Chapter 7 Australian Broadcasting Corporation Melbourne accommodation
project, Southbank, Vic
7.1
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) proposes to relocate its
Melbourne-based television production and administrative functions from sites
at Gordon Street and Selwyn Street, Elsternwick, to a new building consolidated
with the existing ABC Centre at Southbank.
7.2
The purpose of the project is to support the ABC’s Strategic Plan, and therefore
meet the ABC Charter obligations.
7.3
The cost of the project is $176.4 million.
7.4
The project was referred to the Committee on 21 March 2013.
Conduct of the inquiry
7.5
Following referral to the Committee, the inquiry was advertised on the
Committee’s website, by media release and in The Australian and the Australian
Financial Review newspapers.
7.6
The Committee received one submission and three supplementary submission
from the ABC. The Committee also received submissions from various
organisations and individuals. The list of submissions can be found at
Appendix A.
7.7
The Committee received a private briefing and conducted a site
inspection, a public hearing and an in-camera hearing on 30 April 2013 in Melbourne.
7.8
A transcript of the public hearing and the submissions to the inquiry
are available on the Committee’s website.[1]
Need for the works
7.9
There are significant deficiencies in the existing Elsternwick sites.[2]
7.10
The ABC television studio complex located at Gordon Street, Elsternwick
was constructed in the 1950s and would need considerable refurbishment at
significant cost simply to provide reasonable levels of operational efficiency,
health and safety, serviceability, and functionality.[3]
7.11
The Selwyn Street, Elsternwick site includes a heritage-listed fire station,
two storey office accommodation, the outside broadcast garage and factory sheds
converted to garaging and storage for equipment, props and sets. There is also
a considerable need for refurbishment of the building’s ageing ICT
infrastructure. As there is already growing local pressure to limit the hours
of usage for the site, the ABC anticipates that there would be significant
residential objection to redevelopment of the site.[4]
7.12
The Southbank Boulevard site was completed in 1994 and has undergone various
office accommodation modifications and technology infrastructure upgrades. Much
of the engineering infrastructure in the Southbank building will need to be
refurbished to meet the higher level aims of the project. Additionally, the
power distribution infrastructure does not have a dual power supply which would
ensure the level of business continuity required for a 24 hour broadcasting
organisation with emergency broadcaster responsibilities.[5]
7.13
The Committee is satisfied that there is a need for the works.
Scope of the works
7.14
The works will include the following facilities:
- Construction of a new
five storey building which will include office space, television studios and
supporting technical facilities.
- A gross floor area
over the consolidated building of 31,663m2. This represents a
reduction in the total gross building area currently occupied by the ABC in
Melbourne of approximately 5,000m2.
- Some refurbishment of
the existing Southbank building to address ICT functionality, accommodation and
business continuity.
- Construction of a
basement car park for approximately 77 ABC operational vehicles.
- Integration of the
new and existing building including upgrade of services and office
accommodation to address current functionality issues.
- Construction of new studios
for television production, which include:
- A major
television production studio of approximately 800m2 which can be used
to produce a broad variety of programs including audience based entertainment
and drama.
- A new 250m2
studio for a broad range of News and Current Affairs programs.
- A smaller
production studio of 162m2 for ABC 3 - Kids and general programs.
- A smaller
studio primarily for the use of Australia Network News production.[6]
7.15
The Committee finds that the proposed scope of works is suitable to meet
the need.
Cost of the works
7.16
The project cost is $176.4 million. The Committee received a
confidential supplementary submission detailing the project costs and held an
in-camera hearing with the proponent agency on these costs.
7.17
The Committee is satisfied that the costings for the project provided to
it have been adequately assessed by the proponent agency.
