Chapter 1 The allocation of land to diplomatic missions in the ACT
Introduction
1.1
In November 2012, the Minister for Regional Australia, Regional
Development and Local Government, the Hon Simon Crean MP, requested the Joint
Standing Committee on the National Capital and External Territories to conduct
an inquiry into the allocation of land to diplomatic missions in the Australian
Capital Territory.
1.2
The inquiry arose out of public concern surrounding the process of
allocating land to diplomatic missions under Draft Amendment 78 to the National
Capital Plan, which proposes the creation of a new diplomatic estate to the
south-west of Stirling Ridge, an area of as yet undeveloped land of
significance to the local community in Yarralumla.
1.3
The Committee was tasked with examining the roles of various agencies
involved in the allocation of land to diplomatic missions, including the
National Capital Authority (NCA), the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
(DFAT), and the Government of the Australian Capital Territory (where
applicable). It was also tasked with investigating forecast levels of supply
and demand for diplomatic missions; the suitability of current property types
and other options to meet the needs of diplomatic missions; and options for the
location of future diplomatic estates.
1.4
In undertaking its task, the Committee has examined the following:
- the current planning
structure for the allocation of land for diplomatic missions in the Australian
Capital Territory and compared it to overseas examples, most particularly
Washington DC
- the roles of the
various agencies involved, particularly the NCA, DFAT and the ACT Government
- forecast demand and
supply for diplomatic missions
- various options for
meeting future demand
- options for future
locations, including Draft Amendment 78 concerning Stirling Ridge
- the need for an
overall strategy to govern the allocation of land to diplomatic missions.
Diplomatic missions in the ACT
International and statutory obligations
1.5
Australia’s obligations with regard to diplomatic missions are defined
under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations. Article 21 of the
Convention provides that any nation has an obligation to ‘either facilitate the
acquisition on its territory, in accordance with its laws, by the sending state
of premises necessary for its mission or assist the latter in obtaining
accommodation in some other way’.[1] Article 22 also provides
a ‘special duty to take all appropriate steps to protect the premises of the
mission against any intrusion or damage and to prevent any disturbance of the
peace of the mission or impairment of its dignity’.[2]
1.6
Australia’s international obligations have been implemented under the
following legislation:
- Diplomatic
Privileges and Immunities Act 1967
- Consular
Privileges and Immunities Act 1972
- Public Order
(Protection of Persons and Property) Act 1971
- Crimes
(Internationally Protected Persons) Act 1976[3]
1.7
In addition, the AFP noted its responsibilities as set out in section 8
of the Australian Federal Police Act 1979, ‘which includes the provision
of police services in relation to the laws of the Commonwealth, the
safeguarding of Commonwealth interests and performing such protective and
custodial functions as the minister directs in the gazette’.[4]
Planning regime
1.8
The diplomatic estate in Canberra exists within the planning environment
established by the National Capital Plan. The Plan identifies matters of
national significance, including the ‘pre-eminence of the role of Canberra and
the Territory as the National Capital’. Within this context, one of the key
objectives of the National Capital Plan is to ‘further develop and enhance the
Central National Area which includes the Parliamentary Zone and its setting and
the main diplomatic sites and national institutions, as the heart of the National
Capital’.[5] There is no specific plan
or policy governing the location of diplomatic missions. In its submission,
however, the NCA noted that:
Diplomatic issues are a component of foreign affairs and thus
a Commonwealth, rather than a Territory, function. This means that, ideally,
all diplomatic missions would be located on National Land sites, identified for
Diplomatic Use, within a Designated Area defined by the National Capital Plan.[6]
1.9
The NCA further noted that ‘there are significant foreign policy
advantages if land allocation and planning is controlled by the Commonwealth’.[7]
1.10
The result is that a substantial proportion of the diplomatic missions
in Canberra are located within the three sections—in Yarralumla, West Deakin
and O’Malley—of the diplomatic estate. In its submission, the Department of
Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) stated that of the ninety-nine diplomatic
missions currently established in Canberra:
- Fifty-two are in the
diplomatic estate
- Eight have
undeveloped leases in the diplomatic estate
- Forty seven are in
temporary accommodation:
- Five in
commercially leased premises
- Nine in
the central national area
- Thirty-five
in residential leases—predominantly in areas adjacent to the diplomatic estate.[8]
1.11
With regard to missions located in residential areas DFAT noted:
The lack of capacity in the diplomatic estate and the nature
of the zoning of land in Canberra mean that diplomatic missions which do not
establish in commercial premises have to seek permission to use residential
premises for their chanceries. The grant of relief from the purpose clause of
Crown leases for residential premises can only be temporary—for a period of up
