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Darebin Appropriate Development Association

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Save The Preston Market Action Group Website

The Save the Preston Market Action Group has launched a new website with up to the minute information and ideas to help in the fight to keep the market from being demolished by developers. Here is the link: https://savetheprestonmarket.com/

Please help if you can

Preston Market Update: Article from The Rezzadent

There is a new newspaper/community news outlet called ‘The Rezzadent” and Carmen Jenkins wrote the following article.
Saving Preston Market
I have lived down the road in some capacity from the Preston Market for the past 22 years. With an almost perverted sense of pride, I’ll tell anyone who listens that the people who run the Hot Jam Donut van know me by name. My eldest child, now 21, was once a lost 4-year-old scooped up and saved by Melissa from Sam and Sons Grocers. I remember when Rhubarb Rhubarb was a tiny stall near the other ‘good toilets’, now a market stalwart its own right with great coffee, gorgeous staff and even better avocados. And then there is Cathy from the chicken shop who regals me weekly with stories of her beautiful little granddaughter.
After 22 years you make a lot of connections, you build a history, and that’s how you build community. Community doesn’t need to be based around spending, but the market has a special place in the north of Melbourne that’s captured the hearts of the community since it replaced the Thomas Broadhurst Tannery which was the original purpose of the site after colonisation.
History
In 1969 the then Mayor of Preston W. K. Larkins drove home the first stake into the building site that would be Preston market.  Two million dollars was then an exciting and forward-thinking investment offering renewal, hope and advancement to the people of Preston, Thornbury, and Reservoir.
By 1970 the market was up and running and by 1976 had grown to include 46 green grocers, 15 delicatessens, 4 fish shops, 4 poultry shops, 19 butchers and a variety of small goods shops including toys, clothes, carpets, plants, and sporting goods. https://heritage.darebinlibraries.vic.gov.au/article/479
In 2004 Centro MCS, sold the Market to Salta Properties for $36.75 million. The new company has had plans to renovate the site ever since. For the past 17 years the Preston Market has been under the majority ownership of Preston Market Developments Pty Ltd (PMD), a joint venture between Australia’s Salta Properties and Medich Corporation.
What is the developer planning?
The draft plan for the Preston Market claims to retain part of the market building and proposes the balance of the market along the eastern side of the precinct, allowing space in the centre of the precinct for 6 new buildings that provide future homes and jobs. The highest building is 20 storeys, the smallest 10 storeys and by all indications the majority if not all will be 1- and 2-bedroom apartments. The current and future community will be supported by the new Preston Station, new open spaces, and community facilities. What those open spaces will look like, is underwhelming in the plans and do not seem to entail any greening of the space.
There is lots of underused spaces within the current Preston Market Property that could be better used by the community.
It’s the 6 building towers one at 68 metres in the centre of the market that has people most concerned by this development proposal, anyone who lives locally would consider this an overdevelopment that is developer driven, not driven by actual community need. Looking at percentages of population in this region Preston is a suburb of families, we need affordable housing that caters to families and 1- and 2-bedroom apartments don’t do that long term.
Save the Market campaign
The Rezzadent spoke to George Kanjere, who is one of the organizers of the current Save Preston Market advocacy group. There have been multiple iterations of the Save Preston Market campaign, and constant pressure from the Darebin Appropriate Development Association (DADA) and Darebin Council to maintain beloved aspects of the Preston Market, who have been behind appropriate development of the site since it was sold in 2004.
The Preston Market Precinct project has been identified as a project on the Victorian Planning Authority’s Fast Track Program. This means that the government has prioritised its development as a possible economic stimulus to the area as part of the Victorian Government’s packaged response to the COVID-19 crisis.
Who makes the decisions?
The local council doesn’t decide the future of the Preston Market. It’s privately owned and under state jurisdiction. But they can certainly have their say and the current council has voted against the latest plan put forward by the developer for the Preston Market property and made calls on the Minister for Planning, Richard Wynne and the VPA to protect the future of Preston Market. Unless Wynne agrees it’s going to be a hell of a fight for the community.
Wynne is a formidable powerhouse in the Labor Party who seems to have a reputation for rarely listening to or working with communities versing developers. No-one knows this like the Dja Dja Wurrung people who have spent years trying to protect their birthing trees! Wynne has a litany of VCAT cases where he has overturned decisions made by local councils in favour of developers.
If we want to save our market, then we’ll need to stand and fight as a community. DADA and Save Preston Market, along with the council and local State MPs are the only way forward. However, the state seems very locked into the current design which includes the housing towers. Salta and Medich are well known developers of this high-density housing style.
At this stage the community needs the Victorian Government to forcibly acquire the land. As George Kanjere pointed out to the Rezzedent, they have no problem acquiring private housing in other circumstances.
A great example is the rail renewal project where land is acquired under the Land Acquisition and Compensation Act 1986. However, the process for land acquisition includes compensation for future earnings. For the Preston market this could be massive, costing the state and the public extraordinary amounts of money.
DADA and Save Preston Market are asking the state government to recognise that there is not enough protection of the significant and recognised heritage features of the market and to acknowledge that the 20-story dwellings proposed on the Murray Roadside of the market does not satisfy ESD (Environmentally Sustainable Design) standards as other buildings including the market will be overshadowed from northerly solar access during trading hours.
Good planning of the precinct is vital because, like many areas throughout Melbourne, Preston is facing transformational growth, with the population forecast to double in size to 68,000 people by 2041. And that’s not the only forecast to worry about. The Climate Emergency is no doubt on many locals’ minds, especially after the recently released IPCC climate report.
The dense urban design that is being flagged by the Victorian Planning Authority is not only out of scale with the local community but has not considered any of the environmental concerns that the IPCC report highlights.
This is even more important when taking into consideration the 2018 paper which outlines Preston the suburb, as one of the hottest in Melbourne. High Density housing does not help negate heat spots. Any development or re-development in Preston should be taking this into account. https://www-sciencedirect-com.ezproxy.lib.rmit.edu.au/science/article/pii/S2212095517301141
https://watersensitivecities.org.au/case-study/
The days of the market you knew could be coming to an end, either way. Senior and disability groups have spoken out in the past about the unlevel paths and the dangerous dash from the station across the market’s infamous carpark, which is also perilous for families with small children and prams. It would be fantastic to see the market retain its character but to also reach its potential as a jewel of the north with the appropriate and sustainable re-development that the community deserves.
https://vpa.vic.gov.au/project/preston/
https://vpa.vic.gov.au/fast-track-projects/?_ga=2.63947823.1080407891.1630317597-362687248.1629103714
https://engage.vic.gov.au/preston-market-precinct
https://saveourprestonmarket.wordpress.com/
https://heritage.darebinlibraries.vic.gov.au/article/479
https://www.darebinada.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/DADA-response-toPreston-Market-Structure-Plan-recommendations-final.pdf

