[COM] 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

All high-rise, low-rise and street developments in the Adelaide and North Adelaide areas.
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notmichaeljfox
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | ~65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#106 Post by notmichaeljfox » Sat Jan 09, 2021 3:00 pm

Jaymz wrote:
Mon Jan 04, 2021 9:13 pm
Well if that is true then it's very unfortunate. Another Govt. agency having to anchor a building just to get it off the ground.
You make it sound like they are being forced. :D Services Australia has tenancies in several buildings in/around the CBD, from the days when orgs like Medicare were separate entities. This move consolidates their back of house staff to one location, and has been years in the making.

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#107 Post by gnrc_louis » Sat Jan 09, 2021 9:46 pm

There is a paywalled advertiser article about this development and the hotel further up King William if someone could please post.

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Ho Really
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#108 Post by Ho Really » Sat Jan 09, 2021 10:13 pm

Your wish is my command...
Developers pouring millions into North Terrace

One of Adelaide’s most historic streets remains a premier target for builders, figures obtained by The Advertiser show.
Renato Castello
@Rencastello
January 9, 2021 - 4:26PM
The Messenger

With its wide promenades, grand cultural buildings fringing the Parklands and mix of old and new architecture, North Tce is Adelaide’s premier boulevard.

And it’s also the city’s development hotspot according to near year-ending development approval data held by Adelaide City Council.

There were 688 applications worth nearly $600m approved to the end of November 2020, with 52 of those projects sited on North Tce and valued at $235m.

The month with the highest value of approvals across Adelaide and North Adelaide was June with 56 projects valued at $161.5m.

Developers lodged 964 projects with the council and state commission assessment panel to November 30 last year, according to council figures supplied to The Advertiser.

Those projects were collectively worth $1.376bn, up from $981.47m for the 2019 calendar year, when 1192 projects were lodged for the city.

The figures do however contain applications which had secured extensions to the approvals.

Among projects underway in North Tce include the $100m GSA Australia’s student tower on the corner of Frome St and North Tce and another $30m student housing block at 203 North Tce, which involves renovating a state heritage-listed warehouse.

Property Council SA executive director Daniel Gannon said confidence was lifting across the property sector despite the COVID pandemic.

“SA’s investment market has a lot going for it, including no stamp duty on commercial property transactions which is providing a really big attractor for outside investors,” he said.

“2021 is looking cautiously optimistic given the influx of investors and recent purchases in the CBD.”

Adelaide City Council Lord Mayor Sandy Verschoor said it was fantastic to see increased private investment in the city.

“This clearly demonstrates the high level of confidence business has in Adelaide as a smart, globally-connected and innovative city that is a great place to live, work and play,” she said.

Year/Applications/Value

2017/1215/$740,332,068

2018/1339/$1,262,905,823

2019/1192/$981,469,147

2020/964/$1,376,423,084

RECENTLY COMPLETED

Adelaide Casino, North Tce

Cost: $330m

Developer: SkyCity

The nine-level expansion of the existing casino opened its doors last month after a two-and-a-half year construction program. The curved design and reflective gold glazing is unlike any other project in SA. The project includes new five-star hotel Eos, restaurants, bars, gaming rooms, conference centre and a $5500 a night suite, SA’s most expensive.

Hotel Indigo, Market St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Primefield Property

The IGH Group’s second hotel in Adelaide (it also operates the bigger Crowne Plaza hotel in the Adelaidean tower on Frome St) has 137 rooms and is scheduled to open in February.

Wingfold Tower, 114-122 Waymouth St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Wingfold Holdings

A project that has been a painful birth after previous owners went broke. Originally planned as residential apartments now opens as a serviced apartment building with ground floor retail and restaurant.

20 Toms Court

Cost: N/A

Developer: Karidis Corporation

A 48m-high serviced and short-stay apartment development on a narrow block. Completed in August. It will next month become SA’s dedicated COVID-19 facility for infectious patients.

02-120 Wakefield St

Cost: $70m

Developer: Kyren Group

A 14-storey office tower providing about 14,000 sqm of accommodation was completed in June. Rare project in that no tenants were secured prior to construction.

250 East Tce

Cost: N/A

Developer: 250 East Pty Ltd and Pajo Projects

Luxury apartment development overlooking Victoria Park and the Mt Lofty Ranges. Was beset with lengthy delays after work started in 2016.

