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Race begins as $250m Geelong hotel, apartment tower approved

Planning minister’s green light for the 17-storey Geelong project with a hotel, apartments, supermarket and conference centre, starts a race to finish by the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

The planning minister has approved the permit with a 60m height limit for the $250m mixed use development Cunningham Place, at 35 Corio St, Geelong.
The planning minister has approved the permit with a 60m height limit for the $250m mixed use development Cunningham Place, at 35 Corio St, Geelong.

Victoria’s planning Minister has signed off on a $250m, 17-storey mixed use development in central Geelong, leaving a tight time frame to deliver the luxury hotel, conference centre, apartments and retail space before the Commonwealth Games.

Cunningham Place is the first foray into Geelong for Amber Property Group directors Geoff Brady and Jevan Clay and their largest project, in partnership with owners of Grace Church.

The developers received a draft permit prior to the state election, but had to wait until after new planning Minister Sonya Kilkenny approved the new Central Geelong Framework Plan in March before the Minister ratified the design.

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It’s the first major project approved since the framework became the CBD planning guidebook and Ms Kilkenny chose to enforce the 60m preferred height limit set for the strategic site at 35 Corio St, meaning developers will have to shave 3m from the structure.

The neighbouring WorkSafe building at 1 Malop St is 65m.

The planning minister has approved the permit for the $250m mixed use development Cunningham Place, at 35 Corio St, Geelong.
The planning minister has approved the permit for the $250m mixed use development Cunningham Place, at 35 Corio St, Geelong.

Mr Clay said construction is due to start in late 2023 with a target opening date of 2026.

The Commonwealth Games, jointly hosted by Geelong and other regional centres, opens on March 17.

The next steps will be working with Geelong’s council to construct a new civil drainage system around the site, which fronts Corio St, Clare St, Transit Place and Gheringhap St.

Mr Clay said demolition of the original tenpin bowling lanes will occur this year as a tier one builder is appointed.

A drone photo looking east from the Cunningham Place site.
A drone photo looking east from the Cunningham Place site.

The project is expected to create more than 1500 full-time equivalent jobs a year over the construction time frame and more than 300 ongoing full-time and up to 300 part-time jobs once operational.

McGrath Projects director Jim Cross was appointed to lead sales and leasing for the apartments and commercial spaces, expected to start later this year.

A display suite will be constructed on Eastern Beach Rd.

Mr Clay said it would be Geelong’s biggest private mixed use project.

Cunningham Place will hold a 5000sq m conference facility with a 650‐seat auditorium, a 168‐room luxury hotel and more than 60 residential apartments with views across Corio Bay.

The facility will also provide bars and restaurants, a supermarket, retail and co‐working spaces, and a medical centre and gymnasium.

A drone photo from 50m high looking north from the Cunningham Place site overlooking Deakin University’s waterfront campus and Corio Bay.
A drone photo from 50m high looking north from the Cunningham Place site overlooking Deakin University’s waterfront campus and Corio Bay.

Mr Brady will own the hotel, his third behind Sebel Ringwood and Peppers Richmond.

“Amber is excited to deliver a project which provides much needed tourism support for services such as the Spirit of Tasmania, Commonwealth Games and the GMHBA Stadium upgrades,” Mr Brady said.

Mr Clay said developers wanted to work with Geelong businesses to occupy these spaces.

“We envisage a world class business hub by day, transforming to a world‐class leisure destination in the evening,” he said.

“Cunningham Place is perfectly positioned to host footy supporters from all over the country when the Cats take those big AFL games at GMHBA stadium.

Mark Nicholas from Anchor Private Financial Services, has arranged stage 1 finance with interest from several large banks and private funding organisations.

Architect Steve Tillinger from WMK Architecture and town planner Simon Loader from Tract Consulting were key Geelong consultants working on the planning stage.

Originally published as Race begins as $250m Geelong hotel, apartment tower approved

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/property/race-begins-as-250m-geelong-hotel-apartment-tower-approved/news-story/191298773da4745d245eb85a9bbf9a80