CAN: [Wayville] The Wayville | $300m | 6lvls | Mixed Use
Posted: Wed Nov 12, 2008 3:38 pm
From The Messenger:
Goody Rd to get a multi-million dollar highrise
by Tim Williams
A MULTI-million dollar development with a centrepiece hotel, apartments and possibly retirement living, stretching several storeys high, is being earmarked opposite the Adelaide Showgrounds, on Goodwood Rd.
The proposed development would represent a dramatic change for this part of Wayville, an area Unley Mayor Richard Thorne said was “ripe for development”.
The Eastern Courier understands the main player behind the proposed development is the Sgherza Group but owner Sam Sgherza would not comment.
At least four properties between Young and Le Hunte streets currently housing Transforma, the Commander Centre, the House of Prints, and the SA office of the National Institute of Youth Performing Arts have all been sold this year (see fact file).
One of the purchasers is a company named Wayville Plaza, registered to the Norwood address of the Sgherza Group. Wayville Plaza bought the Transforma site for $3.25 million, in June, the same month two more companies, Wayville Plaza Apartments and Wayville Plaza Retirement, were registered.
The House of Prints gallery was bought, in June, by the company Wayville Lifestyle, registered to the same address as the gallery, for an undisclosed sum. The gallery would not comment on the sale or the development.
Unley’s Development Plan currently limits heights on the eastern side of Goodwood Rd to two storeys. Apartment blocks are non-complying. The council wants to update its Development Plan to allow apartments above commercial premises on major roads but this would be years away from receiving State Government approval.
Planning Institute SA state manager Kirsty Kelly said it would be “relatively difficult” for the council to approve a non-complying development of any more than about five storeys, because of likely appeals by residents.
In May, the State Government gave major project status to the former Le Cornu site, North Adelaide, and in September approved a six-storey retail and apartment complex, twice the City Council’s three-storey limit.
Ms Kelly said the Goodwood Rd development was an unlikely candidate for major project status, which should go only to developments of significant economic or environmental importance to the state: “But the Le Cornu one shouldn’t have got it either,” she said.
A Department of Planning and Local Government (formerly Planning SA) media officer said the department was aware of interest in the site but had not been approached by developers.
Showgrounds CEO John Rothwell said he had been approached by unnamed developers about options for the site, which is directly opposite the Showgrounds’ Ridley Gates.
Mr Rothwell said a hotel had been discussed and he was enthusiastic about accommodation for Royal Adelaide Show-goers and visitors to conventions and exhibitions at the Showgrounds.
“I think a hotel would complement the area,” Mr Rothwell said. “The suburb has no accommodation, so at Show time it would be booked out in five minutes. People from interstate would find it very convenient.”
He said parking and traffic management for any development would need to be addresssed.
Mr Thorne said Unley Council would “look as favourably as we can about development there”. “Some better quality development there would be a plus for the city (of Unley) and the Showgrounds ... a lot of the stuff over there is set well back from the street and looks a bit rundown,” he said.
Mr Thorne said the scale of the Showgrounds’ new Goyder Pavilion on Goodwood Rd “has increased possibilities for what can be done on the site opposite”.
“With Centennial Hall gone and the new pavilion there, the height of the general locality has increased now,” he said.
Unley’s development manager Paul Weymouth said he was “aware of the possibility of amalgamations of those (Goodwood Rd) sites but “no discussions of any substance” had taken place with developers.
Goodwood Park Hotel co-owner Peter Rogers said news about a development bringing more visitors or residents to the area “made my day”.
“I think it would be terrific for the general area and all businesses concerned.”