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Commuting isn't a problem. The method of commuting is. The best jobs are always in the city and it's hard to recreate that sort of system without massive Chinese style intervention in the market which State Governments avoid like the plague because a) You get any vision kicked out of you within a few weeks of entering any government planning office and b) The most consistent donators to both sides of politics are property developers who specialise in low density housing and the government will maintain the status quo. You could build a dense city with character of say 100,000+ people in somewhere like York and link a good internal public transit system to a fast rail line to Perth for those who wanted to commute. The key is making sure it's more practical to catch the train then it is to drive.
Would have a nice flow on for the Wheatbelt in services and entertainment and open up a part of the state that's relatively ignored by tourism.
It's probably better to make Mandurah the main satellite town ala Geelong/the Gong. Then, as you've said, just try and centralise those outskirts. I still think that's problematic though, you'd need the biggest and best train lines in the world to service Perth at this rate and that'll make it worse. You really have to fill in the city.
Kalbarri is a nice spot as well from memory although I haven't been there since about 2002/3 so it might have changed a bit.
If you are going to build a high density city of 100,000 in York and connect it by rail to Perth you may as well just develop high density in Perth to start with.
Perth has some pretty extensive rail lines within the CBD. The problem is our population is so spread out that 99% of people need a secondary form of transport to access it. Of the new stations Cockburn Central is about the only one to be a bit progressive. Even though it's a dull area there is medium density accommodation all around the station site which is smart.
I went there last year for the first time since the 90s. Didn't have any trouble recognising it - some new housing to the south of town but otherwise it was exactly the same.You wouldn't recognise it.
Great spot though.
I went there last year for the first time since the 90s. Didn't have any trouble recognising it - some new housing to the south of town but otherwise it was exactly the same.
I did say dense but I meant medium density in my hypothetical York city. Mix of townhouse and 3-4 story buildings. Very high density with huge buildings are going to ruin the heritage character of the town and then we're back at Perth 101 again.
You say the bolded as though people haven't tried before. In the last WA Labor Government, Alannah McTiernan brought in a very sensible planning policy requiring councils to lift the densities of their regions for urban infill. Theoretically the benefits of this were the councils had full control over where they build up. They could choose what kind of density they wanted and they could what it looked like. So pretty much a council could build a couple of large towers in one spot, allow residents to subdivide blocks or they could redevelop a main street to three story or whatever they wanted. Bear in mind that this was a relatively very small increase in density. Some of the councils are STILL fighting it to this day nearly a decade after it was first tabled.
You underestimate the structural problems of trying to do it in Perth. We need to start again from a blank slate where people CHOOSE to move to said new city because it's of medium density with a more village feel rather than battling the inherent conservatism of ratepayers and governments who like or won't change the status quo, no matter if it's ruining the city.
The sandgropers rekon SA don't get enough GST. We should be more supportive.Seven pages into a thread on Perth and nobody bitching about the GST, I am disappoint.
You're a pretty smart fellow smokingjacket
He is indeed.
Which is why I hope these council mergers go ahead.
But further north in Butler, and beyond, with homes on 400sqm or less, with no gardens and stacked on top of each other to maximise developers profits.
I doubt it will fix the problem unfortunately. If it means lower rates that's a good thing but there's so much wrong with planning, special interests and the cultural part of wanting a 4be2 that it'll be very hard to change.
What I struggle with is what Riseupaustralia pointed out earlier in the thread. These blocks have moved beyond the old bungalow at the front cricket pitch/garden out the back character that I could justify moving out to the suburbs if I had too.
Most of these new homes are built on already small blocks and not just the developers but the owners too decide to build the exact same project home on the reduced block as what they would build on one twice the size. I've seen whole estates where the rear gutters of single story houses nearly touch each other at the back. What's the real difference between that and an apartment? There's no room or light for a garden out back and most likely the front is paved for the driveway. What's the point? Where do the kids play? Seems like people want the house more than the lifestyle.
Indeed, there is a definite shift in the acceptance from the home builder to live in such a manner, and I honestly believe that it will lead to social chaos in these areas in the not too distant future.
They are bloody rabbit warrens without a single, desirable characteristic.
I suppose it is a reflection on modern trends and dependencies on electronic toys, (in the home), and travelling O/S for holidays, (Bali LOLOL).
The house is a box to keep us safe from the big bad world, where we can lock the doors, immerse ourselves in "entertainment" to deviate our thoughts away from our millstone mortgages and the only real reason "we" leave it is to go to a job we hate to service the debt, or to engage in some more retail therapy at our monopolised supermarkets and appliance stores.
Who needs a f***ing garden, and it's too dangerous for the kiddies outside anyway?
What a great society we have developed.
Can't like this enough. Even though the old backyard concept sounds isolationist when you plonk it in modern society, it was traditionally a social tool. BBQ's on the weekend and space for the neighbours kids to play in to compensate for the lack of surrounding public entertainment options. There are no redeeming qualities of the current housing model and you are 100% bang on regarding huge future issues to deal with.
Not for me, as you know, I'm getting the flock out of here.