"The current owner has treated it with absolute disrespect and that makes me angry," he said.
"Community safety has to be number one and if the building has to go, it has to go, but this is a prime example of demolition by neglect and the inaction of the owner is a disgrace.
"My concern is this sends a strong message to other owners of historic and heritage buildings that if you continue to let your property go to rack and ruin, sooner or later you'll get permission to pull it down."
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And also from the Geelong Advertiser
THE
owners of the dilapidated Ritz building have until Friday morning to fence off
the site following an emergency order by City of Greater Geelong.
Fencing has arrived on site today but is
unlikely to be erected until the adjoining carpark is cleared later this
evening.
“If the owner has complied with the emergency
order by fencing off the site, then Council does not need to take any further
action,”
Manager City Development Joanne Van Slageren
said.“An engineer’s report would need to be
provided demonstrating the safety of the building before any barricading could
subsequently be removed.”
RIP DOWN
THE RITZ, MP URGES
SOUTH Barwon MP Andrew Katos has declared
time's up for Geelong's Ritz Flats and wants the building torn down in the
interests of public safety and pride.
"It's just an eyesore and a monstrosity
and a danger," Mr Katos said of the site yesterday. "This needs to
come down. This has dragged on for 20 years and this has to come down. It's as
simple as that."
He believes disrepair has voided the
building's heritage value and wants any heritage features mirrored in a new
building on the site.
Mr Katos spoke as heat intensified on the
building's owner, Tim Truong, as the clock ticked on a 48-hour City of Greater
Geelong emergency order to fence off land adjoining the building's cracked
southern wall.
That order followed an ignored emergency
order to provide expert analysis on the wall's structural integrity.
The Geelong Advertiser revealed the crack in
the building and called for the site to be fenced off.
Mr Katos said Victorian Planning Minister
Matthew Guy had asked to see the building during a visit to Geelong and had
pledged to help council work around heritage overlays if it was to be
demolished.
"The heritage has probably hamstrung
council. I think if the heritage could have been resolved some time ago I think
you would have seen movement on this building quite a while ago," Mr Katos
said.
"The problem is that this building I
don't think can be saved in its state. That's the issue now."
Geelong region National Trust conservation
spokeswoman Jennifer Bantow yesterday lamented the state of play.
"It's a dreadful shame that it has
reached this point. It was at one point able to be restored and it's another
example of this term we all know as demolition by neglect," Mrs Bantow
said.
"Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be
any way of compelling people to maintain heritage places unless someone is
living in them and it is condemned or something."
Mr Katos pointed to elements of life in the
Ritz's neighbourhood; new flats, parkland and loving restoration of The Lord
Nelson hotel. "And all of a sudden we've got this," he said.
He urged Mr Truong to get on with whatever
plans he had for the site.
"If you're not going to develop it,
knock it down and sell it to someone who will," he said.
Mr Truong's lawyer, Bowman & Knox partner
Ian Knox, declined to comment.
-------
And the people say –
Harvey of Newtown Posted at 4:10pm Thursday
the owner wanted it
pulled down and the council would not let him.It will cost $150,000 just tp
prop up the outside walls just to save them during construction.Anyway he was
offered more than $5,000,000 for the site and knocked it back. Who wants to pay
more????
Lana C of Geelong Posted at 2:28pm Thursday
My mum's cousin owned
the Ritz when she was a child and she recalls it being a special place, iconic
in Geelong. It is clear the current owner is trying to outsmart the Council by
doing nothing, and have them order the Ritz be demolished so that he doesn't
have to work around preserving its historic facade. Get tough Council, force
him to sell so that a new deserving owner can respect a piece of Geelong's
history, address safety issues and take advantage of the property's great
potential!
Lynn of Lara Posted at 1:08pm Thursday
If there was any chance
of restoration it should have been done years ago. Now its just a rotted, ugly,
eye saw. Too far gone to even consider restoration. The sooner its pulled down
the better.
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Meanwhile on the hillsides on the outskirts of Geelong, little boxes on the hillside seem to be rising - or not always little though.