State Significant Development
Moriah College Redevelopment
Waverley
Current Status: Determination
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- SEARs
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- Exhibition
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- Response to Submissions
- Assessment
- Recommendation
- Determination
Concept Proposal and Stage 1 development application for the redevelopment of the Moriah College senior school campus including the demolition of buildings, construction of new teaching facilities and progressive increase in student enrolments.
Modifications
Archive
Notice of Exhibition (1)
Request for SEARs (4)
SEARs (1)
EIS (33)
Response to Submissions (9)
Agency Advice (3)
Amendments (14)
Additional Information (5)
Recommendation (3)
Determination (4)
Approved Documents
There are no post approval documents available
Note: Only documents approved by the Department after November 2019 will be published above. Any documents approved before this time can be viewed on the Applicant's website.
Complaints
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There are no enforcements for this project.
Inspections
29/06/2023
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
- the significant impact it will have on the amenity of Queens Park residents and surrounding suburbs
- the building will not be in keeping with the current look and feel of our heritage suburb
- the increased size of the school will require many more security guards and I believe guards carrying guns in such close proximity to Queens Park, where many young children play every day is not acceptable
- the school does not provide any facilities or amenities back to the local community and residents. Whilst many other schools in the area eg Waverley Public School, SCEGGS allow their premises to be rented for recreational use or host fetes/community events, Moriah does not allow non-students to use the school and it's facilities. The school sits empty for significant periods of time eg school holidays in an area where community space is lacking and such a facility could be enjoyed and well utilised by the public if Moriah would open up it's doors.
- the school put forward a traffic management plan when it last expanded student numbers several years ago however the school has not enforced it's own traffic management plan resulting in significant inconvenience to residents and causing disruption to local traffic.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
This is our suburb! We value our lifestyle and neighbourhood and most importantly our Health and Safety.
Please pay attention to the voice of the people and not the powerful.
Thankyou.
Name Withheld
Comment
Name Withheld
Message
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
There are other areas such as security risks and over developement already but traffic is only going to get worse unless this project is stopped.
Andrew Stewart
Object
Andrew Stewart
Message
Name Withheld
Comment
Name Withheld
Message
I am a resident of Queens Park - near Moriah College. I have no financial or educational conflicts of interest in the school (i.e no students at the school etc). I have no Jewish cultural connection.
I would generally endorse the capacities of schools to develop - education being a prime asset in our culture. Moriah College has offered a high educational standard to its students.
Yes, we get a few students parking in our street - which can clog up the street parking a bit. So maybe if the development could factor in some additional parking for students, as well as staff - this might address local residential concerns about the project.
As locals, we can find work-arounds for the busy traffic periods at the beginning and end of the school day - in the end minor inconveniences that I, for one, am happy to make to facilitate our local students' education.
michael ahrens
Object
michael ahrens
Message
1. it would be built in an area sensitive in many ways, especially right adjacent to and overlooking Centennial Parklands. Note in particular the Eastern Suburbs Banksia area ! That will be disturbed by the planned construction and traffic internal and external.
2. it would intensify at certain times of the day the traffic around it which is already congested. That would increase also with parents of the junior school always driving across the Precinct each school day. It wrongly omits reference to the bad north south traffic effects and only talks about Queens Park Road. Rat running through the other streets of the Precinct increases by the year. It should be withdrawn until that issue is addressed and proper traffic counts are done.
3. The use of buses only relieves that traffic problem for the students of the Senior School
4. The College has over the years failed to monitor and curb students parking and drop offs in the Precinct area agreed to by it in the TTPP. When it first came in the agreed prohibition was policed and students penalised. That ceased for a long time,( until just in the last few months.).
5. The time given for lodging objections is far too short!
6. The College over the years has gained expansion by promising to a limit on growth in student numbers. Those agreements are constantly raised and it appears now that the College wants all such limits removed. Constant expansion is the aim and the interests of the surrounding residents, once significant to the College, are now subverted.
As a long time member of the Queens Park Precinct and the MCCC I wish to have a personal meeting with the Department. Please contact me
Thanks
Michael Ahrens 0411 360 209
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
b) Moriah College has failed to manage its own Transport, Traffic & Parking Plan (TTPP) for a long time, evidenced by the number of students, parents and staff vehicles parking daily in local streets contrary to its own TTPP. I am concerned about the growing risk of 'road rage'. Centennial Park is being used as an overflow car park by College students.
c) Moriah College night-time events are frequent, attract significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
d) Pedestrian safety risks and general road safety risks will escalate as a result of the increased traffic in local streets.
e) Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
f) The streets of Queens Park are becoming ‘traffic sewers’, which is impacting friendly interaction between neighbours, resulting in a decreased sense of well being, connectedness and security.
g) The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
h) 3 weeks is grossly inadequate for informed responses to the proposal, which contains nearly 1,600 pages of complicated text and diagrams – more time is needed.
i) The ripple effect of the increase in traffic, congestion and pollution will extend to many residents who have not been notified of the proposal and who deserve the right to be informed and to comment.
j) The ‘Near Neighbour Letter Catchment’ was inadequate and needs to be significantly expanded so that all impacted neighbours are aware of Moriah’s intentions.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
b) Moriah College has failed to manage its own Transport, Traffic & Parking Plan (TTPP) for a long time, evidenced by the number of students, parents and staff vehicles parking daily in local streets contrary to its own TTPP.
c) Moriah College night-time events are frequent, attract significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
d) Pedestrian safety risks and general road safety risks will escalate as a result of the increased traffic in local streets.
e) Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
f) The streets of Queens Park are becoming ‘traffic sewers’, which is impacting friendly interaction between neighbours, resulting in a decreased sense of well being, connectedness and security.
g) The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
h) 3 weeks is grossly inadequate for informed responses to the proposal, which contains nearly 1,600 pages of complicated text and diagrams – more time is needed.
i) The ripple effect of the increase in traffic, congestion and pollution will extend to many residents who have not been notified of the proposal and who deserve the right to be informed and to comment.
j) The ‘Near Neighbour Letter Catchment’ was inadequate and needs to be significantly expanded so that all impacted neighbours are aware of Moriah’s intentions.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
b) Moriah College has failed to manage its own Transport, Traffic & Parking Plan (TTPP) for a long time, evidenced by the number of students, parents and staff vehicles parking daily in local streets contrary to its own TTPP.
c) Moriah College night-time events are frequent, attract significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
d) Pedestrian safety risks and general road safety risks will escalate as a result of the increased traffic in local streets.
e) Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
f) The streets of Queens Park are becoming ‘traffic sewers’, which is impacting friendly interaction between neighbours, resulting in a decreased sense of well being, connectedness and security.
g) The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
h) 3 weeks is grossly inadequate for informed responses to the proposal, which contains nearly 1,600 pages of complicated text and diagrams – more time is needed.
i) The ripple effect of the increase in traffic, congestion and pollution will extend to many residents who have not been notified of the proposal and who deserve the right to be informed and to comment.
j) The ‘Near Neighbour Letter Catchment’ was inadequate and needs to be significantly expanded so that all impacted neighbours are aware of Moriah’s intentions.
Michael Stratton
Object
Michael Stratton
Message
- The Proposal has too much Scale and Bulk and will become a visual eyesore when viewed from within the Park. Sydney doesn't have many parks and the Green Link between Queens Park and Centennial should be preserved.
- The School in its current form already creates traffic problems and blocks the surrounding roads during drop off and pick-up and is very dangerous when they have events of a night time. Their proposal to have the pick-up internally is laughable as they still have the line of 50 plus cars extending onto the Roads and blocking traffic. I did note that they talk about access to public transport but I have never seen a school where so little of the students come by Public Transport.
- The School should not be given any scope to grow as the traffic and visual impact are bad enough. The School has more than enough students. Why don't they do what other Schools like Scots do and buy land and create another campus elsewhere.
- They obviously have no shortage of rich benefactors - create another campus elsewhere.
- I am sure when they took over the old Hospital they said they wouldn't impact the views from the park or cause traffic bottle-necks. Maybe State Govt should review their original pledges and hold them to it instead of encouraging overdevelopment.
R
Mike Stratton
Jane Christmas
Object
Jane Christmas
Message
The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
Morish College has failed to manage its own Transport Traffic and Parking Plan for a long time . Our streets are filled with students and staff parking daily and then parents picking up.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
At its present size the college already has a substantial impact on traffic and pedestrian movement at peak times of the day.
It is already difficult to walk past the college at busy times, not because the students are discourteous, they are not, it is just they are in large numbers and buses and cars impede access.
In addition on the footpath there are several monitors with walkie-talkies obstructing movement. Further there are armed, black-clad guards. Putting guns on the street a of Queens Park should be the province of police, not a school. The message presented by these uniformed armed guards is a bad one for the community and worse for the students who walk between them each day into school.
The school in presenting this quasi-military face cuts itself off from the community rather than being a constructive participant. To make the school bigger would further harm the community.
Best regards
Marius Benson
Melina Yaffa
Object
Melina Yaffa
Message
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
1. Traffic congestion is a major issue between school drop of times of 7:30am and 9:30am & during the afternoon pick up. The through traffic it creates is unsafe environment for all residents, pedestrians.
