URBAN DESIGN MASTERPLAN

GREEN SQUARE URBAN RENEWAL EASTERN MASTERPLAN

GREENSQUARE_IMG1

Prepared for Meriton as part of the City of Sydney and NSW Governments Green Square urban renewal project. A significant new Planning Proposal, and stage 01 Development Application for over 750 new dwellings on one of the last remaining large parcels in the Green Square Urban Renewal Area. The site is the entire Link Road Precinct, formally the Sutton City car dealership Site. The project interrogates the existing Masterplan for 10 city blocks, including the new Mulga Park, and re-shapes the planning controls to ensure the built form density and public domain amenity requirements could be achieved. The revised Masterplan re-shapes the built form to better respond to the site specific challenges including improving sunlight to the public domain, protecting dwellings and public domain from traffic noise, increasing deep soil / canopy cover, and maintaining sunlight access and views to existing and proposed dwellings on and surrounding the site.

category

URBAN DESIGN MASTERPLAN

recognition

Approved Stage 01 Development Application

location

Zetland, Sydney

project data

Ammendments to DCP Controls in order to achieve: 784 proposed apartments (mix of one to four bedroom apartments) as well as 30 townhouses Proposed GFA of 89,924sqm 1174sqm childcare facilities 2579sqm of retail

project team

Simon Mather, Alex Koll, Bridget Rosic, Tom Cowlishaw

MAKO Architecture practice on lands once inhabited and fostered by people including at least the Gadigal, Garigal, Gayamaygal and Ngunnawal clans.

With respect to the lands we inhabit, work on and work for, we recognise the traditional owners and their descendants as having continuing connection to the land and waters, and thank them for fostering country since time immemorial. We acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded and that the earth, waters and skies associated with this continent always have been and always will be of it’s traditional owners.

MAKO Architecture practice on lands once inhabited and fostered by people including at least the Gadigal, Garigal, Gayamaygal and Ngunnawal clans.

With respect to the lands we inhabit, work on and work for, we recognise the traditional owners and their descendants as having continuing connection to the land and waters, and thank them for fostering country since time immemorial. We acknowledge that sovereignty was never ceded and that the earth, waters and skies associated with this continent always have been and always will be of it’s traditional owners.