Belvedere on Park, South Tce

Cost: $10m

Developer: Australia CPB Investments

Six storey apartment complex overlooking the Parklands.

NEARLY THERE

Luminesque/Sofitel, 108 Currie St

Cost: $140m

Developer: Palumbo

Est completion: 2021

Financed by SA owned company Palumbo this apartment and hotel building has given some added height and prestige to a rather dull part of the city. The 32-storey building was topped out in August and will include Adelaide’s first Sofitel hotel and fist internationally recognised five-star hotel to be built in Adelaide in 30 years. The building is due to open for business in 2021, adding 257 hotel rooms to the market.

Penny Place apartments (off Angas St)

Cost: $48m

Developer: Flagship Property Holdings

Est completion: 2021

A neighbour to its sister apartment building Kodo, next to the Federal Court building, Penny Place is expected to begin welcoming residents from mid-2021. The 24-storey building with 152 apartments was topped out in October and all one-bedroom apartments sold out in June.

UNDER WAY

Global Student Accommodation Australia, North Tce

Cost: $100m

Developer: GSA Australia

Est completion: 2022

Construction of what will be among Adelaide’s tallest buildings is progressing with speed.

SA contractor Synergy Construct hit level 18 of the 36-storey building in early December and is expecting to top out on the building in the first half of 2021.

The 118m tall building with a head-turning ‘skeleton’ concrete facade is expected to be completed in 2022 welcoming international students into one of its 725 beds.

203 North Tce, student accommodation

Cost: $30m

Developer: 203 North Tce Pty Ltd

Est completion: 2022

SA contractor Synergy Construct is also building this 115m tall student tower, which also involves retaining and restoring the facade of an existing State Heritage listed 1878 warehouse associated with merchant firm G & R Wills and Co.

The 35-storey tower will have 367 beds and is expected to be topped out in the second-half of 2021 and be completed the following year.

73-85 Pirie St

Cost: $300m

Developer: CBUS Property

Est completion: 2022

The former Planet Nightclub building has been reduced to rubble and will be replaced by a modern 20-storey office tower. Staff from the Infrastructure and Transport Department will occupy 10 floors of the building, with construction to begin early this year.

SAHMRI 2 (Australian Bragg Centre), North Tce, Adelaide

Cost: $500m

Developer: Commercial & General

Est completion: August 2023

The crane is up so expect to see work begin apace this year on this companion to the original SAHMRI building located next door.

The 12-storey building will house Australia’s first proton therapy unit and was originally forecast for a 2022 completion date.

COMING SOONER OR LATER

56 King William St

Cost: $470m

Developer: Charter Hall

Est completion: TBA

The biggest office development in Adelaide, ever, according to the Property Council’s Daniel Gannon. Charter Hall secured planning consent in November for a 15-storey office tower to replace the existing Southern Cross Arcade. The project will include retaining and restoring the state heritage listed facade of the former Sands & McDougall building.

Quest North Tce, 100 North Tce

Cost: $18m

Developer: BYLD

Est completion: TBA

The 17-storey serviced apartment building opposite the Adelaide Convention Centre will have 127 apartments and incorporate the existing Art Deco facade of the 1920s Metters Building. Again, construction timelines contingent on refining the design to the satisfaction of the state planning commission.

Hyatt Regency Adelaide, 51 Pirie St

Cost: $160m

Developer: CEL Australia

Est completion: 2023

Where others have retained heritage, this project sacrifices a 1920s locally-heritage listed bank facade for a 21-storey 285-room five-star hotel, which will be mark Hyatt’s return to Adelaide. Company director Robert Lee anticipates construction to begin first-half of 2021 pending final design documentation.

Festival Plaza tower, Festival Plaza, Adelaide

Cost: $600m

Developer: Walker Corporation

Est completion: TBA

The 27-storey tower, initially approved in 2016, has been redesigned four times, the latest changes approved in November. Work is now underway on the imposing landmark, which will occupy a slab of public land.

Westin GPO Hotel, King William St

Cost: $200m

Developer: Greaton

Est completion: 2022 and beyond

The first Westin hotel in Adelaide was initially approved in May 2018. Subsequent variations have been approved for the 285-room 15-storey project. Consent for demolition works to begin were granted in May 2020 but have been put on hold in light of COVID. It is unclear when work will begin.

