State Significant Development
Moriah College Redevelopment
Waverley
Current Status: Determination
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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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Inspections
29/06/2023
Note: Only enforcements and inspections undertaken by the Department from March 2020 will be shown above.
Submissions
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Aaron Lamshed
Object
Aaron Lamshed
Message
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Steven Sher
Support
Steven Sher
Message
I have noticed that many public schools around the Eastern Suburbs have had extensive works carried out in order to upgrade their facilities this includes but it not limited to my local public high school, Rose Bay as well as Bellevue Hill primary and Rose Bay primary to name a few.
Moriah is asking for the same opportunities to be able to upgrade and update their offering.
It is believed that the upgrade will allow for a further 250 odd students to attend the school campus from preschool to year 12. I know that the local public high schools and some of the public primary schools are under huge strain with the number of students looking for places. Moriah belong able to offer additional places will take some pressure off the need for additional places in other schools.
In the upgrade, Moriah is proposing to add a new internal ring road within the high school which will improve traffic flow for everyone including surrounding neighbours.
Thank you for taking the time to review my submission.
Jim McDomald
Object
Jim McDomald
Message
Currently Moriah College is underutilised by about 14%. That should be the baseline used for environmental impact not the maximum potential usage listed in the redevelopment documentation. Using the maximum current capacity as a baseline gives a very distorted view of what the local community could experience from the redevelopment of Moriah College.
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If the numbers in the document SEARs Request Moriah College 20 June 2019 are consistent with the rest of the Moriah College Redevelopment documentation, then those documents are incomplete and misleading. Subsequently the planning for the impact on the local community from increase in staff and students Moriah College numbers will not be accurate. What the local community experience in shared facilities of transport infrastructure and the parkland of Queens Park is not based on current theoretical maximum capacity of Moriah College but actual staff and student numbers.
The population increase of Moriah College due to redevelopment could be about 600 staff and students not the 340 students and an unknown number of staff listed in the submission document SEARs Request Moriah College 20 June 2019. The student numbers could increase by about 40% and not the 20% listed in that document. Moriah College like any other teaching institution would probably have a considerable number of volunteers, their numbers are not listed and could not be established.
The proposed redevelopment will impact my local community significantly more than what is documented. The negative impacts to adjacent roads, parking facilities and use of the parkland where I live in Queens Park will be far greater than expected.
See attachment Notes_for_Moriah_College_Redevelopment _20191211
for supporting material
Attachments
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
Anita Zaid
Support
Anita Zaid
Message
martin smith
Object
martin smith
Message
Over my 25 years living in Queens Park, Moriah College has continually undertaken to the community to limit their growth, restrict teacher and Yr12 parking and combat the traffic. All of these undertakings are ignored by the College.
We are not against the college, however for it to grow in size, Queens Park should be isolated from school traffic. The school should be forced to use York Road only and the suburb of Queens Park should be strictly for local resident traffic only.
Sergio Kulikovsky
Support
Sergio Kulikovsky
Message
Educational needs are all evolving and a school cannot stay in outdated facilities.
jessica efrat
Support
jessica efrat
Message
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
• Moriah College has failed to manage its own Transport, Traffic and 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.
• 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.
• Pedestrian safety risks and general road safety risks will escalate as a result of the increased traffic in local streets.
• Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
• 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.
• The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
• Three 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.
• 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.
• The ‘Near Neighbour Letter Catchment’ was in adequate and needs to be significantly expanded so that all impacted neighbours are aware of Moriah’s intentions.
• 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.
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
• Moriah College has failed to manage its own Transport, Traffic and 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.
• 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.
• Pedestrian safety risks and general road safety risks will escalate as a result of the increased traffic in local streets.
• Pollution in our local streets will increase due to more traffic and air quality will reduce.
• 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.
• The visual amenity of Queens Park will be adversely impacted by the bulk of the proposed buildings.
• Three 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.
• 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.
• The ‘Near Neighbour Letter Catchment’ was in adequate and needs to be significantly expanded so that all impacted neighbours are aware of Moriah’s intentions.
• 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.
KIM LEIGH
Support
KIM LEIGH
Message
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
The proposal develops an important learning facility for numerous current and future students whose learning will ultimately benefit the larger community in years to come.
Development of educational facilities should be encouraged.
Viviane Rubinstein
Support
Viviane Rubinstein
Message
grahame jackson
Object
grahame jackson
Message
Moriah College Redevelopment: Project 14741
We all want the best schools, the best for our own children and those of others, the best schools whether public or private. Of course we do. Perhaps the expansion requested by Moriah College will achieve better educational outcomes for the school’s pupils, and under normal circumstances, no one would want to deny that. But these are not normal circumstances. The outcomes will extract a further cost to the Queens Park community.
Much has already been given to the College by State, Council and the community. Starting in the 1980s when the College was allowed land belonging to Queens Park, and a pupil intake of 300 or so, it has expanded incrementally. Extra land and buildings have been made available, increased pupil numbers allowed, and permission for a preschool facility granted. The College has reached a current intake of 1680 students, way in advance of its initial allocation, and all in only 35 years.
Now we are being asked to believe that the facilities are not good enough, green spaces are insufficient, buildings unsafe because they are dated and not designed for contemporary education.
In addition, the upgrade is said to need more students, another 17% over time.
Even at present pupil levels, the tight access to the area is not suitable for the drop-off and pick-up of more than 2000 people crammed into a few hours each day. However you might juggle with entrances, car parks and building configurations, you will not change the congestion. A quagmire of vehicles has been created, jostling for room in the busiest times of morning and afternoon, when we all want to use the roads. Everyone knows what it’s like. The streets near the school are deluged by buses and parked cars of students, staff and parents. Residents do not have a chance. It can’t or shouldn’t be allowed to get worse.
But worse it will get.
No one believes that this is the last request. At some time in the future, requests will be made for more pupils, and more high-rise buildings – a precedent will have been set if the present application is granted.
Moriah College realises that managing access to the school is a major problem: it highlights it in its leaflet to the community of 25 November 2019. It states that improving traffic flow along Queens Park Road is a key objective of the proposal, but it is also just as great a problem along Baronga Avenue and York Road. To date, every expansion has made the situation worse, and this request will be no different.
And the result of the expansion on the community? Traffic congestion will become greater still, and our lives will be the poorer with increased air pollution and stress.
So, I submit, the College should rethink this development, consider what it has already achieved, be satisfied with keeping to its present size, and drop all unreasonable ambitions to expand further. And I say to you as Minister of Planning and Public Spaces, please heed the concerns of residents of Queens Park, and the concerns of adjacent communities in Randwick and Woollahra, and refuse this application.
Grahame Jackson
24 Alt Street
Name Withheld
Object
Name Withheld
Message
Jami-Leigh Baskin
Support
Jami-Leigh Baskin
Message
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
The Eastern suburbs is short of government school places and needs private school places
Name Withheld
Support
Name Withheld
Message
I would like to think that all unnecessary agendas would be put aside and the community could allow this ambitious project to proceed.