PORT PHILLIP CONSERVATION COUNCIL INC.
Telephone +61397890598, +61429176725         20 Hudson Avenue, FRANKSTON VIC 3199
Facsimile +61397898025                                                                             ggd@netspace.net.au
A0020093K Victoria                                                                            www.vicnet.net.au/~phillip
ABN 46 291 176 191                                                                                           21st February 2002
 
The Chief Executive Officer 
Mornington Peninsula Shire Council 
Private Bag 1000 
ROSEBUD VIC 3939 

Dear Sir, 

Application for a Planning Permit Ref. No. P01/ 2679 Rye Foreshore Reserve, North of Lyons St. 

Port Phillip Conservation Council Inc., a federation of 14 conservation organizations around Port Phillip, understands that the above application is "to develop the land as a minor sports and recreation facility (permanent skate boarding, inline skating and BMX bike facility) and associated works, including vegetation removal and earthworks". 

Port Phillip Conservation Council Inc. objects to the above Planning Application for the reasons below:

1. Water Dependence: The proposed facilities are in no way coast or water dependent. They will function just as well on other inland sites. It has been the well-accepted policy of State Governments over many decades that the very narrow essentially fixed area of coastal reserve land around Port Phillip should be left in its natural condition as far as possible, with the exception of limited development that is water dependent. It is a well-established planning principle in Victoria that coastal land should be free of avoidable intrusions. The proposal appears to be inconsistent with the Victorian Coastal Strategy.
 
2. Removal of Many Trees: Removal of a significant number of trees is required to place the facility among the remaining trees. Removal of vegetation on foreshore land is a particularly critical matter. Coastal vegetation protects dunes against erosion. Gradual and unwanted spread of sand by the wind has been facilitated already at Rye foreshore by earlier removal of vegetation. Windborne sand was a major reason why a similar proposal was rejected at Frankston, as Frankston City Council realized that grains of sand constantly being blown into the metal bearings of skateboards was a major reason for preferring a much more sheltered inland site for their facility.
 
3. Concrete Cover: PPCC Inc. understands that the proposal involves over 1000 square metres of concrete being placed on the foreshore. That is an ugly and incompatible treatment for any part of the edge of the metropolis’s major natural feature, Port Phillip Bay. A proposed ‘shade structure’ of some 32 square metres will also make the area more ugly, and will spoil views to the water in a way that trees do not, as they are felt as a natural accompaniment of the coast. It is pathetic and preposterous that well-established trees are to be killed to enable a ‘shade structure’ to be built.
 
4. Deterioration and Removal: As has been all too common for developments in the corrosive and abrasive coastal environment, there appears to be no commitment for future maintenance against the harsh deteriorating influences of sun, salt and wind-blown sand. The result is that the usual steady deterioration and neglect can be expected. Past experience has shown that enthusiasms like skateboarding have usually been ephemeral. Nevertheless the Shire, notwithstanding its proclaimed commitment to sustainable development, appears to have not required a bond to be lodged to provide for the inevitable ultimate demolition and sound disposal of the works, and for the restoration of the site.
 
5. Adjacent Excess: The site is just beyond the northern extremity of an area of foreshore where at various stages a large conglomeration of other intrusive developments has been imposed. Those have included the very large area of foreshore taken over for car and boat trailer parking at the Rye Boat Ramp, and many other structures in that area. The load of intrusive development has become excessive. Other land, less highly regarded than the foreshore, should be used for the skateboard proposal.
 
6. Pre-emption of Plan: The Shire is preparing a Coast Action Plan (CAP), whose outcome should be awaited before a structure that is could well be inconsistent with it is imposed on the coast.
 

Yours sincerely, 

 

Geoffrey Goode 
President 
Port Phillip Conservation Council Inc. 

 

 
cc.  Hon. Sherryl Garbutt MLA; Minister for Conservation and Environment; Mr Victor Perton MLA; 
Mr Martin Dixon MLA; Hon. Ron Bowden MLC: Hon. Ken Smith MLC; 
Mornington Peninsula Shire councillors 
Mr Nick Wimbush, Central Coastal Board