Antias

Date Built: 2012

Architect: Tonkin Zulaikha Greer

4 storeys, 43 apartments Adjacent to Anzac Bridge overlooking Bank Street. Site of CSR char house.

Antias

1990

Char house Char house seen from Saunders Street

In 1984, as industries quit Pyrmont, the State government resolved to redevelop the area, and in 1987 decided that the peninsula needed its own plan.  In the same year CSR asked Lend Lease to study the feasibility of redeveloping the whole industrial site. Many studies ensued: the Pyrmont-Ultimo Heritage Study (1990), a Social Impact Assessment (1991), and a Regional Environmental Plan (1992).  In 1993 the Pyrmont-Ultimo Urban Development Plan was approved.

From our point of view the most useful studies were archaeological surveys, summed up in the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority’s Jacksons Landing Interpretation Strategy, and Jane Bennett’s extraordinary series of paintings.  A few years later John Broadbent complemented these studies with his comprehensive history of the peninsula’s ecology.

Pyrmont residents were deeply divided: some had to leave and some welcomed development, but in 1979 opponents formed UPROAR (Ultimo Pyrmont Residents Opposed to Arbitrary Redevelopment) and endured years of being consulted (or, in their view, coerced).  In August 1992 a few activists proclaimed the Republic of Pyrmont. In this brilliant but ultimately vain gesture the republicans issued visas, and publicised their critique of top-down planning, and in particular to Jacksons Landing, and the proposed casino and helipad.

Meanwhile in 1997 Lend Lease bought the whole CSR site, and by April 1999 Jacksons Landing was being constructed.