Wyndham Hotel, King William St

Cost: $150m

Developer: Equinox Property

Est completion: 2024

Topping out at 120m, this slender building will occupy a small corner block replacing the old Adelaide Metro office. It will include 347 rooms, an infinity pool, day spa, fitness centre, rooftop restaurant and sky bar facing the Adelaide Hills.

Central Market Arcade

Cost: $400m

Developer: ICD Property

Est Completion: TBA

A partnership with Adelaide City Council involves construction of 11,200 sqm of retail space, new food hall, childcare centre and a tower with 5000 sqm of office space. Behind this is a 38-story tower with a 249-room hotel and up to 210 apartments.

Construction slated to start in 2021.

62 Currie St

Cost: $180m

Developer: Axiom Properties

Completion: TBA

Boutique hotel operator QT Hotels has agreed to manage 200 rooms in the 23-level tower, which also includes office space. SA-based Axiom Properties general manager Paul Rouvray said the company hoped to start construction this year.

“But it really depends on what happens with COVID and the resulting border /travelling restrictions. We need some confidence here before committing,” he said.
Cheers
Confucius say: Dumb man climb tree to get cherry, wise man spread limbs.

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gnrc_louis
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Posts: 870
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#109 Post by gnrc_louis » Sat Jan 09, 2021 11:25 pm

Ho Really wrote:
Sat Jan 09, 2021 10:13 pm
Your wish is my command...
Developers pouring millions into North Terrace

One of Adelaide’s most historic streets remains a premier target for builders, figures obtained by The Advertiser show.
Renato Castello
@Rencastello
January 9, 2021 - 4:26PM
The Messenger

With its wide promenades, grand cultural buildings fringing the Parklands and mix of old and new architecture, North Tce is Adelaide’s premier boulevard.

And it’s also the city’s development hotspot according to near year-ending development approval data held by Adelaide City Council.

There were 688 applications worth nearly $600m approved to the end of November 2020, with 52 of those projects sited on North Tce and valued at $235m.

The month with the highest value of approvals across Adelaide and North Adelaide was June with 56 projects valued at $161.5m.

Developers lodged 964 projects with the council and state commission assessment panel to November 30 last year, according to council figures supplied to The Advertiser.

Those projects were collectively worth $1.376bn, up from $981.47m for the 2019 calendar year, when 1192 projects were lodged for the city.

The figures do however contain applications which had secured extensions to the approvals.

Among projects underway in North Tce include the $100m GSA Australia’s student tower on the corner of Frome St and North Tce and another $30m student housing block at 203 North Tce, which involves renovating a state heritage-listed warehouse.

Property Council SA executive director Daniel Gannon said confidence was lifting across the property sector despite the COVID pandemic.

“SA’s investment market has a lot going for it, including no stamp duty on commercial property transactions which is providing a really big attractor for outside investors,” he said.

“2021 is looking cautiously optimistic given the influx of investors and recent purchases in the CBD.”

Adelaide City Council Lord Mayor Sandy Verschoor said it was fantastic to see increased private investment in the city.

“This clearly demonstrates the high level of confidence business has in Adelaide as a smart, globally-connected and innovative city that is a great place to live, work and play,” she said.

Year/Applications/Value

2017/1215/$740,332,068

2018/1339/$1,262,905,823

2019/1192/$981,469,147

2020/964/$1,376,423,084

RECENTLY COMPLETED

Adelaide Casino, North Tce

Cost: $330m

Developer: SkyCity

The nine-level expansion of the existing casino opened its doors last month after a two-and-a-half year construction program. The curved design and reflective gold glazing is unlike any other project in SA. The project includes new five-star hotel Eos, restaurants, bars, gaming rooms, conference centre and a $5500 a night suite, SA’s most expensive.

Hotel Indigo, Market St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Primefield Property

The IGH Group’s second hotel in Adelaide (it also operates the bigger Crowne Plaza hotel in the Adelaidean tower on Frome St) has 137 rooms and is scheduled to open in February.

Wingfold Tower, 114-122 Waymouth St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Wingfold Holdings

A project that has been a painful birth after previous owners went broke. Originally planned as residential apartments now opens as a serviced apartment building with ground floor retail and restaurant.

20 Toms Court

Cost: N/A

Developer: Karidis Corporation

A 48m-high serviced and short-stay apartment development on a narrow block. Completed in August. It will next month become SA’s dedicated COVID-19 facility for infectious patients.

