The divisive plan to bulldoze 80 units to ‘make way for millionaires’
By Megan Gorrey
A developer backed by billionaire James Packer has sparked criticism over a $100 million plan to leverage the state government’s affordable housing incentives to replace an older block of units in Potts Point with fewer upscale apartments, some of which would be offered at below-market prices.
Melbourne-based developer Time and Place last year raised the ire of residents when it submitted plans to knock down the Chimes building on Macleay Street and replace the 10-storey block’s 80 studio and one-bedroom apartments with a nine-storey tower containing about 31 luxury homes.
The Chimes building, designed by Hungarian architect Hugo Stossel, was completed in the heart of Potts Point in 1964.Credit: Louise Kennerley
But a new concept proposal shows the developer is seeking approval for a building envelope that would enable the construction of a block up to 13 storeys, at this stage comprising 34 residences.
At least 15 per cent of the apartments would be “affordable housing”, available at a lower price than market rent for a minimum of 15 years, under the government’s policy of offering developers height and floor space bonuses if they dedicate a portion of homes for low- to moderate-income earners.
Sydney MP Alex Greenwich said the possibility that 80 relatively affordable units could be replaced with fewer than 10 would be “the most perverse use of the affordable housing policy imaginable”.
“At a time when we need more affordable housing, not less, property developers are having a laugh at Sydney’s housing crisis, and the government’s flawed affordable housing policy is essentially evicting essential workers to make way for millionaires,” Greenwich said.
Planning Minister Paul Scully stressed that the proposal was at an early stage and the finer details, such as the dwelling mix, had not been finalised.
“If not for the government’s reforms, there’s every chance that this project would have had no affordable housing in it,” Scully said.
Earlier plans to overhaul the site turned the Chimes into a lightning rod for debate about the trend of bulldozing Sydney’s older, cheaper units for luxury developments with fewer, bigger apartments.
The new concept proposes ground-floor retail space to activate the streetscape and about 12 floors of residences in a building up to 50 metres. Time and Place suggested its future detailed designs would include more than 34 apartments and a “significantly” higher number of affordable homes.
The proposal seeks approval for a 50-metre-tall building with ground-floor retail spaces and about 12 floors of residences.Credit:
Nearly 150 negative submissions on the proposal – including from the City of Sydney Council – raised concerns about a net loss of affordable housing, demolition of an “iconic” building rather than its adaptive reuse, and the “excessive” bulk and scale of the proposed building envelope.
A response to those submissions, prepared for Time and Place by consultants Urbis in June, said the proposal would deliver diverse and affordable housing in an accessible location, “directly responding to the NSW government’s policy mandate to improve housing choice and affordability”.
It said the “bulk and scale of the proposal would not result in any unacceptable overshadowing, visual or landscaping impacts”, and that technical analysis had determined that renovating the existing building would “result in a much poorer and constrained development outcome”.
Time and Place said it was “passionate about redeveloping the site into a high-quality, well-considered development that will provide a significant contribution to affordable housing supply while also improving the streetscape experience and replacing a building that is long past its prime”.
Potts Point Preservation Group chairman Peter Sheridan said building much-needed housing was “an estimable idea”, but erasing the Chimes building for fewer apartments “makes no sense at all”.
He said developers viewed Potts Point and Elizabeth Bay as “another Point Piper. If they can get extra height, they create views, and they can sell those top apartments for $30 or $40 million”.
“The issue is the existing affordable housing is being pulled down with the idea this will create new housing.
“In fact, we’re losing housing stock, our residents, our diversity, and what’s being offered in return is a token nonsense of affordable housing, which isn’t affordable to people who currently live there, and is just creating enormous returns for developers,” Sheridan said.
An artist’s impression of an earlier proposal for the Chimes site, which sought to replace 80 apartments with 31.Credit: City of Sydney planning portal
The Macleay Street project brings together an elite group of property identities. Company records show Time and Place Chimes Pty Ltd has two directors: Tim Price, the founder of developer Time and Place, and Todd Nisbet, a former Crown Resorts executive when it was run by James Packer.
In June, News Corp reported that Time and Place had development funding from Packer, and it had previously reported that the tycoon had taken a 10 per cent stake in the Macleay Street project.
Potts Point Preservation Group founder Warren Fahey last year said: “We’re fighting something that’s backed by Packer money. It’s a considerable wallet to say the least.”
Scully said the government’s infill affordable housing scheme was “a clear example of how smart planning incentives can drive real results, delivering affordable housing alongside market housing”.
“The pathway has so far seen nearly 1600 affordable homes already approved and nearly 2400 more under assessment, many of which would not have existed without the incentive scheme.”
The luxury redevelopment phenomenon prompted the City of Sydney to adopt new regulations to restrict dwelling loss.
Approved in June, the rules limit any “net dwelling loss” to 15 per cent, or one apartment, whichever is greater. But they are not retrospective and, in any case, would not apply to the Chimes, given the newest proposal is a state significant development application.
Developer lobbyist Tom Forrest of the Urban Taskforce previously said the luxury revamp problem was “confected” and that preserving run-down buildings for affordable homes was a “failure of policy”.
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