Howie wrote:Has Merc on Gouger been resurrected?
From yesterday's
Adelaide Now:
China billionaire to build $150m residential and commercial development on Gouger St, Adelaide
Sarah Martin From: The Advertiser February 16, 2010 5:00PM
A CHINESE billionaire will build a $150 million residential and commercial development on the former Merc on Gouger site.
The seven-storey building, for which finance is secured, will comprise 300 apartments and 6000sq m of commercial and retail space, including a supermarket. It will also include two levels of underground car parking.
The development will be constructed on Gouger St, west of Morphett St and will be developed by Chinese property development company, TangCheng, in association with listed environmental technology company AES. Billionaire Chenghui Xu, who is one of China's most prolific developers, is the project's principal.
The Adelaide project will be Mr Xu's first Australian development.
AES managing director Gabriel Ehrenfield said the project would cost $90 million to develop, and the sale of apartments would generate $150 million revenue for the company.
Mr Ehrenfield said he hoped to have approval in place for the 33,000sq m building by early next year, and construction would commence shortly afterwards.
"Mr Xu has looked carefully for the last two to three years to find suitable sites within Australia, and he has a very good eye for real estate," Mr Ehrenfield said.
"This will be a cornerstone development for that area," he said.
Up to 300 families would move into the development, with one, two and three-bedroom apartments. The commercial and parking space will be retained by AES and leased to operators.
Mr Ehrenfield said finance for the project had been secured, and he was confident the project would proceed without any setbacks.
"The scale of the project here is certainly much smaller than the scale of the projects he (Mr Xu) has done in China so he is not daunted by the scale, or the amount of resources this project will take," he said.
Preliminary estimates indicated the project would generate $33 to $50 million profit over five years for the venture.