Alexandria Summer Fair is going ahead

The weather bureau having pronounced that the weather for tomorrow will be better than today, Alexandria Summer Fair is going ahead.

We might move a few activities to the school, and we might have to make
some adjustments to the schedule, but we’re going ahead.

The planned schedule is:
11:00 Start
11:30 Official Opening and Welcome to Country
12:30 Doggy Parade and Competition
2:30 Junior Photo Competition Winners Announced
3:00 Close

Blanket sellers and kids photos – registration opens at 10:00
Doggy Parade – registration opens at 11:00

Hope to see you there.

Corner of Buckland and Wyndham Sts.

Alexandria Park – Corner of Buckland and Wyndham Sts.

DA Objection Requests for 5-Storey Apartment Block at 76 Mitchell Road (Auction Centre)

Note: Last day for objections is Tuesday 11th December.

From David, Damien, David & Tony of Buckland Street (bucklandstreet@hotmail.com)

Urgent Community Objection Needed Against Construction of Large 5 Storey Apartment Block at 76 Mitchell Road (DA D/2012/1627) – Submissions Close Tue 11th December

Dear Fellow Alexandria / Erskinville Residents,

We, residents in Buckland & Fountain Streets and the Alexandria Residents’ Action Group (ARAG) have only just become aware of the DA to demolish the Auction Centre at 76 Mitchell Road, Alexandria and build an extremely large 5 Storey apartment block that is completely out of scale with the area and will dwarf the heritage listed streetscape directly across from and adjacent to it.

Because the City of Sydney Council only notified houses within 75 metres and the fact that the Developer has placed the DA notice inside a window in the building hidden by shutters after opening hours, it is clear that most residents in the area are unaware of the proposed eyesore that will negatively impact our heritage listed low-rise residential area; at present there are only 6 Objections lodged at time of writing – a number that Council itself has indicated is extremely low.

We apologise for the late notice, but please ask that you take 5 minutes to lodge an Objection to DA D/2012/1627 with Council by Tue 11th December* so that we can have this Community-unfriendly design Rejected. Submission Objection points and more details are provided below.

Please lodge your Objections by Email to DASubmissions@cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au  & Copy Councillor Linda Scott (who has offered to assist us) LScott@cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au and the Alexandria Residents’ Action Group info@arag.org.au.

(*) 2-week extension from 28/11 granted.

76 Mitchell St, artists impression

76 Mitchell St, artists impression

When lodging, it is important to reference DA D/2012/1627, include your Email address or phone number for Council to contact you and to CC Councilor Linda Scott and ARAG to track Objections and have the matter heard before Council. It is worth noting that Council does listen to residents; when 70 residents objected to the Buckland Hotel opening a late-night venue on its top floor, it rejected the DA.

76 Mitchell St, artists impression

3 Residents’ Groups met over the weekend and the following subset of objection points were immediately identified (there are too many to list here, but we are happy to share others by Email):

  1. The bulk & height are totally out of scale with existing streetscape. The proposed height of 14.7 metres is non-compliant with the current 12m allowable (DA attempts to quote draft 2011 LEP)
  2. The Floor to Space Ratio (FSR) is above the 1:1 allowable, in fact the DA seeks to have a 50% ‘bonus’ applied to 1.5:1 by paying Council a monetary sum under a ‘Voluntary Planning Agreement’. Details in the DA show that they are further non-compliant as the real FSR is 1.6:1.
  3. The building of a bulky 5-storey apartment block directly opposite and adjacent to 1 to 2-storey heritage listed areas is completely non-compliant with the current Green Square Development Control Plan (DCP) in particular with the objective to “Encourage design that reinforces unique attributes of Green Square (heritage, contributory buildings, landscape etc.)”
  4. The large increase in height and bulk will cause very large loss-of-privacy and overshadowing (the ‘shadow diagrams’ show massive impact to the South – particularly in mid-Winter).
  5. The height of the proposed design and high-density unit layout is non-compliant with NSW’s 2002 ‘SEPP 65’planning policy (introduced to improve design quality of units); inside the block less than the minimum of 70% of units will receive 3 hours sunlight between 9.00-15.00 in mid-Winter.
  6. The mixture of dwellings is also non-compliant under the current South Sydney Development Control Plan (DCP) –there are nine (9) tiny 50sqm studios which is 41% of total (far higher than the maximum of 30% allowed) and only five (5) 80sqm 2-bedroom units which is 23% of total (far lower than the 40% minimum). Single-brick construction means limited acoustic privacy.

Please note that we are in favour of residential developments that are sympathetic to our area and improve amenity – this DA is not, and also states it’s only Stage 1 (Stage 2 being the smash repair shop).

David / Damien / David / Tony – Buckland Street (bucklandstreet@hotmail.com)

A sample objection is attached: Template Letter – Objection to DA D-2012-1627 – 76 Mitchell Road Alexandria. Please use this only as a starting point for your own objection – a short but original objection is worth more than a copy of a longer and more detailed objection.

A  version of this post is also available in MS Word format: DA Objection Letterdrop v1-8b

Questions to Mayoral Candidates

Candidates attending the combined resident action group’s Mayoral forum have been asked to share their vision for Sydney, including a response to the following three questions:

Q1. In your opinion, have past development approvals adequately
considered the suburban infrastructure needed to service those
developments? Will the Green Paper’s proposed ‘enterprise zones’ make it
more or less likely that future developments will be adequately
supported by infrastructure?

Q2. Do you believe that Precinct Committees would improve “the flow of
two-way communication between community members and Council staff and
Councillors”? If so, do you think the City of Sydney would be better
served by the North Sydney model (open forums) or the Canada Bay model
(semi-random invitations)?