2. Students, teachers & parents park daily in the local streets creating congestion. Local residents have difficulty in finding parking, especially if there is off street parking.
3. Moriah College's night time events are getting more frequent, attracting significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
4. Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
5. The visual impact of the buildings is not in character with the local area. As all of Queens Park is low rise residential housing. Therefore, the size of this building is a monstrosity!!!
6. Streets in Queens Park are small & narrow, and all this extra traffic makes it more hazardous to exit from side streets onto the main arterial (Newland St, Birrell St).
7. Three weeks is insufficient time combined with Christmas & upcoming holidays for people to properly assess the proposal. More time is needed.
8. The school impacts on two major entry & exit points to Queens Park, so all the additional traffic creates additional frustration for drivers & residents.
9. The information provided by Moriah College was inadequate and lacked substance. More detailed information should be provided to all residents in Queens Park to allow for proper consultation.
10. The Queens Park residents would like Waverley Council to conduct their own independent and public traffic survey so that all stakeholders can better understand the the impact.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
1. Traffic congestion is a major issue between school drop of times of 7:30am and 9:30am & during the afternoon pick up. The through traffic it creates is unsafe environment for all residents, pedestrians.
2. Students, teachers & parents park daily in the local streets creating congestion. Local residents have difficulty in finding parking, especially if there is no off street parking.
3. Moriah College's night time events are getting more frequent, attracting significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
4. Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
5. The visual impact of the buildings is not in character with the local area. As all of Queens Park is low rise residential housing. Therefore, the size of this building is a monstrosity!!!
6. Streets in Queens Park are small & narrow, and all this extra traffic makes it more hazardous to exit from side streets onto the main arterial (Newland St, Birrell St).
7. Three weeks is insufficient time combined with Christmas & upcoming holidays for people to properly assess the proposal. More time is needed.
8. The school impacts on two major entry & exit points to Queens Park, so all the additional traffic creates additional frustration for drivers & residents.
9. The information provided by Moriah College was inadequate and lacked substance. More detailed information should be provided to all residents in Queens Park to allow for proper consultation.
10. The Queens Park residents would like Waverley Council to conduct their own independent and public traffic survey so that all stakeholders can better understand the impact.
11. Moriah College's car line snakes around Queens Park. The drivers don't acknowledge, are rude & impatient while speeding through residential streets & rear lanes. Drivers disobey street signs and drive up one way rear lane streets closest to Moriah College.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
1. Traffic congestion is a major issue between school drop of times of 7:30am and 9:30am & during the afternoon pick up. The through traffic it creates is unsafe environment for all residents, pedestrians.
2. Students, teachers & parents park daily in the local streets creating congestion. Local residents have difficulty in finding parking, especially if there is no off street parking.
3. Moriah College's night time events are getting more frequent, attracting significant numbers of people and use local streets as a parking lot. This will only get worse for residents if this proposal goes ahead.
4. Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
5. The visual impact of the buildings is not in character with the local area. As all of Queens Park is low rise residential housing. Therefore, the size of this building is a monstrosity!!!
6. Streets in Queens Park are small & narrow, and all this extra traffic makes it more hazardous to exit from side streets onto the main arterial (Newland St, Birrell St).
7. Three weeks is insufficient time combined with Christmas & upcoming holidays for people to properly assess the proposal. More time is needed.
8. The school impacts on two major entry & exit points to Queens Park, so all the additional traffic creates additional frustration for drivers & residents.
9. The information provided by Moriah College was inadequate and lacked substance. More detailed information should be provided to all residents in Queens Park to allow for proper consultation.
10. The Queens Park residents would like Waverley Council to conduct their own independent and public traffic survey so that all stakeholders can better understand the impact.
11. Moriah College's car line snakes around Queens Park. The drivers don't acknowledge, are rude & impatient while speeding through residential streets & rear lanes. Drivers disobey street signs and drive up one way rear lane streets closest to Moriah College.
HERITAGE COUNCIL OF NSW
Comment
HERITAGE COUNCIL OF NSW
Message
Attachments
David Plaister
Object
David Plaister
Message
2.0 The visual amenity of Queens Park and Centennial Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the buildings within a residential/parkland area;
3.0 Traffic congestion is already a major problem morning and afternoon - increasing it is unreasonable;
4.0 Alt Street acts as a "traffic sewer"morning and afternoon which impacts on friendly interaction between neighbours and our neighbourly amenity;
5.0 Three weeks is grossly inadequate to for informed response to to the proposal, which contains nearly 1,600 pages of detailed/complicated text and diagrams - a more reasonable time is needed; and
6.0 Moriah College has failed to manage its published transport, Traffic and Parking Plan for a long time and when you bring a particular incident to their attention they are off hand and arrogant in their reply.