02-120 Wakefield St

Cost: $70m

Developer: Kyren Group

A 14-storey office tower providing about 14,000 sqm of accommodation was completed in June. Rare project in that no tenants were secured prior to construction.

250 East Tce

Cost: N/A

Developer: 250 East Pty Ltd and Pajo Projects

Luxury apartment development overlooking Victoria Park and the Mt Lofty Ranges. Was beset with lengthy delays after work started in 2016.

Belvedere on Park, South Tce

Cost: $10m

Developer: Australia CPB Investments

Six storey apartment complex overlooking the Parklands.

NEARLY THERE

Luminesque/Sofitel, 108 Currie St

Cost: $140m

Developer: Palumbo

Est completion: 2021

Financed by SA owned company Palumbo this apartment and hotel building has given some added height and prestige to a rather dull part of the city. The 32-storey building was topped out in August and will include Adelaide’s first Sofitel hotel and fist internationally recognised five-star hotel to be built in Adelaide in 30 years. The building is due to open for business in 2021, adding 257 hotel rooms to the market.

Penny Place apartments (off Angas St)

Cost: $48m

Developer: Flagship Property Holdings

Est completion: 2021

A neighbour to its sister apartment building Kodo, next to the Federal Court building, Penny Place is expected to begin welcoming residents from mid-2021. The 24-storey building with 152 apartments was topped out in October and all one-bedroom apartments sold out in June.

UNDER WAY

Global Student Accommodation Australia, North Tce

Cost: $100m

Developer: GSA Australia

Est completion: 2022

Construction of what will be among Adelaide’s tallest buildings is progressing with speed.

SA contractor Synergy Construct hit level 18 of the 36-storey building in early December and is expecting to top out on the building in the first half of 2021.

The 118m tall building with a head-turning ‘skeleton’ concrete facade is expected to be completed in 2022 welcoming international students into one of its 725 beds.

203 North Tce, student accommodation

Cost: $30m

Developer: 203 North Tce Pty Ltd

Est completion: 2022

SA contractor Synergy Construct is also building this 115m tall student tower, which also involves retaining and restoring the facade of an existing State Heritage listed 1878 warehouse associated with merchant firm G & R Wills and Co.

The 35-storey tower will have 367 beds and is expected to be topped out in the second-half of 2021 and be completed the following year.

73-85 Pirie St

Cost: $300m

Developer: CBUS Property

Est completion: 2022

The former Planet Nightclub building has been reduced to rubble and will be replaced by a modern 20-storey office tower. Staff from the Infrastructure and Transport Department will occupy 10 floors of the building, with construction to begin early this year.

SAHMRI 2 (Australian Bragg Centre), North Tce, Adelaide

Cost: $500m

Developer: Commercial & General

Est completion: August 2023

The crane is up so expect to see work begin apace this year on this companion to the original SAHMRI building located next door.

The 12-storey building will house Australia’s first proton therapy unit and was originally forecast for a 2022 completion date.

COMING SOONER OR LATER

56 King William St

Cost: $470m

Developer: Charter Hall

Est completion: TBA

The biggest office development in Adelaide, ever, according to the Property Council’s Daniel Gannon. Charter Hall secured planning consent in November for a 15-storey office tower to replace the existing Southern Cross Arcade. The project will include retaining and restoring the state heritage listed facade of the former Sands & McDougall building.

Quest North Tce, 100 North Tce

Cost: $18m

Developer: BYLD

Est completion: TBA

The 17-storey serviced apartment building opposite the Adelaide Convention Centre will have 127 apartments and incorporate the existing Art Deco facade of the 1920s Metters Building. Again, construction timelines contingent on refining the design to the satisfaction of the state planning commission.

Hyatt Regency Adelaide, 51 Pirie St

Cost: $160m

Developer: CEL Australia

Est completion: 2023

Where others have retained heritage, this project sacrifices a 1920s locally-heritage listed bank facade for a 21-storey 285-room five-star hotel, which will be mark Hyatt’s return to Adelaide. Company director Robert Lee anticipates construction to begin first-half of 2021 pending final design documentation.

Festival Plaza tower, Festival Plaza, Adelaide

Cost: $600m

Developer: Walker Corporation

Est completion: TBA

The 27-storey tower, initially approved in 2016, has been redesigned four times, the latest changes approved in November. Work is now underway on the imposing landmark, which will occupy a slab of public land.

