Saturday, June 11, 2005

Milano Apartments offer Movie Lounge

PDG Corporation in Melbourne are offering buyers in their Milano Apartments the latest in entertainment with the inclusion of a Club Lounge and Entertainment Theatre System.

Great to see developers offering these kinds of services to Apartment residents, they might have to implement an online booking system for this room as I suspect it will be very popular with residents.

Maybe they should look at Melbourne company Resinet to add such a service. Resinet provides Intranets/Portals for Apartment buildings.

The Apartments are being cabled for provision of High-Speed Broadband Internet.

Milano

Young embrace the High-Rise Apartment life

By Royce Millar and Martin Boulton

Only 20 years ago "flats" were regarded as the poor man's option - cheap, pokey and a last resort. The "commission flats" were the only high-rise. But flats are now "apartments" and new research shows that Melbourne is embracing high-rise living.

Two surveys - one covering inner municipalities Melbourne, Port Phillip, Stonnington and Docklands; the other, Moreland and Darebin - show that people now are choosing apartment living.

In Docklands, people are moving in specifically to live in an apartment - that factor outranks all others such as low maintenance and price. Price is no object - the new urban breed is cashed up, with more than half Docklanders having a a median income of more than $1000 a week.

They are much more inclined than other Melburnians to rent their homes. They travel to work more often by public transport, and own fewer cars. Apartment households are smaller, younger, with fewer children and more university degrees.

Melbourne Deputy Lord Mayor (and apartment dweller) Gary Singer says the survey findings are good news for the State Government's long-term metropolitan plan, Melbourne 2030, which aims to curb urban sprawl by encouraging apartment living in designated suburban centres.

"We can see the city is not developing into the sort of doughnut we thought it would 20 to 30 years ago," he says.

But Melbourne University planning professor Kevin O'Connor says the survey findings simply confirm that inner-city apartment dwellers are a specialised group: well-paid renters, international students and young professionals. He says the findings offer no support to the 2030 assumption that the middle and outer suburbs will embrace inner-city-style apartment precincts.

"There's a sense that the inner city is becoming special and different, even a bit exclusive. The research shows Melbourne 2030 might work, but only in the inner city," Mr O'Connor says.

Metropolis Research director Dale Hubner says apartment dwellers are more likely to be of Anglo-Celtic and then Asian backgrounds. Mr Hubner says those of southern European descent - the Greeks and Italians who traditionally lived in the inner and mid-north - are continuing their outward journey from suburbs such as Richmond, Carlton and Brunswick to the fringe areas such as Mill Park and Epping.

He also acknowledges a widening "split" in Melbourne: young Anglo professionals gravitating to the inner city while a less educated group - often tradespeople - opt for fringe estates.

"The two groups operate rather independently of each other," he says. "If you live in somewhere like Mill Park you won't be coming to live at Southbank." Nor will Docklanders be moving to Mill Park.

A surprise finding is that Docklands has a high proportion of middle-aged adults (35 per cent aged 46-60 years) - mainly wealthy empty nesters, still professionally and socially active. Melbourne 2030 also envisages older retirees "downsizing", giving up their large detached houses for apartment living. Mr Hubner acknowledges the almost total absence of this group from both surveys.

But while the frenzied apartment market of the early 2000s has quietened, and doubters continue to talk down high-density living as an un-Australian fad, apartment dwellers say their housing choice was the right one.

"Living here I can go away on trips and shut the door without thinking about who's going to water the garden. It's less complicated," says Ms Frey.

"I wasn't sure about having neighbours up top, beside me and underneath . . . but I've found not having the responsibility of a house is a whole new way of life."

See The Age for more info.

Apartment living in Melbourne - Survey


Thursday, June 09, 2005

Guru of high-rise living spins tall storey

Guy Allenby

THERE'S a simple explanation for Karl Fender's missionary zeal for apartment living: he's been doing it himself for much of his adult life.

As the architect explained, his first two decades might have been spent growing up at ground level in the outer suburbs of Melbourne, but from the mid-70s he'd been enjoying the high life overseas.

"Ever since I left in 1975 I had to live in apartments - London, Rome, Boston, Hong Kong and eventually Bangkok - and I loved it," Mr Fender said. "They were vibrant, dense places, with people looking for quality of life in other ways which don't necessarily involve cutting grass and painting and scraping and listening to the neighbours' arguments."

And that's just as it should be really for the co-architect of Eureka, the towering new apartment block pushing ever higher at Melbourne's Southbank.

Eureka
Eureka Photo May 2005

Developed in a joint venture between the Grocon, Tab Fried and Nonda Katsalidis groups, it is being built by Grocon Constructions and, once finished later this year, the 550 apartment, $500million, 88-storey structure will be Australia's tallest building and the tallest residential tower in the world (or possibly the second tallest, but we'll get to that later).

It's completion will also mark a symbolic moment in Australia's built-history, maintained Mr Fender, who designed the development in concert with architect Nonda Katsalidis, co-director of the Melbourne-based firm Fender Katsalidis.

"Eureka reflects a pivotal moment. It's a landmark statement in inner-city apartment living," he said.

