
Gawler’s Mayor Brian Sambell has slammed the government’s 30 year plan for Greater Adelaide.
“For Gawler, this is a plan for urban sprawl and traffic chaos”, said Mayor Sambell.
“The plan is very disappointing given the clear community message that was delivered to the State Government”
Mayor Sambell said, “The urban mass around Gawler, which will become Adelaide’s northern city, will allow the population to increase by over 500% and a 16 kilometre stretch from north to south”
“The 30 Year Plan makes it look like Gawler and Roseworthy will not be connected but this is a misrepresentation and ignores the area is already used for residential, education and industry purposes”.
Mayor Sambell has pointed out “The Draft Plan had specific proposals for higher density along rail corridors, provision for road transport infrastructure, and green spaces, including between Gawler and Roseworthy. These have disappeared”
“Improved public transport is good, but it will not replace car use in a regional city. There will be at least 38,000 new households in and around new Gawler City. This is more than 300,000 extra vehicle movements each day. Unlike some other parts of the Plan for Adelaide, no transport plan is provided.”
Greens MLC and Planning Lawyer Mark Parnell has also said that “the release of the final version of the 30 year Plan for Greater Adelaide under the cover of the Southern Expressway announcement is a strong pointer to the lack of consultation and backward thinking in the document”.
“For a document that is supposed to be the key driver of development changes in Adelaide over the next three decades, the lack of public input is a disgrace,” said Mr Parnell.
“The Government had to be dragged kicking and screaming to publish the public submissions, they refuse to release key background documents asked for by the planning industry, and now they release the final version of the Plan under the cover of today’s Southern Expressway announcement,” he said.
The draft 30 year Plan, released in July, attracted controversy for the over-inflated population targets far above ABS projections. These remain in the final version.
The Plan reinforces that less than a quarter of new dwellings (60,000 of 258,000) will be built in Transit Orientated Developments (TODs). Instead, 48% of all new houses (124,000) are planned for the urban fringe. The much vaunted 70:30 split between infill and urban fringe development will only be achieved ‘in the last years of the Plan period’.
“The simple fact remains this Plan will guarantee an increase in Adelaide’s urban sprawl. Half of all new houses are planned for the urban edges,” said Mr Parnell.
Another major concern is that three of the major areas regarded as ‘urban expansion priorities’: Buckland Park, Roseworthy and Mt Barker are associated with the planning consultants given the job by the Government to identify future housing land.
“Big questions about conflict of interest remain. The question the Greens continue to ask is: in whose interest has this Plan been developed – big developers or the community?”