Westin GPO Hotel, King William St

Cost: $200m

Developer: Greaton

Est completion: 2022 and beyond

The first Westin hotel in Adelaide was initially approved in May 2018. Subsequent variations have been approved for the 285-room 15-storey project. Consent for demolition works to begin were granted in May 2020 but have been put on hold in light of COVID. It is unclear when work will begin.

Wyndham Hotel, King William St

Cost: $150m

Developer: Equinox Property

Est completion: 2024

Topping out at 120m, this slender building will occupy a small corner block replacing the old Adelaide Metro office. It will include 347 rooms, an infinity pool, day spa, fitness centre, rooftop restaurant and sky bar facing the Adelaide Hills.

Central Market Arcade

Cost: $400m

Developer: ICD Property

Est Completion: TBA

A partnership with Adelaide City Council involves construction of 11,200 sqm of retail space, new food hall, childcare centre and a tower with 5000 sqm of office space. Behind this is a 38-story tower with a 249-room hotel and up to 210 apartments.

Construction slated to start in 2021.

62 Currie St

Cost: $180m

Developer: Axiom Properties

Completion: TBA

Boutique hotel operator QT Hotels has agreed to manage 200 rooms in the 23-level tower, which also includes office space. SA-based Axiom Properties general manager Paul Rouvray said the company hoped to start construction this year.

“But it really depends on what happens with COVID and the resulting border /travelling restrictions. We need some confidence here before committing,” he said.
Cheers
Perfect - thanks. Off topic, but if 203 North Tce, student accommodation actually only costs $30m to build, that is not going to turn out well.

citywatcher
Legendary Member!
Posts: 866
Joined: Sun Jul 15, 2007 5:51 pm

[COM] Re: [APP] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#110 Post by citywatcher » Sun Jan 10, 2021 6:59 am

gnrc_louis wrote:
Ho Really wrote:
Sat Jan 09, 2021 10:13 pm
Your wish is my command...
Developers pouring millions into North Terrace

One of Adelaide’s most historic streets remains a premier target for builders, figures obtained by The Advertiser show.
Renato Castello
@Rencastello
January 9, 2021 - 4:26PM
The Messenger

With its wide promenades, grand cultural buildings fringing the Parklands and mix of old and new architecture, North Tce is Adelaide’s premier boulevard.

And it’s also the city’s development hotspot according to near year-ending development approval data held by Adelaide City Council.

There were 688 applications worth nearly $600m approved to the end of November 2020, with 52 of those projects sited on North Tce and valued at $235m.

The month with the highest value of approvals across Adelaide and North Adelaide was June with 56 projects valued at $161.5m.

Developers lodged 964 projects with the council and state commission assessment panel to November 30 last year, according to council figures supplied to The Advertiser.

Those projects were collectively worth $1.376bn, up from $981.47m for the 2019 calendar year, when 1192 projects were lodged for the city.

The figures do however contain applications which had secured extensions to the approvals.

Among projects underway in North Tce include the $100m GSA Australia’s student tower on the corner of Frome St and North Tce and another $30m student housing block at 203 North Tce, which involves renovating a state heritage-listed warehouse.

Property Council SA executive director Daniel Gannon said confidence was lifting across the property sector despite the COVID pandemic.

“SA’s investment market has a lot going for it, including no stamp duty on commercial property transactions which is providing a really big attractor for outside investors,” he said.

“2021 is looking cautiously optimistic given the influx of investors and recent purchases in the CBD.”

Adelaide City Council Lord Mayor Sandy Verschoor said it was fantastic to see increased private investment in the city.

“This clearly demonstrates the high level of confidence business has in Adelaide as a smart, globally-connected and innovative city that is a great place to live, work and play,” she said.

Year/Applications/Value

2017/1215/$740,332,068

2018/1339/$1,262,905,823

2019/1192/$981,469,147

2020/964/$1,376,423,084

RECENTLY COMPLETED

Adelaide Casino, North Tce

Cost: $330m

Developer: SkyCity

The nine-level expansion of the existing casino opened its doors last month after a two-and-a-half year construction program. The curved design and reflective gold glazing is unlike any other project in SA. The project includes new five-star hotel Eos, restaurants, bars, gaming rooms, conference centre and a $5500 a night suite, SA’s most expensive.

