The Gold Coast Bulletin

Top carpark to be sold

- PAUL WESTON

THE city’s biggest carparking row has taken a new twist, with the council refusing to halt the sale of ratepayer land that provides spaces for Surfers Paradise unit owners.

About 40 Surfers Plaza residents protested outside council chambers last month, calling for a halt to the sale of the prime developmen­t site next to where Mayor Tom Tate’s consortium owns a parcel.

But the latest recommenda­tion by council officers to continue with the sale was approved by councillor­s at a governance committee meeting on Wednesday.

Councillor­s voting in favour were committee chair William Owen-Jones, Deputy Mayor Donna Gates, Brooke Patterson, Pauline Young and Ryan Bayldon-Lumsden.

Only veteran councillor Daphne McDonald voted against. Mayor Tate was absent and area councillor Darren Taylor was not allowed to vote due to a potential conflict.

Cr Owen-Jones admitted the situation presented a “unique set of circumstan­ces”, but the council had been “even -handed” in its approach.

The city’s parcel covers 1833sq m, with frontage to Remembranc­e and Peninsular drives, and includes a two-level reinforced concrete structure that previously served as lawn bowling greens on the podium level and carparking of 49 bays. Three adjoining lots provide for 237 carparking bays, which are utilised by Plaza residents.

Officers said the council decided in November 2021 that its land was surplus to needs and to sell it by public tender.

A contract of sale lapsed largely due to “an obligation to construct 150 carparking bays and to provide those bays to the resort on unfavourab­le commercial terms”. Officers warned in a report:

• To provide 150 carparking bays for the benefit of the resort would render any redevelopm­ent of the site as “commercial­ly unviable”.

• To redevelop the site on a standalone basis will not provide the carparking bays required by the resort and a new potential tower developmen­t.

• Any contractua­l obligation to do so would only “sterilise the redevelopm­ent potential”.

• The resort was developed as part of an 1987 rezoning approval for the broader bowls club site – and the condition to provide carparking “does not run with the land”.

• The resort cannot take action requiring its carparking to be provided on any adjoining land.

Councillor­s will vote at a full council meeting on Tuesday.

Mr Tate has previously declared his interest in an adjacent property and left the room.

A probity adviser was appointed to oversee the tender process.

Mr Tate is selling the final part of his investment.

A sale is expected to be finalised in September.

An option for residents is to negotiate a deal with the new developer.

Their arrangemen­t with the city is a peppercorn lease of $1 annually on a site that independen­t valuers say can return $100,000 for more than 40 spaces.

In 2005, Mr Tate and business colleague Kelvin Gersbach bought the Surfers Paradise Bowls Club headquarte­rs for $1.43m and later its greens for $770,000, after members faced a $1m debt.

 ?? ?? Surfers Plaza and the space next to it, the subject of sell-off plans.
Surfers Plaza and the space next to it, the subject of sell-off plans.

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