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Developer Salta sells land, buildings to fund its build-to-rent dream

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Charter Keck Cramer’s national research director, Richard Temlett, said financiers needed to adjust their expectations, and governments should re-introduce incentives to bring foreign investors back into the market.

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Five build-to-rent projects covering 1370 apartments were completed in Melbourne last year but none in Sydney. The next two years offer some light in Sydney with eight build-to-rent projects covering 1550 units under way.

In Melbourne, there are 35 approved build-to-rent projects covering 8500 apartments, and a further 32 projects in either application or early planning covering 9000 apartments.

However, the report found that “finance for the construction of several build-to-rent projects continues to be difficult to secure on acceptable lending terms. Some projects may, therefore, be delayed or deferred in the short term”.

Apartment launches and construction across Melbourne and Sydney are at their lowest levels in a decade and way below the peaks of 2015 to 2017.

Salta contributed hundreds of apartments during that period as part of the development of its 17-hectare urban renewal project in North Richmond and Abbotsford.

Thirty years ago, a trip down the eastern end of Victoria Street took travellers past the razed Vickers Ruwolt site and the Melbourne Fire Brigade’s training centre.

Theatre owner David Marriner envisaged the riverside site as a huge commercial and residential project. Salta entered into the partnership in 1996 with Marriner, who bowed out in 2007 before the Victor Smorgon Group joined forces with Salta in 2009.

The site straddling Victoria Street, which includes the 21-year-old Victoria Garden shopping centre (co-owned with Vicinity), 31,000 square metres of office space and another 800 apartments, has been totally transformed.

Last week, Salta marked the completion of more than 1000 apartments along the river and the opening of Walmer Plaza, a public space between buildings that leads to the revamped Walmer Bridge and bike route.

Salta transformed a 17-hectare industrial site on the riverbank in North Richmond and Abbotsford.

Salta transformed a 17-hectare industrial site on the riverbank in North Richmond and Abbotsford.Credit: Eddie Jim

The project’s difficulties are an example for developers and affordable housing advocates who think it’s easy to transform former industrial sites into residential zones.

While he would not disclose the total clean-up cost, Tarascio revealed that remediation of the former MFB training centre site blew out after unknown contaminants were discovered.

“One of the unknowns is estimating the clean-up costs. Costs on this site went up from $2 million to $18 million. These are significant impediments to ensuring we can provide affordable housing. But you have to do it,” he said.

“All of these inner-city sites have got problems. The river was historically a way of disposing of contaminants. Opening up the river is one of the things we’re really proud of.”

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