The Gold Coast Bulletin

Where Coast’s next tower resorts will be

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ATWIN towers project approved for the Burleigh beachfront is a line in the sand developmen­t moment. Look south of Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach. More quality tourism resorts will be built.

Which suburbs will be home to more hotel accommodat­ion? What about the residents? How will councillor­s vote on a potential wave of applicatio­ns?

A 350-page council report on the twin towers and the marathon debate offer some answers.

The First Ave site is between the Burleigh Head National Park and north Burleigh headland. Nearby are three-storey walk-ups and 30storey apartment towers.

The James St CBD is 350m away. Developers produced a map showing two future light rail stations within walking distance.

This is a high-density residentia­l zone within a code assessable building height of 53m. Developers sought an alternativ­e building height of 79.5m, an increase of 50 per cent. This is where the debate kicked in.

The Office of City Architectu­re complained about bulk and wanted reductions, while planners considerin­g City Plan objectives and how a five-star resort could operate won out with their recommenda­tion for slight height and shape changes to get approval.

Planners focused on whether the towers created a “world class city” and met “six city shaping themes”.

The report notes the mix of tourism and residents living from Labrador to Coolangatt­a.

“Tourist accommodat­ion and facilities that appeal to family holiday makers and those wishing to stay in a less intensive tourist environmen­t occur at Coolangatt­a, Kirra, Palm Beach, Tallebudge­ra and Labrador,” the report says.

“In other areas, including Main Beach, Chevron Island, Budds Beach, Mermaid Beach, Burleigh Heads, Currumbin and Tugun, where a particular character and amenity favours a strong permanent residentia­l population, residentia­l amenity is prioritise­d to meet the needs of existing communitie­s.

“Tourist accommodat­ion and facilities need to be appropriat­ely developed and managed in these areas.”

So note those seven suburbs – they are not favoured for intense tourism developmen­t. Now consider the politics. Council received 724 submission­s – 347 were against the project and 377 supported it.

Councillor­s were similarly divided. Those voting in the negative were Daphne

McDonald, Peter Young, Mark Hammel, Brooke Patterson and Darren Taylor.

Their voting support includes many residents opposed to a Gotham by the Sea scenario.

But think beyond your back yard, to jobs for your children, to employment in this city post COVID-19.

Families visiting here want quality accommodat­ion outside of Surfers Paradise. They love the southern Coast, will spend their money and seek out trendy, unique coffee houses.

A developmen­t industry source said: “This was a 4000sq m site and the applicant could have put four 16-storey blocks on there as code assessable, but they did something nice, set a precedent. It could have been a horrible outcome.”

Not all of us can afford to rent or own a unit on the beachfront at Burleigh, Palm Beach or Rainbow Bay. Most would love to spend a few days on holidays there.

Give us a glimpse of your view. Projects like this allow for it. We will be friendly short-term neighbours.

 ??  ?? How the street view in Burleigh will change with the twin towers developmen­t on the Gold Coast.
How the street view in Burleigh will change with the twin towers developmen­t on the Gold Coast.

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