"Hopefully the mere presence of Eureka, the tallest building in Australia - a fully residential tower - will help illustrate the acceptance and beauty of high-density apartment living."

Perhaps it will, although you can certainly be sure many of its residents will certainly have made the radical switch from the wide open, low-rise urban landscape - like Mr Fender did 30 years ago - for a higher-density lifestyle.

He grew up in Melbourne's Burwood. There was bush at the end of his street, he remembered, and where the adjoining suburb of Glen Waverley now stands were orchards.

"I knew nothing else and it was a fine place to be raised."

After leaving school Mr Fender studied architecture at university, then spent his early years as a young architect learning at the feet of the local master.

"I worked with Robin Boyd until his death (in 1971, at 52)," he said.

He left the country a couple of years later and lived in London followed by Rome "for four or five years".

Mr Fender furthered his studies in the US and subsequently spent long stints living and working in Southeast Asia - much of it in partnership with architect Bob Nation as Nation Fender architects.

About 10 years ago he returned to Melbourne to a city that had just begun to embrace inner-city apartment living - some of the most accomplished developments having been driven by Nonda Katsalidis, a man who has been quoted in the past as saying that the suburbs are "terrible, vacuous, isolated. I hate the suburbs, it's a disease. Nothing ever happens there".

Accordingly, it made perfect sense for Mr Fender and Mr Nation to team up with him and form Nation Fender Katsalidis.

(Mr Nation meanwhile has since moved on, now lives in Sydney, and is the new national president of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects.)

As the trio worked fruitfully together, Mr Fender and Mr Katsalidis now share a comfortable, creative working relationship that's most recent flowering is the Eureka tower.

"We've always worked together on the design," he said. "We test each other. And it goes beyond Nonda and I, we've got a fabulous team in here."

In 1994 Mr Katsalidis had been responsible for Melbourne Terrace, a mix of 65 apartments, retail space and offices that broke new ground in the shift to higher-density living.

He and Nation Fender Katsalidis went on to design a host of apartment buildings, including Silo Apartments in Richmond, Arcadia Apartments in Parkville, Astorial Apartments in Carlton and the much-admired Republic Tower in Melbourne's CBD.

Appropriately, Mr Fender now lives in an apartment in Republic.

"People say to me you've got a daughter - she's just turned 15 - how does she like living in an apartment in the city?," he said. "Well she loves it. I just had all her friends over and they wouldn't leave the place.

"There's a pool upstairs that I don't have to clean and there's a gym that I didn't have to buy and there's cafes and restaurants and theatres and gardens. And two minutes to the market. What more could you want? Melbourne's just a fabulous, fabulous city to live in."

Mr Fender is genuinely passionate about living in the centre of Melbourne and he's equally upbeat about the new possibilities that Eureka will bring to its residents, as well as to the Southbank precinct and Melbourne in general.

"Where Eureka stands was a gravel carpark," he said. Once finished "it'll act as a conduit between the residential that's always been established to the south of City Road and the river bank. So it's giving Southbank a depth rather than just a linear edge that used to be".

"It'll also add a dizzyingly tall edifice to Melbourne that'll inevitably have both its champions and critics. It'll be quite a piece," Mr Fender said, adding that it's gold-clad top would "set up a very curious geometry ... from different vantage points around Melbourne it'll take on quite a different appearance - sometimes it'll even look like it's leaning".

"Love it or hate it'll be quite a talking point ... but any piece of architecture that has been highly considered is there for people to love or hate."

Will it be the tallest residential building in the world (something Sunland, developer of the Gold Coast's Q1, hotly disputes)? The mine-is-bigger-than-yours argument is "a bit of fun but we don't take it seriously", he said.

"Who cares if we are the tallest residential building or the tallest building in Australia for a couple of milliseconds? What matters is the quality of the outcomes." Besides, "our building is physically taller than that building (Q1) but they've got this little spike on top."

So there.

Eurekaview

Eureka Tower - View from Level 82!

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

SkyNetGlobal adds Voip to Apartment Broadband Offering

SkyNetGlobal has added VoIP to it's W-Home Broadband service and hopes it will double the take-up of its Apartment Broadband service.

In an OEM partnership with Engin, the wireless broadband provider's residential service, W Home, will offer Engin's VoIP box in its suite of products which include lifestyle, security and entertainment devices.

In addition to increasing W Home take-up rates, SkyNetGlobal CEO, Jonathon Soon, said the partnership would increase revenue per customer, because his company would receive a commission on all calls originating from W Home customers.

Engin's 'voice box' allows broadband calls to be made by plugging directly into an existing telephone handset without the need for a computer or any software. Soon said an easy to use VoIP product would be attractive to customers because they would no longer have to pay rental fees for a fixed line, as they only needed a broadband connection.

"Most people in our demographic have mobiles anyway, so they would be happy to not have to pay extra for a fixed telephone line," he said.

W Home provides broadband communications and associated products to customers in more than 120 apartment buildings in selected areas of Sydney and Melbourne, and the network is constantly expanding.

Soon said the W Home network would continue to grow, as would its associated list of wireless broadband products and channel partners.

"We will be announcing several new products in the next few months," he said