The Gold Coast Bulletin

Hint of progress at ‘bomb site’

- ANDREW POTTS andrew.potts@news.com.au

CONSTRUCTI­ON workers are shoring up the walls of the Gold Coast’s most famous “bomb site”, but don’t expect to see a new tower rising soon.

The walls of the Southport site, which has sat empty for 30 years, began to crumble recently, forcing its owners to provide support via structural walls.

Once slated for a supertower which would dwarf Surfers Paradise’s Q1, building has yet to begin despite developer Cienna securing approval for the project from the Gold Coast City Council.

But area councillor Dawn Crichlow said she was confident the maintenanc­e work on the site was a positive sign.

“There’s been problems and the site could have sunk,” she said.

“Hopefully now this has happened we will start seeing something rise out of the ground.

“These people say they are going to build and it has been a long time coming.”

The site, which sits between Southport’s Nerang, Young and Garden streets, is close to the location of the Gold Coast’s first cinema.

It was cleared in the 1980s to make way for a tower developmen­t which failed to eventuate as a result of the early 1990s recession and has gone through several owners.

Cienna, a Sydneybase­d developer, bought the site in two separate deals a decade apart, with the final piece secured in July 2013 for $1.1 million

Cienna lodged a developmen­t applicatio­n in 2015, earmarking the 4440sq m land for towers with 88 and 38 levels in a plan that included an Asian cultural centre.

But the project has never progressed.

Mayor Tom Tate said the land, which borders Chinatown, was a jewel in the city’s crown and could not continue to remain empty.

“The will of council is behind this because we made Southport a priority developmen­t area, which gives developers the flexibilit­y to bring forward the best and highest use for our CBD,” he said.

“They should bring it to fruition but if they do not want to then put it to the market and let someone else have a vision.

“Fill the hole in. We don’t want tooth decay in our CBD.”

The lack of movement on the site has left some city leaders frustrated given its prime location and the loosening of planning restrictio­ns in a bid to stimulate developmen­t in Southport.

The frustratio­n boiled over in 2017 when Cr Crichlow led calls for developers to face a “use it or lose it” rule, saying many developers had been disingenuo­us, submitting plans for highrises and other projects to gain approvals before putting the sites on the market.

Developers currently have four years from the time of council approval to develop the site before their project is considered lapsed.

 ?? Main picture: GLENN HAMPSON ?? The giant empty hole in the ground between Southport’s Nerang, Young and Garden streets. The site has sat empty for 30 years but constructi­on work has begun to shore it up. Inset: The proposed developmen­t.
Main picture: GLENN HAMPSON The giant empty hole in the ground between Southport’s Nerang, Young and Garden streets. The site has sat empty for 30 years but constructi­on work has begun to shore it up. Inset: The proposed developmen­t.

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