3 minute read

HubNEWS Metro Minerva Theatre due for revival

BY JOHN MOYLE

When in February the former NSW Arts Minister Ben Franklin announced the compulsory acquisition of Parramatta’s Roxy Theatre it brought about a call for similar action to take place for the Metro Minerva Theatre in Potts Point.

HubARTS: Fab Four

Art in every corner at the National 4

(See p. 26)

PUBLISHED DATE 13 APRIL 2023

Published monthly and freely available throughout the Inner City. Copies are also distributed to serviced apartments, hotels, convenience stores and newsagents throughout the city.

Distribution enquiries call 9212 5677. Published by Altmedia Pty Ltd. While every effort is made to ensure accuracy of content, we take no responsibility for inadvertent errors or omissions.

ABN 52 600 903 348

Group Editor & Publisher: Lawrence Gibbons

Publisher Assistant: Mal Moody

Advertising Manager: Mal Moody 0484 042 615

Advertising: sales@altmedia.net.au

News Editor: Erin Modaro

Contributors: Abha Haval, Christine Lai, Erin Modaro, Henrique Monteiro, Jasmine Simmons, John Moyle, Justin Cooper, Lauren Frost and Sharlotte Thou

Arts Editor: Rita Bratovich

Contributors: Rita Bratovich, John Moyle, Martin Fabinyi, Mark Morellini, Irina Dunn

Cover Photo: Savannah Estate

Designer: Nadia Kalinitcheva

Mail: PO Box 843 Broadway 2007

Email: news@altmedia.net.au, arts@altmedia.net.au

Ph: 9212 5677 Fax: 9212 5633

Website: cityhubsydney.com.au

If you have a story, or any comments you’d like to share with us: news@altmedia.net.au

@CityHubSydney

The Metro Minerva is currently owned by property developers Central Element who have a development application lodged for the heritage listed building.

Central Element’s website states “Plans will see the vacant building, last occupied as an office, lovingly restored int a multi-use venue, incorporating a 5-star boutique hotel and performance spaces, for which the building is renowned.”

Despite the findings of a City of Sydney/ Create NSW feasibility study stating that the theatre could be restored as a working 1,000 seat venue, Central Element commissioned a study by Arup to state that this was impossible due to modern building standards and the degradation of the space during its conversion to a food court and later offices.

This was also despite 178 submissions from individuals, 1799 petition signatories and 21 responses from organisations being lodged against the proposal.

On 18 December 2020 the Metro Minerva was listed on the State Heritage Register and on 13 May 2021 a predevelopment meeting was held between Heritage NSW and the City of Sydney regarding the new proposal for the site.

In May last year Heritage NSW handed down its own report regarding then DA that has at least one proponent for the retention of the Metro Minerva as a theatrical venue hopeful.

Andrew Andersons is a highly awarded architect who has spent much of his working life developing Sydney’s theatrical spaces, including the Ros Packer Theatre, Angel Place Recital Hall and the restoration of the Capitol Theatre.

“The thrust of Arup’s report was that the old theatre would never comply with contemporary standards, in fact it had the most generous seating of any theatre in Sydney,” Andersons said.

“You could reinstate the old theatre as it was without any difficulties because nothing has fundamentally changed in the way that theatre designs are made.”

Heritage NSW, in section 2 of the report, supports this, stating “A joint feasibility study by Create NSW and City of Sydney found that the Minerva could house up to 1,000 patrons and therefore be financially viable as a small to medium theatre.” and if you can’t build that you are reducing the desirability of the hotel.

“The idea of using that magnificent auditorium as a nightclub is also a really bad idea.”

The City of Sydney noted that the DA was still under consideration and that the council officers were considering all documentation lodged with the DA against relevant planning controls.

A Create NSW spokesperson said that it “noted that the Department did not agree with assertions made by Central Element that the restoration of the theatre to a 1,000 seat venue was not possible.

“The submission … confirmed that the proposal to restore the theatre to a 1,000 seat theatre is both workable and realistic.”

Architect Opposes Elements Of Proposal

In Section 7 The Heritage NSW report states that the proposal should delete the demolition of the roof, the northern foyer wall and the introduction of partition walls in the auditorium.

“These are serious constraints that would really kill off the hotel, in my opinion,” Andersons said.

“The hotel is premised on building two levels of the auditorium roof, and all the best (hotel) rooms are in that section,

The report contains one glaring mistake in Section 6.2.6 when is says that there has been no “active theatre productions in the walls since the 1940s” which omits the record breaking two year run of Hair from 1969 to 1971.

“The report is encouraging to me as it is dealing with the major cultural significance of the building and its impact on the performing arts,” Andersons said. “If the state government wants to acquire then building it can negotiate a lower acquisition rate because the developer has no options to make it profitable.”

Alex Greenwich, the independent member for Sydney has said “I strongly support the compulsory acquisition of the Metro/ Minerva as a theatre as it’s the least the major parties can do for imposing the lockout laws on Kings Cross all those years ago.”

If the planned hotel development goes ahead, it will irreversibly change the look and use of the Metro Minerva, locking us out a world significant theatre space forever.

This article is from: