2:30 pmIdeally, carparking can be banned for residential CBD developments.
It's just that. Much more use of home delivery for a "big" shop, and then smaller ad hoc pickups from IGA or the Mall supermarkets as needed. Once you're in a routine, it's pretty easy.SBD wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 10:53 pmHow do "true city dwellers" deal with what I (a suburbanite) would call the "weekly shopping"? Not many of the major residential towers have what suburban people would recognise as a "supermarket" within a very short walk (the distance to the back of the shopping centre carpark). Going to the shop is still different to just using pick and deliver services.