The Gold Coast Bulletin

Smaller tower plan lodged for Komune

- ANDREW POTTS

CONTROVERS­IAL plans to build a tower on Coolangatt­a’s Komune site have been revived — this time with a different developer and a third of the units.

More than two years after the Planning and Environmen­t Court rejected a Hotel Komune bid to build a 27storey, five-star hotel at the base of Greenmount hill on Marine Pde, developer Spyre Group wants to erect a 12storey residentia­l tower.

The Brisbane-based builder, the company behind Burleigh’s $70 million Natura tower, has filed plans with the Gold Coast City Council to replace the existing Komune resort.

The proposal has been welcomed by city leaders but

community groups opposed to “over developmen­t” say a clear pathway is needed to determine what towers can be built in southern beachside areas.

Area councillor Gail O’Neill said she hoped the smaller tower would be greeted with less rancour than the previous proposal.

“The site cover is dramatical­ly lower than what was previously put forward and this is a high-density residentia­l area,” she said.

“I am hoping this will be more palatable to the residents who were unhappy about the previous one.”

The Planning and Environmen­t Court rejected the Hotel Komune developmen­t in December 2018 on the basis it did not comply with either the 2003 or 2016 city plans.

The proposed 100-suite

hotel, which would also have had 94 apartments, cafes and restaurant­s overlookin­g Greenmount Beach, was approved by the council in April 2017.

Two months later eight neighbours at the Lindor Apartments appealed, taking the decision to the Planning and Environmen­t Court.

After receiving legal advice, the council withdrew its support in March 2018. This left the eight ratepayers forking out $190,000 in legal fees fighting an approval the council no longer endorsed.

By comparison, Spyre Group’s new tower will have 31 units, including two subpenthou­ses on level 10 and two penthouses on level 11. The site is owned by Paradise Property Developmen­ts.

Spyre Group held a prelodgeme­nt meeting with council staff in June. A design for the project presented at the meeting was ultimately shelved and replaced with the current proposal.

Community Alliance president John Hicks welcomed a smaller proposal for the site but said the spate of new tower proposals meant it was critical to discuss future developmen­t in the southern beachside suburbs. The Komune Resort is nine storeys.

“We hope this project will

I AM HOPING THIS WILL BE MORE PALATABLE TO THE RESIDENTS WHO WERE UNHAPPY ABOUT THE PREVIOUS ONE

AREA COUNCILLOR GAIL O’NEILL

not be an overdevelo­pment of the site and will have no problem with it if it’s consistent with the planning code as read by the community,” he said.

“However, there does need to be a conversati­on about the future of developmen­t and we need to establish a community based planning reference group to have an ongoing conversati­on about the management of growth.”

Elsewhere in Coolangatt­a, developer Paul Gedoun has begun constructi­on of his $74 million Flow Residences at Rainbow Bay and in December filed plans to redevelop the Cafe D-Bah.

Sunland Group had planned to redevelop the Greenmount Resort site but shelved the project and put the site up for sale.

 ??  ?? Artist impression of the new proposed Komune developmen­t at Coolangatt­a.
Artist impression of the new proposed Komune developmen­t at Coolangatt­a.

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