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Darebin Appropriate Development Association

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Darebin Appropriate Development Association Charter (November, 2022)   Since 2005 Darebin Appropriate Development Association DADA, is a group of residents of Darebin concerned with inappropriate development. DADA represents and provides assistance to residents who might feel unheard and powerless when development is happening near them. DADA acts to preserve the nature and character of our welcoming community and influence planning at all levels of government to ensure appropriate … Read More.. about About DADA

Twin towers in Northcote application WITHDRAWN

Seems we are not the only Northcote in the world experiencing Inappropriate Building Developments although, the people in the Northcote Ward, Battersea, England were more fortunate than their counterparts in Northcote, Victoria, Australia.

Northcote Ward, Battersea

Clapham Junction planning application WITHDRAWN by the Developers.

This welcome news was announced some 48 hours before Wandsworth’s Planning Committee met on Wednesday evening (May 20th) to consider the application. The report by the Borough Planning Officer was recommending that the application be refused because

a. there was insufficient benefit to public transport infrastructure in the town centre

b. affordable housing was omitted from the scheme.

A spokesman for the developer is reported as saying “We are deeply disappointed therefore that the report to the committee was not able to give the proposal its backing”.

Twin towers in Clapham Junction « Clapham Junction Action Group

Darebin Transition Initiative

Darebin locals has been meeting for the past couple of months with the intention of initiating a Darebin Transition Initiative. Transition initiatives are about exploring positive community responses to climate change and peak oil. They are about banding together both existing and new initiatives and groups under a common vision for the local area.

We are holding a small visioning workshop next Sunday the 14th of June to help guide our group and we thought that you or someone else from your organisation might be interested in coming, and we would certainly love to have you along.

When: Sunday 14 June 2009 | 1-4 pm
Where: Loophole – 834a High St, Thornbury

Also see www.transitiontowns.org.

Australian Horizons Development

In a nutshell developers are seeking the zoning to be changed on the Australian Horizons site in Arthurton Road and Elm Street from industrial to mixed use.

The developers are proposing to construct 350 units (a combination of studio apartments and larger residences) up to twelve storeys high plus commercial and retail premises.

It is estimated that there will be a thousand extra residents not including the number of people using the site each day which greatly exceeds this figure. In addition traffic is estimated to grow by at least an extra thousand cars per day. To date the plan includes widening Arthurton Road by five metres, but no further consideration has been given to the surrounding streets that are likely to be inundated with this surge in traffic that they are not designed to cater for.

The DADA fight continues…

The fight continues but with little vengeance or progress.

DADA now appears on Wikepedia – Northcote albeit as an external link but the word spreads.

Melbourne2030 is nothing but rhetoric and a guideline for councils in what “not to do” to protect against urban sprawl and inappropriate developments.

Sadly, the only ones who appear to want these two ugly towers are the greedy developers who neither live in the area or give a toss how it affects the local community.

What chance do we have when our own council staged but a small wimpy protest.

Darebin Appropriate Development Association, fighting against development at All Nations Park / Plaza.

Updated News

Updates to Darebin Appropriate Development Association fight against Northcote Towers.

Why Melbourne 2030 is a dream come true for Vic Roads.

This article was written by Kenneth Davidson in The Age on the 17th. October 2002. With the benefit of hindsight and DADA’s experiences, it seems that his predictions have indeed turned into our nightmare.

Submitted by lhealy on Sat, 24/09/2005

Why Melbourne 2030 is a dream come true for VicRoads
October 17 2002

Developers will love this reconstituted Kennett plan, which tries to hide three wasted years under Labor, writes Kenneth Davidson.
Town planning is about identifying options leading to choices. There are winners and losers. If you believe Melbourne 2030, released last week, every punter with a vested financial interest in Victoria is a winner.
It is simply a restatement of the main elements of the Kennett government’s 1995 planning document (Living Suburbs).
This is not surprising when it is understood that both planning documents were drawn up by the unreconstructed Department of Infrastructure, which is still run from the inside by VicRoads.
What’s different is style. Jeff Kennett was in your face (sometimes literally, with a shovelful of sand, if you were a journalist). Steve Bracks tries to sugar-coat the same pill with phoney consultative processes and documents in warm, earthy colours, subliminally evocative of a sustainable environment, with lots of pictures of happy people enjoying caffe latte society, trams and trains, and hardly a freeway in sight – apart from the odd blurred picture evoking speed and mobility.
Leading up to Melbourne 2030, the Bracks Government undertook a consultative process in two stages over two years, involving 30 meetings with more than 5000 people from across Melbourne. And while they may not have been a representative sample of the population, they were committed, and put a range of sensible ideas up to their interlocutors that deserved serious consideration.
A real plan would go something like this.
First the big question. What are we trying to achieve? Most people agree, it is a liveable city. But for whom? Upper-middle-class Camberwell is serviced by trams that run seven days a week until midnight. In the lower-middle-class Cranbourne/Pakenham growth corridor, buses stop running after 7pm on most nights, and don’t run at all on Sunday. And yet the corridor contains a population of 300,000, the size of Canberra, which manages to run an extensive bus service 365 days of the year.
Just by looking at some of the raw facts, we are already confronted by the issues. Should the scarce public transport infrastructure of the city be shared equitably? If not, why not?
After the issues are defined, this leads on to the consideration of options (freeways versus buses or trams) and evaluation of the possible choices via environmental impact and cost benefit studies. If these studies are honestly and openly carried out, they should lead to the right choices that will be backed by public opinion.
Finally, after the choices are made, a proper planning process requires an implementation plan that lays down a clear set of rules, against which citizens can plan their lives – and developers their investments – with some degree of certainty.
Instead, what we have got is pre-election spiel that attempts to hide three wasted years of government with more spin.
The reader is tantalised. There are worthy statements, such as the government “intends” that public transport’s share of Melbourne trips will double to 20 per cent by 2020. But how? Instead of choices and firm recommendations, we get politico-speak like “Possible future options are . . . facilitate . . . study . . . investigate . . . and prepare a plan”, which can all be brushed aside after the election, while VicRoads gets on with the real business of extending the road network that crowds out public transport development in the outer suburbs.
The worst aspect of the report is the adoption of the Kennett plan that allows major development to occur in 104 “activity centres” around Melbourne. This is virtually an invitation to development, wherever developers want. A decent, equitable transport system and widest possible access to the specialised services that make city living a civilised joy rather than an isolated hell depends on concentrating sub-centre or CBD-type development in no more than six centres about Melbourne.
These centres were identified in the 1950s by the late and much-lamented Melbourne and Metropolitan Board of Works (MMBW), and they still remain valid today. They are Box Hill, Frankston, Dandenong, Footscray, Preston and Moorabbin.
Planning is about choosing. The activity centres concept is about freedom of choice for developers. Planning is about picking winners and telling developers where and under what conditions they can invest.
Firm planning, backed by tough, unambiguous legislation – rather than backroom negotiation and case-by-case arbitration as exemplified by VCAT – is the best way to avoid corruption and probably leads to better planning outcomes.
The only thing Melbourne 2030 tells us is that a thoroughly politicised planning process doesn’t work in Victoria. Melbourne planning needs an arm’s-length authority along the lines of a reconstituted MMBW.

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Next Meeting

Our next meeting is planned for 7pm, Tuesday, July 18th, 2023. All welcome.  Contact DADA for address or zoom details. … [Read More...] about Next Meeting: 7pm, Tuesday July 18th, 2023

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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