The Manila Times

Australia axes Asian-led Gold Coast mega-casino plan

- AFP

SYDNEY: A Chinese-Australian investment consortium’s plans to build a multi-billion-dollar mega-casino on the Gold Coast were canned by the state government Tuesday, following an outcry from locals over the size of the complex.

The ASF Consortium, comprising a Sydney-listed Chinese-Australian Chinese companies, had proposed a Aus$3 billion (US$2.4 billion) socalled integrated resort in the tourist hotspot.

The waterfront developmen­t on the Gold Coast Spit was to have included multiple hotels up to 45 storeys high as well as retail, entertainm­ent, residentia­l and conference facilities.

Community and environmen­tal groups were critical of the proposal, which came after ASF was chosen as the preferred tenderer in 2014, saying it would hurt local entertainm­ent and gambling venues in the area as well as impact local wildlife.

“Like many Queensland­ers, I have enjoyed visiting the Spit for decades,” Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said in a statement as her state government announced it had “terminated the proposed ASF developmen­t”.

“We need to ensure that character is preserved for future generation­s... What the Spit really needs now is a master plan to revitalise it and in as a community asset.”

Palaszczuk said the replacemen­t -- a community-led master plan for the area -- did not rule out a future casino complex in the Gold Coast.

But it would keep to local guidelines for buildings to be at most three storeys high and low density.

“It also helps get the balance right between protecting environmen­tal and community values and allowing appropriat­e commercial developmen­t,” state Infrastruc­ture and Planning Minister Jackie Trad added.

A response from ASF was not immediatel­y available.

The announceme­nt is the second blow recently for the casino sector in Queensland.

Hong Kong billionair­e Tony Fung last year shelved the casino part of a Aus$8.15 billion Aquis project near Cairns, the gateway to the iconic Great Barrier Reef, citing a softening Asian gambling market.

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