Jaymz wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 5:26 pm
SBD wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 2:58 pm
Nort wrote: ↑Tue Jun 14, 2022 10:09 am
Exactly.
I'm all in favor of the argument that we shouldn't be essentially just building more sprawl.
However the practical reality is that with developments like this we
are building suburban sprawl.
Where new suburbs are being built it should be with quality road and public transport connections. If that's not financially viable,
then we shouldn't be building there at all.
For example as these families grow a little older, what happens when their kids start applying to universities in the city? We're gonna have a bunch more cars on the road, either driving into the city directly or further clogging up places like the Mawson Lakes park and ride.
There’s a shiny new set of traffic lights to Port Wakefield Road and Angle Vale Road. Riverlea has as good or better road link than any of the other new estates. It has no trains or buses, but neither do any of the other outer developments when they start. Uni doesn’t have to be park and ride, there is a campus at Mawson Lakes too.
If people want a life (work or leisure) that involves frequent travel into Adelaide city, they should consider one of the developments in or near the city. Bowden, Hindmarsh, Mile End, high rise apartments etc. all offer that. Some of those are new residential areas on former industrial sites. The industry is nearer the urban fringe or further out, so people can live near there and get different benefits.
I'm sorry but you're being very specific with you argument. First that people living in fringe suburbs be limited to Uni S.A at Mawson Lakes. Second that they should live in a town house or apartment at one of the inner areas which you mentioned.
There are still a lot of ppl who want to live on a block of land in a house, and like it or not we have to accommodate them. Don't get me wrong, I live in a city apartment, but there are still a large chunk of ppl who would rather spend the same amount of money (even less) to have a back yard and more floor space.
In part, I'm being specific because this is the Riverlea thread, not a general residential development thread or the SA Economy.
More generally, there are accommodation options for students, and when I was at uni there was a higher "living away from home" allowance for student benefits. I lived "at home" (on a farm, not a suburb), but was right on the edge of where it would have made sense to board closer to Adelaide Uni. Flinders Uni has a student boarding college too.
There are lots of inner-suburban houses too. Obviously there is a limited supply, but it's still possible to live in a freestanding house inside of the old tram network boundary, twenty minutes from the Adelaide parklands.
Someone remarked earlier that Adelaide should learn from Sydney and Melbourne. I'm going wider - South Australia should
learn from New South Wales and Victoria, not slavishly follow their mistakes. Instead of continuing to increase the footprint of Greater Adelaide, and expect people to commute further and further to one central business district, we should be decentralising. Let's develop more independent cities with their own industrial and employment bases, and more secondary centres in the capital city. I haven't managed to get lots of people (or any at all) on this forum to stand up and say it is a
positive outcome that people
want to commute well over an hour at each end of the day, either by car, train or bus.
Everyone wants their commute to be quicker. I'm advocating that the urban planning, Centrelink, whatever else is available should nudge people to make it easier and more attractive to make choices that result in shorter travel distances. The alternative (in my understanding) is making those kinds of nudges to assist people to make choices that result in longer distances. Eventually, if enough people make those choices, the transport corridors fill up, movement slows down, and more infrastructure is required to get back to the times they were promised. Examples include the need for new, wider freeways, faster (more expensive) trains, there's even been a brief mention of needing more tracks on the Gawler railway line!
I'm not saying that long commutes should be banned. I'm saying they should be discouraged, by making it easier to make choices that don't
require long commutes. A lot of people don't move house or job very often, so the choices they make last a long time. We should be helping them to make choices that result in the kind of state or city we want to get to (or remain). I am yet to be convinced that means the average commute should be over 40 km of suburbs. Perhaps that's because I grew up in a town where I saw the same people at school/work, church, shop and CFS. Maybe I missed out on an urban diversity of having a different discrete community for each aspect of life, and don't know how much better that would be where my parents never encountered my school friends' parents in any other aspect of life. I'm open to listening.