Professor Ken Maher says bickering hinders Adelaide
Article from: The Advertiser
* Font size: Decrease Increase
* Email article: Email
* Print article: Print
* Submit comment: Submit comment
MATT WILLIAMS, CITY EDITOR
March 26, 2009 08:55am
MINDLESS bickering is hindering Adelaide's chance of becoming a great world city, Australia's top architect has warned.
Professor Ken Maher, credited with "shaping Sydney's physical and cultural landscape", says Adelaide's mindset consists of "a lot of debate and discussion, but not a lot of outcomes". He believes there is only a "five-to-10-year" window for Adelaide to be compared with contemporary 21st century cities.
Professor Maher said Adelaide was "potentially a really good city", but was lacking the "buzz" factor.
He cited constant debate over major projects as preventing any "positive action" from our state's leaders to improve Adelaide.
The city was hamstrung by debate over the Royal Adelaide Hospital, an inner-city stadium and Victoria Park grandstand.
The State Government's public battle with the city council when it took away its planning powers last year highlighted a lack of confidence in Adelaide's direction.
AdelaideNow readers appear to overwhelmingly support Professor Maher's point of view, according to the comments posted below and the poll at the right of this page. Shortly before 9am, almost 750 people had voted and a whopping 95 per cent of those agree that Adelaide is a city of talkers, not doers.
Have your say below and vote in our poll on this page
Professor Maher met Adelaide Thinker-in-Residence Laura Lee this week. "There are a lot of major projects on the table including the new hospital and the urban village at Bowden which will essentially make or break Adelaide," he said. The "next five to 10 years" was the timeframe Adelaide would be judged, said Professor Maher, who last week won his field's top honour, the Australian Institute of Architects Gold Medal.
"If you have debate and no action then nothing is achieved," he said.
Professor Maher, chairman of architecture firm Hassell and an adviser to landmarks such as Luna Park in Sydney, urged the state to "be adventurous".
"Cities like Chicago, New York and London are radically changing the way they operate and are finding ways of getting cars out of the city," he said, pointing to the impacts of climate change. Business SA chief executive Peter Vaughan said "there are some people in Adelaide who would like to keep it in 1956."
"Unfortunately, these people seem to have a disproportionate say on major issues," he said.
Agree with all this article, Love Adelaide but the city needs a major shake up.
Negativity and vocal minority anti-progress groups such as the Parklands Society are killing Adelaide.