Hotel Indigo, Market St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Primefield Property

The IGH Group’s second hotel in Adelaide (it also operates the bigger Crowne Plaza hotel in the Adelaidean tower on Frome St) has 137 rooms and is scheduled to open in February.

Wingfold Tower, 114-122 Waymouth St

Cost: $60m

Developer: Wingfold Holdings

A project that has been a painful birth after previous owners went broke. Originally planned as residential apartments now opens as a serviced apartment building with ground floor retail and restaurant.

20 Toms Court

Cost: N/A

Developer: Karidis Corporation

A 48m-high serviced and short-stay apartment development on a narrow block. Completed in August. It will next month become SA’s dedicated COVID-19 facility for infectious patients.

02-120 Wakefield St

Cost: $70m

Developer: Kyren Group

A 14-storey office tower providing about 14,000 sqm of accommodation was completed in June. Rare project in that no tenants were secured prior to construction.

250 East Tce

Cost: N/A

Developer: 250 East Pty Ltd and Pajo Projects

Luxury apartment development overlooking Victoria Park and the Mt Lofty Ranges. Was beset with lengthy delays after work started in 2016.

Belvedere on Park, South Tce

Cost: $10m

Developer: Australia CPB Investments

Six storey apartment complex overlooking the Parklands.

NEARLY THERE

Luminesque/Sofitel, 108 Currie St

Cost: $140m

Developer: Palumbo

Est completion: 2021

Financed by SA owned company Palumbo this apartment and hotel building has given some added height and prestige to a rather dull part of the city. The 32-storey building was topped out in August and will include Adelaide’s first Sofitel hotel and fist internationally recognised five-star hotel to be built in Adelaide in 30 years. The building is due to open for business in 2021, adding 257 hotel rooms to the market.

Penny Place apartments (off Angas St)

Cost: $48m

Developer: Flagship Property Holdings

Est completion: 2021

A neighbour to its sister apartment building Kodo, next to the Federal Court building, Penny Place is expected to begin welcoming residents from mid-2021. The 24-storey building with 152 apartments was topped out in October and all one-bedroom apartments sold out in June.

UNDER WAY

Global Student Accommodation Australia, North Tce

Cost: $100m

Developer: GSA Australia

Est completion: 2022

Construction of what will be among Adelaide’s tallest buildings is progressing with speed.

SA contractor Synergy Construct hit level 18 of the 36-storey building in early December and is expecting to top out on the building in the first half of 2021.

The 118m tall building with a head-turning ‘skeleton’ concrete facade is expected to be completed in 2022 welcoming international students into one of its 725 beds.

203 North Tce, student accommodation

Cost: $30m

Developer: 203 North Tce Pty Ltd

Est completion: 2022

SA contractor Synergy Construct is also building this 115m tall student tower, which also involves retaining and restoring the facade of an existing State Heritage listed 1878 warehouse associated with merchant firm G & R Wills and Co.

The 35-storey tower will have 367 beds and is expected to be topped out in the second-half of 2021 and be completed the following year.

73-85 Pirie St

Cost: $300m

Developer: CBUS Property

Est completion: 2022

The former Planet Nightclub building has been reduced to rubble and will be replaced by a modern 20-storey office tower. Staff from the Infrastructure and Transport Department will occupy 10 floors of the building, with construction to begin early this year.

SAHMRI 2 (Australian Bragg Centre), North Tce, Adelaide

Cost: $500m

Developer: Commercial & General

Est completion: August 2023

The crane is up so expect to see work begin apace this year on this companion to the original SAHMRI building located next door.

The 12-storey building will house Australia’s first proton therapy unit and was originally forecast for a 2022 completion date.

COMING SOONER OR LATER

56 King William St

Cost: $470m

Developer: Charter Hall

Est completion: TBA

The biggest office development in Adelaide, ever, according to the Property Council’s Daniel Gannon. Charter Hall secured planning consent in November for a 15-storey office tower to replace the existing Southern Cross Arcade. The project will include retaining and restoring the state heritage listed facade of the former Sands & McDougall building.

Quest North Tce, 100 North Tce

Cost: $18m

Developer: BYLD

Est completion: TBA

The 17-storey serviced apartment building opposite the Adelaide Convention Centre will have 127 apartments and incorporate the existing Art Deco facade of the 1920s Metters Building. Again, construction timelines contingent on refining the design to the satisfaction of the state planning commission.

