Treasury media release 2009
Treasury media release 2009
(3/793). 1 vol.
Records name of applicant, permit number, file number and remarks regarding nature of building.
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
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Treasury media release
Treasury media release 2010
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The number of building approvals Subsidence Advisory NSW have processed in the Bargo mine district between 2017-2019
Applications for buildings and buildings extensions submitted to the Council for approval under Ordinances 70 and 71 of the Local Government Act, 1919. Each application contains plans or architectural drawings of the proposed building and a list of all materials to be used in the building. One application, C101, contains a letter to the applicant from the Department of War Organisation of Industry. The file reflects the control over building materials during the War years.
Each application was given an A, B, or C number by the Council, although the reason for this is not obvious from the records in the series.
These records were in the custody of the Department of Local Government and Housing.
(2/2159-60). 2 boxes
Note:
This description is extracted from Concise Guide to the State Archives of New South Wales, 3rd Edition 2000.
Treasury media release 2009
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List of Development Applications (DA) determined this month in the Lake Macquarie City Council Local Government Area.
Updated daily
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This dataset contains statistics about new license applications, licensed entities, license classes and owner-builder permits.
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This dataset is a work in progress and contains the identified curtilages or boundaries of items listed on the State Heritage Register of NSW. Every item has a 'centroid' which identifies its approximate location. When a listing on the State Heritage Register applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land, a person must not do any of the following things without appropriate approvals: (a) demolish the building or work, (b) damage or despoil the place, precinct or land, or any part of the place, precinct or land, (c) move, damage or destroy the relic or moveable object, (d) excavate any land for the purpose of exposing or moving the relic, (e) carry out any development in relation to the land on which the building, work or relic is situated, the land that comprises the place, or land within the precinct, (f) alter the building, work, relic or moveable object, (g) display any notice or advertisement on the place, building, work, relic, moveable object or land, or in the precinct, (h) damage or destroy any tree or other vegetation on or remove any tree or other vegetation from the place, precinct or land.
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A point dataset maintained by NSW Office of Environment and Heritage on behalf of the Heritage Council of NSW. The data applies to a listing on the State Heritage Register under the Heritage Act, 1977 and applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land. When a listing on the State Heritage Register under the Heritage Act, 1977 applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land, a person must not do any of the following things without appropriate approvals:(a) demolish the building or work,(b) damage or despoil the place, precinct or land, or any part of the place, precinct or land,(c) move, damage or destroy the relic or moveable object,(d) excavate any land for the purpose of exposing or moving the relic,(e) carry out any development in relation to the land on which the building, work or relic is situated, the land that comprises the place, or land within the precinct,(f) alter the building, work, relic or moveable object,(g) display any notice or advertisement on the place, building, work, relic, moveable object or land, or in the precinct,(h) damage or destroy any tree or other vegetation on or remove any tree or other vegetation from the place, precinct or land. For more information visit the following link: NSW Office of Environment and Heritage.
The Owner Builder Permits API has been developed for browsing, verifying and obtaining detailed Information related to owner builder permits for residential property owners. An owner-builder can take on the job of building or renovating their own home, performing the coordinating and contracting roles usually undertaken by a licensed contractor.
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License information was derived automatically
A polygon dataset maintained by NSW Office of Environment and Heritage on behalf of the Heritage Council of NSW for items listed on the State Heritage Register under the Heritage Act, 1977. The data applies to a listing on the State Heritage Register and applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land. When a listing on the State Heritage Register applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land, a person must not do any of the following things without appropriate approvals:(a) demolish the building or work,(b) damage or despoil the place, precinct or land, or any part of the place, precinct or land,(c) move, damage or destroy the relic or moveable object,(d) excavate any land for the purpose of exposing or moving the relic,(e) carry out any development in relation to the land on which the building, work or relic is situated, the land that comprises the place, or land within the precinct,(f) alter the building, work, relic or moveable object,(g) display any notice or advertisement on the place, building, work, relic, moveable object or land, or in the precinct,(h) damage or destroy any tree or other vegetation on or remove any tree or other vegetation from the place, precinct or land. For more information visit the following link: NSW Office of Environment and Heritage.
