Just build it wrote:Bye Union Hall. I'll see you in another life, when we are both cats.
Just build it wrote:Bye Union Hall. I'll see you in another life, when we are both cats.


baytram366 wrote:A very sad day for Adelaide. While I didn't get time to go back and have another look before the demolition team moved in, I did find the photos I took in March this year. So now its Union Hall, what "older, useless" building will be next? Perhaps we should demolish the railway station or the town hall because we have no need for such a large station or we have out grown the town hall??
Why don't we just replace everything with dull glass towers that have no character at all? I work in one and they are not even energy effcient but thats another rant for another day...
stumpjumper wrote:It's interesting that Lavinia Emmett-Grey, last year's Adelaide University Union president refused to oppose demolition of the uni's only decent theatre.
Her argument was that students needed more space. She said that law students are sitting on the floor during lectures. I discussed the demolition with Lavinia last year, but I could not make sense of her argument.
The new building, the 7000 sqm Institute for Photonics and Advanced Sensing, adds a new facet to the university's activities. Its work is closely tied to the Defence Science Technology Organisation and its floor space will not be open to students in general. It won't get the law students off the floor.
I asked Lavinia if she was happy about losing the potential contribution to university life of a 500 seat theatre of professional standard on campus, and she replied that if I was so concerned about campus culture where was I when voluntary student unionism slashed Adelaide University Union's income from $4.5 million per year to $500,000, and what had I done about the fact that 80% of students had to work to stay above the Henderson Poverty Line?
I replied that VSU and student incomes were not relevant to the amenity provided by a theatre on campus, and she responded by saying that with the uni growing at 1000 students per year extra space was vital.
I said that the IPAS was mainly for research and would only cater for a few students, so it wouldn't relieve the crowding much.
Lavinia then accused me of being a typical Save The Union Hall guy - opposed to change, opposed to the growth of the University of Adelaide and to foreign students who comprised much of the growth, and with a bourgeois preoccupation with traditional theatre to boot.
All I could say was that I rejected all those charges, and that a lot of students had signed a petition to keep the hall. Many were members of uni theatre groups, but many weren't, and as far as I knew there was no corresponding pressure from students in general for demolition, just from the Union President.
Lavinia accused me of using the issue as a way of bashing foreign students.
WTF! I thought. I gave up and I left without getting any closer to her reasons for so strongly supporting demolition.
Now, I have some sort of answer, I think.
The new research institute was funded by the federal government ($29 million) and the state government ($5 million).
When Lavinia Emmett-Grey left uni at the end of 2010, she went for a brief period to the Department of Premier and Cabinet, then to a job as an advocate for the Australian Services Union.
I began to see some logic in her position on Union Hall.
'Do a good job muffling any student opposition to demolition of Union Hall, because it makes it easier, and cheaper, to build this ISAP.'
Lavinia wasn't prepared to bite the hand that she hoped would soon feed her. She was prepared to put her personal interest ahead of the interests of the students she supposedly represented, and who paid her Union President's salary.
That sort of behaviour might win the 'whatever it takes' award for political ruthlessness, but I understood that the ALP was trying to find people who were interested in their constituents as well as in wanting power.
It will be interesting to watch Ms Emmett-Grey's career.

Atd wrote
To your first sentence: What about Scott Theatre? I would have thought that would have been held in higher regard.
To the rest of your post: Are you trying to say that as this student rep agreed with the development, and the student rep is of poor standing, the development therefore is of poor standing? What is the point of that story other than to slander the student rep?
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