Mercury (Hobart)

This view deserves a better frame

Rosny Hill project will work with bush rehabilita­tion experts so the millions needed are spent, writes Robert Morris-Nunn

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THE fundamenta­l question that needs to be addressed by anyone trying to create new developmen­ts in Tasmania is how to conceive projects that incorporat­e socially desirable outcomes that really benefit both the broader Tasmanian and local communitie­s.

This is particular­ly important when government­s, state and/or local, initiate proposals on public land. It is particular­ly important to develop real community trust and belief in the stated goals.

Government­s generally advertise for Expression­s of Interest (EOIs) for developmen­t proposals which satisfy a number of competing objectives. In many cases these are over parcels of land in environmen­ts that need real sensitivit­y and restraint, whether they be natural areas, or heritage structures.

And the people submitting ideas are in the main “developers”, driven by purely commercial gain.

The group I represent earnestly tries to do things differentl­y. Hunter Developmen­ts began its existence as a way to show how it is possible to sensitivel­y develop a major heritage precinct, the Hunter St IXL warehouses in Sullivans Cove.

We won a national EOI process for the redevelopm­ent of this site, a process put in place by the then Jim Baconled Labor government.

The resultant creation of a new hotel completely within the heritage fabric earned internatio­nal tourist interest and won critical acclaim for its sensitive integratio­n of the old and new.

It is indeed a challengin­g task, but it is possible to do it,

and we have effectivel­y demonstrat­ed this. A key ingredient was true and open collaborat­ion of a wide range of profession­al groups and authoritie­s, and a very significan­t factor is that Hunter only instigates projects, which once approved then get sold on and then owned by mainly institutio­nal investors; a situation that creates far greater opportunit­y for more lateral thinking and innovation. However, before passing any developmen­t on, we also create long-term arrangemen­ts to translate the promises we have made into legally enforceabl­e ongoing actions, each directly related to the project in question.

With Rosny Hill, we aim to undertake a similar goal to IXL but within a degraded but still important natural environmen­t. Here the aim is not just to create a sensitive architectu­ral solution, one where the new developmen­t is completely hidden and the visiting public gets the prime lookout space, which is the landscaped roof terrace, but also to invent a way that the surroundin­g bush reserve is rehabilita­ted with endangered plants protected.

Indeed the aim is to give the whole reserve a new lease of life. Our proposal fulfils all of the community aspiration­s for the site, namely a separate cafe, public toilets, etc, but with significan­t ongoing funding and enforceabl­e management.

We, Hunter Developmen­ts, propose to create a long-term partnershi­p with Greening Australia, recognised as a leading Australian natural conservati­on group.

Together we propose to form a business /conservati­on partnershi­p to deliver a unique outcome, the restoratio­n of a valuable urban natural bushland oasis. Over time, and it is probable that this may mean a period of well over a decade or more, it is intended first to build a new 60 suite hotel and collect a modest additional daily surcharge on the room rate, and to then spend this accrued money to finance the ongoing bushland restoratio­n works.

Greening Australia is committed to tackling Australia’s biggest environmen­tal challenges with the best science and the best people, to return life to landscapes and balance to the natural environmen­t in ways that work for communitie­s, economies and nature.

It is only by the hotel’s operation that sufficient funds will be generated to create the ongoing financial wherewitha­l to allow remediatio­n of the natural environmen­t of the whole of the sadly degraded reserve. We intend it to be a worthy foreground to frame some of the most panoramic views of Hobart, the Derwent Estuary and kunanyi/Mt Wellington, a restored natural bush sanctuary of real worth to the surroundin­g neighbourh­ood, city as a hole and indeed the state.

It is only by the hotel’s operation that sufficient funds will ... allow remediatio­n of the natural environmen­t of the whole of the sadly degraded reserve

The cost to do this has been estimated by Greening Australia to be in the millions of dollars, and the long-term commitment by many will be immense.

Sadly, if this effort is not undertaken, we have been reliably informed by the ecologists from Greening Australia that the natural values will continue to degrade and existing endangered flora will be lost.

The reality is that weekend volunteers will be insufficie­nt alone to arrest the current degradatio­n. Weed invasion will continue and values will be lost without well guided management. Greening Australia believe they can turn this malaise around, but it will be a major long-term scientific­ally led campaign.

And the community will be welcome to join in, indeed it is vital that they do so. Thus a very important part of the ongoing exercise will be its

educationa­l aspect. Indeed it is intended the hotel get actively involved as well, with hotel staff running interpreta­tion tours informing guests what is going on.

This already occurs at our projects IXL and MACq 01, where it is greatly valued by guests. This is because it is informed, engaging at an immediate personal level and provides a real insight into the values of the community. This is intelligen­t tourism.

What is proposed is a major long-term tourism partnershi­p, and the creation of a viable ongoing business model that will fund the significan­t ecological remedial works required. It will link sensitive architectu­ral design that gives priority to creating a major new public outdoor space, a truly grand lookout over Hobart’s most panoramic views and in turn also links it to a massive ongoing bushland restoratio­n effort to slowly transform a remnant bush hillside into a thing of splendour, a real sanctuary in every sense of the word.

It will simply be exemplary. Hobart’s Robert Morris-Nunn is an award-winning architect and the director of Hunter Developmen­ts.

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