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License information was derived automatically
A polygon dataset maintained by NSW Office of Environment and Heritage on behalf of the Heritage Council of NSW for items listed on the State Heritage Register under the Heritage Act, 1977. The data applies to a listing on the State Heritage Register and applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land. When a listing on the State Heritage Register applies to a place, building, work, relic, moveable object, precinct, or land, a person must not do any of the following things without appropriate approvals:(a) demolish the building or work,(b) damage or despoil the place, precinct or land, or any part of the place, precinct or land,(c) move, damage or destroy the relic or moveable object,(d) excavate any land for the purpose of exposing or moving the relic,(e) carry out any development in relation to the land on which the building, work or relic is situated, the land that comprises the place, or land within the precinct,(f) alter the building, work, relic or moveable object,(g) display any notice or advertisement on the place, building, work, relic, moveable object or land, or in the precinct,(h) damage or destroy any tree or other vegetation on or remove any tree or other vegetation from the place, precinct or land. For more information visit the following link: NSW Office of Environment and Heritage.
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The data in this publication provides an overview of trends in development applications processed by the 152 councils in NSW. In 2006, the Department of Planning introduced a new system for regular performance reporting on the local development planning system, based on development application data collected by councils. This new system will have important long term benefits for State and local government, the development industry and the community. Performance data on local development assessment will assist in ensuring that the legislative framework, planning policy and planning practice are all functioning effectively. In particular, it will help to: * monitor the performance of councils in planning and development matters * monitor the performance of State agency referrals and integrated approvals * monitor key aspects of planning and development assessment systems and identify areas where further streamlining of current procedures and practices could occur * assist in early identification of emerging trends and provide a lead for ongoing system improvement and management * assist in improving the public accountability of the system by establishing performance measures and benchmarks based on comparable data available. The information contained in this report was collected by surveying all councils on development applications (DAs), complying development certificates (CDCs) and postdevelopment consent (building and subdivision) certificates processed during 2005–06. Prior to this survey, the only published data on planning and development matters was the Comparative Information on NSW Local Government Councils produced annually by the Department of Local Government, which provides key performance indicators for various local government operations. The four broad performance indicators for planning and development services contained in the Department of Local Government comparative information are: * number of DAs determined * mean time in calendar days for determining DAs * median time in calendar days for determining DAs * legal expenses to total planning and development costs. The Department of Planning’s Local Development Performance Monitoring supplements this comparative information by focusing specifically on development assessment matters dealt with by local government. The range of information collected through the Department of Planning’s performance reporting system is much more comprehensive than that contained in the Comparative Information on NSW Local Government Councils publication and covers the following areas: * volume of applications lodged and determined * staff involved in DA processing * time taken to determine DAs by estimated development value * value of approved DAs * nature of DA determinations * modifications and reviews * court cases and legal expenses * certificates issued post-development consent * obstacles to efficient DA processing * council initiatives to improve DA processing.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The data in this publication provides an overview of trends in development applications processed by the 152 councils in NSW.
In 2006, the Department of Planning introduced a new system for regular performance reporting on the local development planning system, based on development application data collected by councils. This new system will have important long term benefits for State and local government, the development industry and the community. Performance data on local development assessment will assist in ensuring that the legislative framework, planning policy and planning practice are all functioning effectively. In particular, it will help to:
The information contained in this report was collected by surveying all councils on development applications (DAs), complying development certificates (CDCs) and postdevelopment consent (building and subdivision) certificates processed during 2005–06.
