Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Local History
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Read Our Newspapers Online
    • Read the Latest Western Port News
    • Read the Latest Mornington News
    • Read the Latest Southern Peninsula News
    • Read the Latest Frankston Times
    • Read the Latest Chelsea Mordialloc Mentone News
  • Competition
  • Home New
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Thursday, July 3
Breaking News
  • E-bike rider charged following fatal collision in Hastings
Facebook X (Twitter)
MPNEWSMPNEWS
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Local History
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Home New
Breaking News
MPNEWSMPNEWS
Home»News»Skylift revisions get reluctant OK
News

Skylift revisions get reluctant OK

By David HarrisonApril 27, 2015Updated:May 4, 2015No Comments5 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

chairlift gondola

REVISED Arthurs Seat Skylift gondola plans received a reluctant green light from shire councillors last Wednesday night, but with some suggested changes – a new colour for the gondolas and reservations about the location of heritage objects, which Skylift initially proposed to house inside the summit station.

The matters may be negotiated with the applicant.

Other changes Skylift wants appear likely to reduce costs. They included removing a toilet block from the bottom station – and thus off the Skylift budget – on to public land and deletion of several original design features.

After the meeting, several members of the Save Our Seat anti-gondola group said they would go back to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal (VCAT) on 20-21 May, especially about the new height of the gondola pylons. Some are four metres taller than shown on the original plans, they said.

They accused some councillors of not fully understanding their role in “secondary consent” decision-making on a VCAT decision.

Secondary consent allows councillors to decide on matters that do not result in transformation of a proposal; do not authorise something for which primary consent is required; are of no consequence; and are not contrary to a specific requirement of the VCAT permit.

SOS members oppose the degree to which they say Skylift dominates the Arthurs Seat escarpment and summit, which they say will create substantial visual pollution of Arthurs Seat.

During the council meeting a ripple of mirth in the gallery greeted shire planner Niall Sheehy’s defence of the proposed red gondolas, which he argued would “complement” the Arthurs Seat landscape. Councillors are seeking grey, green or blue as more appropriate colours.

The shire planner report to councillors makes reference to several other changes, which it describes variously as “minor” (a 70 per cent change), “inconsequential” (a 34.62 per cent change) and “very minor” (a 17.79 per cent change).

Councillors pressed questions on why the land corridor under the gondola path needed to be doubled from 20 to 40 metres. Senior planner Lucas Gardiner said the extra land was needed for cabling and piping between the top and bottom stations but further tree removal or pruning would not necessarily be required.

The revised plans required council approval but councillors were told they were severely restricted in what changes they could make to the VCAT permit conditions.

Changes sought – and approved – to the top station included moving the kitchen and deleting the coolroom of the cafe; deleting the information/history gallery; increasing the amount of glass in the west and north walls; changing the “biowood” façade to vertical metal cladding; and reducing the building’s footprint by 5 per cent.

At the lower station Skylift proposed deletion of the lower forecourt; removal of the “amenities block” (toilets) to Parks Victoria land; deletion of a wall, to be replaced by a 45-degree slope; removal of the information centre, to be replaced with a “slim-line information wall”; deletion of a first floor office; and reduction of the gondola storage area by 5.5 per cent.

Skylift also proposed cutting the lower station footprint by 26.3 per cent and changing the façade from pre-cast concrete to vertical metal sheets.

Cr Hugh Fraser wanted to know why officers thought red gondolas “would complement the natural landscape”. Mr Gardiner said the applicant told council the colour “was reflective of the chairlift” … it’s how you read it in the landscape”. The gondola “edge elements” were red, but most of the car was tinted Perspex or the open frame of the car, he said.

“You’re not going to read them as solid red eggs floating up and down the escarpment,” he added.

Mr Sheehy said the intention of the permit clause “was not to screen or hide the gondolas from the landscape; it’s to assist in complementing the landscape … it was determined that the gondolas in that red tone would complement the landscape”.

Skylift chief Hans Brugman, asked about plans to display the heritage objects, said the intention was to place them around the summit, with a map to help people locate them. The objects include some large items, including gates from the 1930s viewing tower demolished in 2012 that Parks Victoria said had concrete cancer. The top gondola station will be built where the tower once stood.

Other items such as photographs could be displayed inside the station, Mr Brugman said.

Cr Graham Pittock suggested that, reflecting the original proposal, the heritage objects all be displayed inside. Mr Gardiner said it was difficult in secondary consents “to introduce new permit conditions, I guess … other than minor elements” such as a different roofing material.

Seeking to house the objects was “a fundamental change”, he said, and “may be best negotiated with the permit applicant”.

Cr Antonella Celi had a question “because this is all starting to get confusing – on purpose”. During the indignant reaction from several councillors to this remark, she apologised, attributing her comment to “a slip of the tongue. No offence meant – can we get on with it?”

The shire, as the responsible authority, will be back in VCAT in May, when the tribunal will adjudicate on whether to accept councillors’ amendments to the Skylift permit.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Advocates celebrate abuse law change

July 3, 2025

Railway station scam

July 1, 2025

Flinders result unaffected by poll blunder – AEC

July 1, 2025

Grand Hotel’s tower revamp signals new chapter for icon

June 26, 2025
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Peninsula Essence Magazine – Click to Read
Peninsula Kids Magazine – Click to Read
Letters to the Editor
Property of the Week

14 Bass Street, McCrae

June 3, 2025
Council Watch

Shire secures $3.9m to tackle road safety

June 16, 2025

Kinder flyer flag snub prompts councillors to take over

June 10, 2025
100 Years Ago This Week

Baxter – On The ‘Wallaby’ with a walking group

July 1, 2025
Interview

Firefighter shows skills from sea to snow

February 5, 2024
Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Entertainment
  • Local History
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Home New
About

Established in 2006, Mornington Peninsula News Group (MPNG) is a locally owned and operated, independent media company.

MPNG publishes five weekly community newspapers: the Western Port News, Mornington News, Southern Peninsula News, Frankston Times and Chelsea Mordialloc Mentone News.

MPNG also publishes two glossy magazines: Peninsula Essence and Peninsula Kids.

Facebook X (Twitter)
© 2025 Mornington Peninsula News Group.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.