Hyatt Regency Adelaide, 51 Pirie St

Cost: $160m

Developer: CEL Australia

Est completion: 2023

Where others have retained heritage, this project sacrifices a 1920s locally-heritage listed bank facade for a 21-storey 285-room five-star hotel, which will be mark Hyatt’s return to Adelaide. Company director Robert Lee anticipates construction to begin first-half of 2021 pending final design documentation.

Festival Plaza tower, Festival Plaza, Adelaide

Cost: $600m

Developer: Walker Corporation

Est completion: TBA

The 27-storey tower, initially approved in 2016, has been redesigned four times, the latest changes approved in November. Work is now underway on the imposing landmark, which will occupy a slab of public land.

Westin GPO Hotel, King William St

Cost: $200m

Developer: Greaton

Est completion: 2022 and beyond

The first Westin hotel in Adelaide was initially approved in May 2018. Subsequent variations have been approved for the 285-room 15-storey project. Consent for demolition works to begin were granted in May 2020 but have been put on hold in light of COVID. It is unclear when work will begin.

Wyndham Hotel, King William St

Cost: $150m

Developer: Equinox Property

Est completion: 2024

Topping out at 120m, this slender building will occupy a small corner block replacing the old Adelaide Metro office. It will include 347 rooms, an infinity pool, day spa, fitness centre, rooftop restaurant and sky bar facing the Adelaide Hills.

Central Market Arcade

Cost: $400m

Developer: ICD Property

Est Completion: TBA

A partnership with Adelaide City Council involves construction of 11,200 sqm of retail space, new food hall, childcare centre and a tower with 5000 sqm of office space. Behind this is a 38-story tower with a 249-room hotel and up to 210 apartments.

Construction slated to start in 2021.

62 Currie St

Cost: $180m

Developer: Axiom Properties

Completion: TBA

Boutique hotel operator QT Hotels has agreed to manage 200 rooms in the 23-level tower, which also includes office space. SA-based Axiom Properties general manager Paul Rouvray said the company hoped to start construction this year.

“But it really depends on what happens with COVID and the resulting border /travelling restrictions. We need some confidence here before committing,” he said.
Cheers
Perfect - thanks. Off topic, but if 203 North Tce, student accommodation actually only costs $30m to build, that is not going to turn out well.
Was thinking same. I think it will be several years before some of these go ahead and maybe one or two never will.
The article says SAHMRI 2 crane is up but I think only the base is in ?

Sent from my SM-A515F using Tapatalk


Ben
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#111 Post by Ben » Sun Jan 10, 2021 9:40 am

The council were chopping down the mature plane trees in front of this site this morning :shock:

Patrick_27
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#112 Post by Patrick_27 » Sun Jan 10, 2021 11:53 am

Surely $30m isn't the correct amount for that building? They would really have to be skimping out to get anywhere near that figure...

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#113 Post by SRW » Sun Jan 10, 2021 10:19 pm

Ben wrote:
Sun Jan 10, 2021 9:40 am
The council were chopping down the mature plane trees in front of this site this morning :shock:
If it's for access, that's crazy! This site is huge, surely they could have arranged egress to keep the trees.
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#114 Post by Ben » Mon Jan 11, 2021 11:59 am

Tommy Guns is closing this Saturday.

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#115 Post by Nort » Tue Jan 12, 2021 9:16 am

SRW wrote:
Sun Jan 10, 2021 10:19 pm
Ben wrote:
Sun Jan 10, 2021 9:40 am
The council were chopping down the mature plane trees in front of this site this morning :shock:
If it's for access, that's crazy! This site is huge, surely they could have arranged egress to keep the trees.
Probably planned all along, the renders feature no trees on the street in front of it.

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#116 Post by SRW » Tue Jan 12, 2021 3:43 pm

Nort wrote:
Tue Jan 12, 2021 9:16 am
SRW wrote:
Sun Jan 10, 2021 10:19 pm
Ben wrote:
Sun Jan 10, 2021 9:40 am
The council were chopping down the mature plane trees in front of this site this morning :shock:
If it's for access, that's crazy! This site is huge, surely they could have arranged egress to keep the trees.
Probably planned all along, the renders feature no trees on the street in front of it.
I suspect you'll find that was simply for rendering's sake. Council bylaws usually require the reinstatement of street trees and any council infrastructure (e.g. footpaths) following building works. Same thing happened when 374-400 KWS was built, but obviously it's a shame to lose mature trees.
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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#117 Post by prometheus2704 » Wed Jan 13, 2021 2:17 pm