Q3. Do you support continuing the current policy of denying some
residents access to on-street and on-site parking, based on the age of
their property? Continue reading

When You Object to a DA

By Nick Fox

I had an onsite meeting with Councillor McInerney regarding the overshadowing issue at number 272 Belmont Street, Alexandria. A few things arose during this meeting that I think ARAG members need to be aware of.  Basically the following covers the DA process, how it now works and how you should proceed it you object to a DA near you.

1. Delegated Authority

Under delegated authority a single planner is allocated responsibility for evaluating all DAs under a set dollar value. The planner alone decides whether or not an alteration/addition complies with the DCP & LEP. The Draft DCP is a supposed to be a consideration for this process, but it seems to have more weight than the old South Sydney DCP, which is in fact the current control document. It will be repealed once the Draft DCP is Gazetted/approved by the State Government.

2. Councillor approval, is a thing of the past… well almost

In previous years a DA would automatically go before a meeting of full council for their consideration. This is no longer the case, but all is not lost and you need to be aware of your rights, because the planners, in Counciller McInerney’s own words, ‘are not required under law to inform you of them,’ so they don’t. If you’re getting a picture of a power hungry planning department, you’re probably on the right track. You need to raise your objection with all Councillors not just the planner or the planning department.

3. When you Object

Make sure you tell the planner that you want the DA looked at by Councillors for consideration as this takes the power for approval out of their hands – confirm this by email and/or letter. It is your right to raise an objection with Council representatives. The planner will probably tell you that ‘it won’t go before council;’ it can, but only if you insist that it does. Make sure to send a confirmation email covering your telephone conversation with any planner or  put it in writing. You need to create a paper trail as ‘he said she said’ arguments don’t hold water in the eyes of the law. I guess you have to balance your loss of amenity against a few hours writing to people.

4. Contact all Councillors

Contact all Councillors about the DA as soon as as your notified of a DA that you object to and include the site address and DA number.

5. Always

Always, always, always keep printed copies of all correspondence with council as they are essential should a council staff member deny having said something to you over the phone. This is the main reason why you should send a confirmation email after any discussion.

6. If the building looks too high

If the building looks too high on the drawings then it probably is. It is a requirement that adjoining properties on either side be shown on the drawings in order to establish the size and scale (bulk) of the development. If you don’t understand the drawings talk to somebody who does. Bulk can be controlled by reducing floor to ceiling heights to 2.4m and overshadowing through the use of skillion roofs. It’s common for designers to use existing ceiling heights throughout a new extension, but this will only disadvantage you. The overall height of a two storey extension can easily be reduced by 1m through height controls, but planners seldom point this out to a developer and the DCP has no provisions to control heights other than that of the existing ridge.

7. Get contacts details

Always get the council/planners contacts details (full name and direct number).

8. Record the time and date

Record the time and date you made the call. You may need this in the event of a dispute over who said what.

9. Windows on a light-well

Windows opposite each other on opposite sides of a light well are a no no.

10. If you don’t understand

If you don’t understand the drawings or what’s proposed get professional advice as the small up front cost may save you thousands rectifying a planners errors.

11. Shadow diagrams

Shadow diagrams are a great source of misleading information and should always be looked at with suspicion. Sunlight and shading is a technical subject and it’s a job that should be done by somebody who knows what they are doing. The old South Sydney DCP called the person responsible for creating shadow diagrams a ‘qualified person,’ but the new DCP says nothing about this at all. It may well be that they meant an architect, but that’s not clear.

12. Once the DA is approved

Once the DA is approved and a construction certificate is issued for a building, it’s basically all over and you cannot get the decision reversed.

13. Construction Certificate drawings

Construction Certificate drawings are more detailed than DA drawings and need to reflect the basic structure of the building. They are not the same as the DA drawings and you should ask the certifying authority if you can have, or view, a copy of them before the construction Certificate is issued. The construction certificate drawings for 270 Belmont Street were identical to the DA drawings, which is simply unacceptable.

14. Lighting analysis

The Draft DCP proposes developers may be required to have a lighting analysis done. This is a job for a professional not a drafting company, which is the service most commonly used by developers. If you’re going to be overshadowed then it’s worth while asking that this be done.

Key points

DA approval is happening at a much faster rate these days and time is very short once you lodge an objection. My advice is, don’t wait to hear back from the planner before contacting Councillors, because the planner may have made their decision by the time you hear back from them – contact them immediately. Planners are often paid a bonus based on their throughput, so there is a financial incentive to approve DA’s quickly.

Professional advice isn’t free, but that small up front fee and the advice you get, may save you a lot of heartache and costs. The only solution for the owners of number 272 Belmont Street is to have high quality Velux windows installed at a cost of over $8,000 and probably closer to $10,000. Given proper advice at the outset this could have been completely avoided, but possibly like you, the owners relied on a planning system that has changed beyond all recognition over the past few years. They thought they understood the process as the owner of the property is an ex South Sydney Alderman. Sadly the game has changed and planners evaluate whats on the paper in front of them very quickly; they are not really concerned with doing the right thing by you and all to frequently won’t. If you have enough spare cash you may want to take the matter to the Land & Environment Court, but you must do so within 6 months of the DA being approved – after that period of recently legislated time, you’re too late.

ARAG Review of ATP Parking Study

In 2010, the Australian Technology Park commissioned a parking study of
Alexandria to the south of the Park. Although comprehensive  in nature, the study missed the fundamental cause of the problem – the impact of ATP-generated commuter parking in our streets.

The City of Sydney Council seemed prepared to adopt the findings and recommendations of the ATP study unchallenged until ARAG raised its voice.

This document is ARAG’s detailed analysis of the ATP-sponsored parking study and is our response to the errors and omissions in the original study.