Preston Market Update: Upstart Article

Follow the link to the article: https://www.upstart.net.au/a-community-hub-on-prime-real-estate/

Preston Market Draft Structure Plan – 2021 Submissions

Here are the submissions from DADA and Save The Preston Market Facebook group.

A big thank you to all the members of DADA and other community groups who took the time to submit a response to the Victorian Planning Authority.

DADA response toPreston Market Structure Plan recommendations final

cme submission 130721

 

Save The Preston Market Campaign Update: 21 June 2021

SAVE THE PRESTON MARKET CAMPAIGN UPDATE

A big thank you to all of those folk who signed the Darebin Council petition to save Preston Market from overdevelopment.

You can still sign, if you haven’t yet, here: http://chng.it/jQRGZdr6Kv

The Victorian Planning Authority (VPA) has released the draft structure plan for the market and is calling for feedback to be submitted before July 13th 2021.

We want to encourage everyone to tell the VPA how phenomenally disappointing their recommendations are for such a important site.

Key documents can be accessed via this link: https://vpa.vic.gov.au/project/preston/

Some points to help guide a submission are;

  • It is an over development.
  • It is an excessive number of dwellings
  • The proposed height of the residential towers on the site is excessive
  • Mostly 1 & 2 BDR flats, creating a demographic with a lack of diversity and failing to meet the future housing need in Darebin
  • This plan is ‘developer driven’ not ‘demand driven’, being to max out the site with insufficient consideration for future community need
  • The suggested heritage overlay does not guarantee the current market will not be demolished
  • There is not enough protection of the significant and recognized heritage features of the market
  • The 20 storey proposed on Murray Rd does not satisfy ESD standards(Environmentally Sustainable Design) as other buildings including the market will be overshadowed from northerly solar access during trading hours.
  • Open space is also negatively impacted
  • Ask the Minister for Planning to keep the footprint of the market as is
  • Ask the Minister to respect the heritage; the intactness of the fabric
  • Ask the Minister to restrict height of new buildings near the market buildings
  • Ask the Minister to remove the site from the fast track list
  • Ask the Minister to proceed with the public acquisition of the site

We reject what has been proposed by the VPA as it is ill conceived and does not adequately reflect the community expectations for the protection of the market and the future development of the site.

Registering your support for the future of the market on a single page or many pages will help.

Thank you.

 

Victorian Planning Authority release their recommendations for Preston Market

Below are the documents released by the VPA today, the 18th of May 2021.

We urge you to participate in the consultation process.

Preston_Market_Precinct_-_Development_Contributions_Plan_Draft_to_be_finalised_consultation_May_2021

Preston_Market_Precinct_-_draft_Structure_Plan_consultation_May_2021

Preston_Market_Precinct_-_Draft_Structure_Plan_-_Community_brochure_web_version_-_14_May_2021_

Preston_Market_Incorporated_Plan_consultation_May_2021

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Guide: Having Your Say

Having Your Say A Guide to Successful Planning and Development Objecting Is designed to guide readers through the process of objecting to planning and development proposals at local government and Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT). It includes pages and appendix documents of strategies and ideas used to produce successful outcomes and shared by DADA folk with many years … Read More about Guide: Having Your Say

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