Palmerston’s tallest building coming: 18 storey 'superblock' proposed

Palmerston’s tallest building coming: 18 storey 'superblock' proposed
Jennifer DukeDecember 7, 2020

A $200 million, 18 storey mixed-use proposal has been received from Darwin developers Randazzo and La Pira families for a Palmerston ‘superblock’.

The ‘superblock’, named as such due to its 6,060 square metre size in the centre of the CBD, has been vacant since the 1980s and is government owned, according to Minister for Lands, Planning and the Environment Peter Chandler.

It will be the tallest building in Palmerston and the first mixed-use project of its kind. The Northern Territory developers previously created the Palmerston Shopping Centre, Highway House and the Goyder Building.

It is to be the first of its type for Palmerston and will provide housing and accommodation options.

To be called Boulevard Plaza, it is expected to bring 225 apartments, 185 hotel rooms and street level access to 10,000 square metres of retail and hospitality space, said Chandler.

“What’s becoming clear is that Territorians want more choice with their housing options. Apartments in Darwin are being snapped up at record rates and smaller blocks of land are becoming more attractive to home buyers,” he said.

“Living and working in the city has many economic and environmental advantages with less of a reliance on vehicles to commute to work, shops or social events.”

Paolo Randazzo and Peter La Pira have said that it will revitalise and activate the heart of the city, noting it will support the rural area, defence activities, oil and gas, the new hospital and the increased commercial activity.

“We played a key role in the social and economic growth of Palmerston and we are now reinvesting in the city’s future because of our confidence in Palmerston’s growth,” La Pira said.

It will be designed by another local name, architects Jackman Gooden, and will have energy efficient measures and a large podium on level five.

The proposal will be lodged with the Development Consent Authority in early-2015, with construction expected shortly after. It will be built over several years in a staged release.

Picture of Palmerston courtesy of Bidgee/Wikimedia Commons.

Jennifer Duke

Jennifer Duke was a property writer at Property Observer

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