So my office is going to have a great view of the construction of this new building (see attached), but I've got some dates (18/01/2021 to 18/02/2021)and details of establishment works:

King William Street
  • 64-68 King William Street - Single street lane closure & pedestrians diverted off footpath
  • 64-68 King William - Overhead protection gantry installed to pedestrian walkways[
  • 64-68 - Soft stripping works
  • 64 King William - External canopy removal
James Place
  • 23-27 James PLace - Overhead protection gantry installation (night works)
  • 23-27 James Place Internal soft stripping works
Imperial Lane
  • Imperial Lane carpark will be closed 18/01/21
  • Trucks will be entering and exiting through Imperial Lane to Grenfell Street
Attachments
initial construction letter.jpg
20210113_140635.jpg
20210113_140806.jpg

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#118 Post by Will » Wed Jan 13, 2021 10:32 pm

From theurbandeveloper.com:
Charter Hall Acquires Adelaide Commercial Assets for $51m

ASX-listed real estate fund manager Charter Hall has furthered its push into South Australia, snapping up two Adelaide office buildings for $51 million.

The group has purchased 60 Wakefield Street and 21 Divett Place, both currently leased to the state government and linked by a fourth-level footbridge, creating a significant 4,500sq m landholding in the core of the CBD.

The six-level 60 Wakefield Street building is set on a site area of 3,200sq m and includes a ground floor entrance, four upper levels of office space as well as a basement car park for 35 cars.

The 10-level 21 Divett Place building, located immediately northeast, spans 9,600sq m of commercial space across a site area of 1,300sq m and includes eight levels of office space, a basement, two plant room levels and eight open car parks.

The precinct is currently home to the South Australian Department of Education and Child Development, State Administration Centre, Santos, IAG, SA Police Headquarters and the Metropolitan Fire Service.

The sale process, negotiated by Savills Australia’s Rino Carpinelli on behalf of local investment firm 1835 Capital, was finalised in an off-market tender process reflecting a yield of 6.44 per cent.

“The buildings are located in the state’s premier business district, on one of Adelaide’s main east-west thoroughfares,” Carpinelli said.

“[The location] enjoys the highest concentration of office, retail, mixed business, cultural, public administration, hospitality, educational and tourist activities.



“In particular, the nearby Victoria Square is currently undergoing a significant upgrade by the Adelaide city council and is envisaged to become Adelaide’s premier meeting place.”

The Adelaide CBD, which gradually reopened in late-May following the end of national lockdown restrictions, has experienced minimal disruption as a result of Covid-19, with resilience across its office markets compared to the other states.

Over the third quarter of the year, the Adelaide CBD recorded -10,200sq m of net absorption while its headline vacancy rate increased by 0.6 percentage points to 15.4 per cent over the three months to September.

Confidence across South Australia’s commercial property sector has also continued to gain momentum, increasing for the second consecutive quarter, according to the latest Property Council survey.

Industry confidence in South Australia rose 12 points to 98 for the December quarter, where a score of 100 is considered neutral.

Transactions have remained somewhat subdued, with Knight Frank’s latest CBD office market report confirming sales activity in Adelaide has slowed significantly since March.

A total of $351 million worth of properties have been sold in the CBD so far this year, down 21 per cent on the same time last year.

Despite this, yields continued to compress, tightening to be around 5.5 per cent for prime CBD properties.

Last month, Charter Hall quietly picked up one of the city’s largest pre-commitments, with Services Australia, a federal agency that delivers Medicare, Centrelink and child support payments and services, for its 15-storey office tower at King William Street.

Upwards of 28,000sq m of the 40,000sq m development, on the site of the Southern Cross Arcade complex, will be taken by the government agency which will consolidate its five Adelaide sites into one space in 2023
.
seems

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#119 Post by cmet » Wed Jan 13, 2021 10:56 pm

Great news. CH are a genuine top tier developer

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[COM] Re: 52-66 King William Street | 65m | 15 Levels | Southern Cross Arcade

#120 Post by Uncle Monty » Fri Jan 22, 2021 1:26 pm

Some early work has commenced, ‘Built’ signage up, and pedestrians are diverted off the footpath and on to KW Rd around the southern end of the site.

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