Prior to this survey, the only published data on planning and development matters was the Comparative Information on NSW Local Government Councils produced annually by the Department of Local Government, which provides key performance indicators for various local government operations. The four broad performance indicators for planning and development services contained in the Department of Local Government comparative information are:
The Department of Planning’s Local Development Performance Monitoring supplements this comparative information by focusing specifically on development assessment matters dealt with by local government. The range of information collected through the Department of Planning’s performance reporting system is much more comprehensive than that contained in the Comparative Information on NSW Local Government Councils publication and covers the following areas:
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The NSW Government (NSW) through Roads & Maritime (RMS), Transurban and Westlink M7 are undertaking the construction of NorthConnex tunnel Motorway in New South Wales, Australia. The project involves the construction of a twin motorway tunnel of 9km length with two lanes and a breakdown lane in each direction between the M1 Pacific Motorway and the Hills M2 Motorway, an increased height clearance of 5.3m and half of the tunnel will be 60m deep, and excavation of additional around 3km tunnels for on and off ramps. Each tunnel will be built with the long term capacity for three lanes in each direction.The project includes the construction of southern interchange connecting Pennant Hills Road and the Hills M2 Motorway, and northern interchange connecting with the M1 Pacific Motorway, the Pacific Highway and Pennant Hills Road.The project will feature the construction of a motorway operation complex, control centre, ancillary buildings, water treatment plant each one near the southern interchange and northern interchange, electronic tolling facilities, ventilation facilities and tunnel support facilities, and the installation of street lights, sign boards and safety systems.The tunnel is being constructed using drilling & blasting method.In March 2012, NSW Government received an unsolicited proposal from Transurban and the Westlink M7 shareholders to design, build, operate, maintain and finance (DBOMF) the project.Australian Government announced it would contribute up to US$315 million to help deliver this project in partnership with the NSW Government in the 2013-14 Budget.Transurban has appointed Aecom as Technical Adviser. Aecom is responsible for providing technical consultancy to leverage innovative engineering solutions for cost savings, environmental approvals, preliminary geotechnical investigations, and reference design and performance specifications for tenders.In June 2013, Transurban has issued an expression of interest (EOI) for design-build (DB) contractor with a submission deadline in July 2013. Bidders were requested to deliver an innovative, cost effective and environmentally responsive design to be constructed within a budget.On August 8, 2013, NSW Minister for Roads and Ports announced three consortia had been invited to tender for the project. The consortia are Thiess John Holland Joint Venture, Lend Lease Bouygues Joint Venture and GlobalLink Joint Venture consisting of Ghella Pty Ltd and Acciona Infrastructure Australia Pty Ltd. The tendering period closed at the end of November 2013.On March 16, 2014, Australian and NSW Governments announced the preferred scheme and Lend Lease Bouygues as the preferred tenderer for NorthConnex.On January 15, 2015, NSW Minister for Planning has granted the approvals for the construction and operation of NorthConnex. The conditions include new and extensive safeguards on the operation of the tunnel and air quality.On January 31, 2015, the project achieved financial close.In January 2015, Lend Lease Bouygues joint venture (LLBJV) was awarded the design-build contractor.The NSW Department of Planning and Environment placed the NorthConnex Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on display for community comment from July 15, 2014, until September 12, 2014.Allens has been appointed as legal adviser and Mikcon Civil South Coast Pty Ltd as the plant supplier.On February 2, 2015, Federal Assistant Infrastructure and NSW Roads signed a final contract to close the deal financial deal for the project.On February 5, 2015, groundbreaking ceremony was held. On February 15, 2015, Hyder Consulting and APP Corporation was appointed as the lead consultant.In September 2015, UGL Ltd was awarded a sub-contract and signed a US$342 million four-year alliance agreement which covers the design, procurement, construction and commissioning of the mechanical, electrical, control, fire and communication systems services required for the motorway development.In the first quarter of 2016, US$73 million was allocated in the federal budget to the project by the Government of Australia, which is part of a US$315 million fund allocated in 2013.In May 2016, blasting and rock breaking to make shafts for the tunnels are being done.In May 2017, Federal Government announced US$308.9 million funding in equity for the project over next 10 years. Out of which US$37 million to be provided for planning and preparatory work in 2017-18.The government plans to establish a government-owned company with strong private sector expertise in FY2017/18 to manage the development process.Construction activities are underway and scheduled to complete in the fourth quarter of 2019. Read More
Treasury media release 2009