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I've flown into London City Airport (Western approach) and can tell you it feels like you are within touching distance of the skyscrapers in Canary Wharf. If this is permissible within one of the bigger cities in the world; Maximum building heights in Adelaide's CBD should be revised upwards imminently.
London is a very relevant example. Flight procedures there were changed to allow The Shard to be built and it subsequently resulted in a huge amount of regeneration in the surrounding area. London City Airport and Heathrow actively supported the changes as obviously a growing city is good for their business. If the busiest airspace in the world can accommodate increased building height, I think Adelaide can manage it.
Fellas remember Kai Tak and Checkerboard Hill?
Cheers
Confucius say: Dumb man climb tree to get cherry, wise man spread limbs.
Perhaps we already have enough high-end hotels under construction at the moment.... Sofitel, Skycity, Crowne Plaza, Adelaide Oval. Westin perhaps not too far from starting. Adding another 300 five-star rooms might be a bit of a stretch for a state that attracts just under 500k international tourists each year.
This is a non-story. Design is just taking slightly longer than anticipated (which happens on most projects). Incredible how quick people are to come up with conspiracy theories based on nothing!
This is a non-story. Design is just taking slightly longer than anticipated (which happens on most projects). Incredible how quick people are to come up with conspiracy theories based on nothing!
Please fill us in with your inside information. We'd love to hear the facts.
This is a non-story. Design is just taking slightly longer than anticipated (which happens on most projects). Incredible how quick people are to come up with conspiracy theories based on nothing!
Please fill us in with your inside information. We'd love to hear the facts.
Exactly as I stated: design is taking slightly longer than anticipated. This is not unusual!
These types of developments are probably quite wise. It all appears a bit speculative at this moment given what is going on. But now is the time to build. Builders will be looking for working so should be good for developers. Whilst post COVID-19 i suspect people after being boxed up for a while will want to get out and go on holidays but safely as such i suspect that local innerstate and interstate travel is more likely. Also suspect Australia and New Zealand will be seen as safe options rather than say Thailand, Vietnam, China etc and even most of Europe. Can't see a mad rush for Spain, Italy or CruiseShips anytime soon.
Singapore-listed property powerhouse Chip Eng Seng has mothballed plans for a new Hyatt hotel in Adelaide and an ambitious apartment project in Melbourne as it waits out the coronavirus-caused slowdown.
Chip Eng Seng expects to post a first-half loss as it absorbs the impact of the pandemic. Its footprint extends across Singapore, Australia and the Maldives.
"Based on a real estate market report prepared by analytics firm CoreLogic in May 2020, the residential property market in Australia has been impacted by the weakened economic conditions and a plunge in consumer sentiment," Chip Eng Seng said.
"In view of this, the group has suspended its marketing efforts for its residential development project in Melbourne, FIFTEEN85, till 2021."
Even before the virus crisis overwhelmed the local residential market, the developer's local arm, CEL Australia, had struggled with buyer interest in the 700-unit apartment project at Fishermans Bend on the city fringe.
At the first stage launch two years ago, the developer signed up buyers for just three of the 222 apartments on offer, despite offering tens of thousands of dollars in incentives to get purchasers over the line.
Chip Eng Seng's hotel portfolio in Australia is also feeling the chill. Occupancy at its two Australian hotels, The Sebel Mandurah in Western Australia and Mercure & Ibis Styles Grosvenor Hotel in Adelaide, has fallen to single-digit levels since March.
"The group expects occupancy in these two hotels to remain low so long as the demand for travel is severely curtailed by Australia's travel restrictions and quarantine requirements," it said.
Plans to add another hotel its holdings in Australia, a 27-storey development for Hyatt in the Adelaide CBD, have also been deferred until next year.
The 295-room Hyatt Regency on Pirie Street had been slated to open in 2023.
Chip Eng Seng reported earlier this week that it had launched legal proceedings for the return of a deposit on a childcare centre in Melbourne's west after the deal turned sour.
Three years ago the Singaporean developer abandoned one of the city's most controversial apartment developments, Tower Melbourne, putting it back on the market and refunding hundreds of buyer deposits after a protracted legal battle with a neighbouring landlord.