The Gold Coast Bulletin

ON THE QT

Hard yakka for Bunnings as road to Carrara warehouse a torturous one.

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THE bosses at hardware heavyweigh­t Bunnings probably thought they’d nailed it when they agreed to buy a Carrara site back in 2015.

Wrong! The “road” to building a Bunnings warehouse on the site is proving a tortuous one.

The final destinatio­n – planning approval – remains over the horizon but Bunnings still is hammering away with its plan for the 10.86ha site.

The long journey by the Wesfarmers subsidiary is there for all to see – for more than two years a for-sale sign on the floodplain land on the western side of Nerang -Broadbeach Rd has sported an “under contract” sticker

It’s that “road” that appears to be the major sticking point.

More accurately, how customers of the warehouse are going to enter and exit the property.

A solution to so-called “traffic modelling” issue appears to have been held up by the upgrade, now completed, of the nearby Gooding Dve roundabout.

In the meantime, Bunnings has been talking turkey to not just the city council but the Department of Transport and Mains Roads and the bureaucrat­s at the Department of Infrastruc­ture, Local Government and Planning.

At one point an underpass was mooted to get traffic travelling south on NerangBroa­dbeach Rd into the site.

It appears it was decided that as the area is floodplain, that idea was not waterproof.

Meanwhile, Bunnings has come up with a novel solution to making the mooted 9157sq m warehouse floodproof – it will be on piers.

It says the project will be a $51 million one and that it will create work for 180 people.

The site, which backs on to Macau casino tycoon Stanley Ho’s Palm Meadows golf course, has a colourful history.

It was for many years owned by a syndicate that included former tennis ace Ken Rosewall and rugby league legend Rex Mossop.

Fifteen years ago one-time shopping centre owner Paul Kyriakou and PlastaMast­er operator Eric Palyiris lobbed in a successful $2.5 million offer for the land.

They at one point mooted four 12-level towers on the land but later curtailed their ambitions.

They went on to get approval for a developmen­t tagged Florina Gardens, with buildings of up to seven levels and equipped with evacuation boats.

The partners had to survive a city council challenge to their plans in the Planning and Environmen­t Court.

The property was put on the market in 2015 in the wake of Kyriakou dying the previous year and Bunnings stepped forward.

The hardware chain put the site under contract, conditiona­l on getting planning approval, and a price of about $8 million has been mooted.

If that approval comes through, and Bunnings pays up, the agents who handled the sale no doubt will be relieved.

Colliers’ Darrell Irwin and Geoff Lamb probably aren’t accustomed to waiting three years or so to get a commission cheque.

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 ??  ?? The land on which Bunnings hopes to build is a triangular vacant parcel fronting Nerang-Broadbeach Rd.
The land on which Bunnings hopes to build is a triangular vacant parcel fronting Nerang-Broadbeach Rd.

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