Project issues
Co-location of facilities in Southbank
7.18
The project proposes to co-locate ABC staff at new and refurbished
facilities in Southbank. The ABC’s submission indicated that a number of
reviews have been undertaken on this issue:
The consistent conclusion from all of these reviews has been
that the most cost-effective and strategic accommodation solution for the ABC
in Melbourne is consolidation of all Melbourne-based operations (excluding the
television outside broadcast operations) at Southbank.[7]
7.19
ABC stated that co-location has significant benefits:
The benefit of bringing our various production activities
together into the one location is the increased sharing of ideas and
collaboration across the platforms. When television is housed separately from
radio and new media teams, they tend not to interact. What we have seen up at
the Ultimo building—it took a while to take hold but it is definitely alive and
well today—is increased collaboration between project teams, program teams and
mastheads. A great example is JTV. JTV is a collaboration between Triple J
radio and television to create a late-night version of Triple J on TV. ABC
Grandstand is another example, where a radio masthead has become a digital,
online service, a new media service—very different teams operating within the
organisation.[8]
7.20
Physical co-location will increase collaboration:
What we hope to achieve in this building by bringing those
program teams together and creating an environment that has fewer walls and
fewer boundaries, and more space where people will interact and collaborate, is
greater sharing of ideas across the organisation that allows the different
programming units to leverage that content. We have seen it happen in Perth,
when we brought our news and radio people together onto the same floor and
created a common, wet-service area, a lounge sort of area, where they could
mix. Over time, those programming areas have tended to share their ideas more
and then collaborate on their content. So, for the ABC, it generates a much
richer leveraging of the content and ideas. For the audience, it enables them
to see across all the platforms, with traditional mastheads, brands or content
being taken on to the newer platforms.[9]
7.21
Further, the design of the new facilities will enable increased casual
interaction, which will in turn increase formal collaboration:
Probably the greatest learning we have seen in our own
buildings and in other buildings that we have looked at around the world, like
the BBC's, is that the more opportunity you can create in a building for people
to run into each other and have a coffee, that sort of casual interaction,
particularly in our industry, the greater opportunity there is for a sharing of
ideas and content. That is definitely what we want to achieve in this building:
fewer walls, more open-plan areas and more spaces where people can more
casually engage with each other.[10]
7.22
Co-location provides financial and administrative savings, with only a
small reduction in staff numbers. The new facility will also provide for
possible future staff expansion of up to seven per cent.[11]
7.23
Additionally, the ABC explained the need for an inner-city location:
Yes, you could take them into far outer, rural or suburban
Melbourne, but as a facility that necessarily would not work, because of where
the industry is—where the production companies are, where the talent is. They
will not necessarily travel to outer suburban locations. That facility would
need to be within that 10-kilometre rim of the centre of the city to operate
effectively.[12]
Committee comment
7.24
The Committee acknowledges that the value of co-location is difficult to
quantify. However, the Committee notes the ABC’s experiences with co-location
and the benefits that it has provided to the ABC and to its audience. Further,
the Committee is aware that many reviews have recommended co-location and that
the ABC purchased the Sturt Street property with the intention of co-locating
its Melbourne operations.[13]
7.25
The Committee recognises that Melbourne is the last remaining capital
city location to complete this strategic initiative, and acknowledges that
co-location and consolidation will provide equal accommodation standards and increased
cohesion for ABC staff in Melbourne.
Final Committee comment
7.26
The Committee notes the significant work health and safety issues at the
Gordon Street site, particularly the widespread presence of asbestos in the
fabric of the building. This causes extensive administrative protocols and
workarounds, and prohibits most work refurbishment work at the site. This
emphasises the need for the ABC to abandon the Gordon Street site.
7.27
The Committee was satisfied with the evidence provided by the ABC
regarding the proposed project. The Committee is satisfied that the project has
merit in terms of need, scope and cost.
7.28
Proponent agencies must notify the Committee of any changes to the
project scope, time and cost. The Committee requires that a post-implementation
report be provided on completion of the project. A template for the report can
be found on the Committee’s website.
7.29
Having regard to its role and responsibilities contained in the Public
Works Committee Act 1969, the Committee is of the view that this project
signifies value for money for the Commonwealth and constitutes a project which
is fit for purpose, having regard to the established need.
Recommendation 6 |
|
The Committee recommends that the House of Representatives
resolve, pursuant to Section 18(7) of the Public Works Committee Act 1969,
that it is expedient to carry out the following proposed work: Australian
Broadcasting Corporation Melbourne accommodation project, Southbank, Vic. |