to three years. Some diplomatic missions seek to have this extended, others
move to new premises. This does not offer certainty for diplomatic missions.[9]
1.12
In its submission, DFAT emphasised that ‘the Australian Government
supports the establishment of new diplomatic missions in Canberra, recognising
that this reflects positively both on Canberra and Australia’. Diplomatic
missions have sought to locate in central areas—in the diplomatic estates or in
commercial office buildings. Smaller missions have rented commercial spaces in
the same zones.[10]
1.13
Diplomatic missions generally seek locations against the following
criteria:
- Ease of access to
Parliament House, government departments—particularly central agencies, DFAT
and Defence—and other decision makers in key sectors
- Proximity to other
diplomatic missions
- Visibility in
centrally located areas for symbolic and public diplomacy reasons
- The capacity to
provide representational activities
- Ease of access for
their nationals in order to provide consular representation among other
services.[11]
1.14
When assessing the suitability of sites for diplomatic use, the NCA
takes account of the following:
- Centrally located to
satisfy the business requirements and preferences of missions
- Ability to provide
appropriate levels of security and emergency response times
- Capacity to meet the
needs of a diversity of block sizes
- Ease of access
- Minimising
environmental, heritage and servicing constraints
- Co-locating
diplomatic missions in estates to minimise disruption to neighbouring
properties from national days, receptions, and security requirements.[12]
1.15
Diplomatic leases are granted under the terms of the Leases (Special
Purposes) Ordinance 1925. Special Purpose leases are for a period of 99
years. Diplomatic missions cannot sell their leases—they must be surrendered to
the Commonwealth, although there is provision for compensation for improvements
made (e.g. cost of buildings).[13] The Ordinance requires
diplomatic missions to commence development within 18 months of commencement of
their lease and complete development within 36 months, although the NCA may
grant extensions of time to construct.[14]
1.16
The current options for leasing National Land for diplomatic purposes
are:
- Land
exchange—negotiated between DFAT and the relevant country. This is a reciprocal
arrangement and no monetary payments are involved. Four diplomatic land swaps
have been completed to date.
- Land rent—based on 5%
per annum (2% prior to 1972) of the Unimproved Capital Value of the land (reappraised every
20 years). Currently 43 missions pay land rent (20 at 2%; 23 at 5%).
- Upfront premium
payment—paid at the commencement of the lease based on the Unimproved Capital
Value of the land. No annual rent is paid. To date 27 missions have paid
upfront premium payments for their blocks.[15]
1.17
The NCA notes that there has been a trend, over time, towards smaller
block sizes, ‘although a significant proportion of diplomatic missions now seek
to acquire two or more blocks’, allowing them to ‘construct not just a
chancery, but also a co-located head of mission residence, staff accommodation
and diplomatic ancillary buildings, such as cultural centres’.[16]
1.18
Reasons for desiring larger missions include:
- The status of a
government recognised by the Australia Government
- The status a foreign
government applies to its relationship with the Australian Government
- Political role of a
government in the Asia-Pacific region
- Need to accommodate
more staff to support increasing consular and trade activities
- Matters related to
the management and/or security of the facility
- Individual
preferences of each diplomatic mission.[17]
1.19
The result of this policy framework is that Canberra has a very
distinctive diplomatic estate, largely confined to three areas in central
Canberra. The missions display a variety of styles, from office accommodation
(for example, Argentina in Barton or Columbia in Civic), to low key chanceries
built very much in the style of the surrounding suburban residences, to high
visibility buildings constructed in a distinctive national style. As DFAT noted
in its evidence before the Committee:
There are physical presences that are identifiably the Papua
New Guinea High Commission, the Solomon Islands High Commission, the American
embassy and the South African Embassy, and the real sense that they have become
part of the Canberra landscape.[18]
1.20
DFAT also noted the changing circumstances and shifting expectations of
the diplomatic community over time, and the variety of needs and circumstances
that DFAT and the NCA must respond to:
I do not think there is a consolidated diplomatic corps view.
In my discussions with them they very much have different expectations
depending on the size of their missions. Some feel that, since they have had to
get smaller for certain reasons, they are not looking to get a different block
of land. Others feel quite constrained; there are four or five of them in one
office now where there were only two or three before. So there is this constant
change. It is a very fluid situation.[19]
1.21
It is within this context that the NCA has proposed Draft Amendment 78,
providing for a new diplomatic estate south-west of Stirling Ridge.
Overseas experience
1.22
Overseas experience sheds some light on current practices in Canberra.
In evidence before the Committee, DFAT noted the similarities and the
differences between Canberra and most other capitals:
Most countries have more open rental or purchase on the
private market and the obligation on the host country will be to assist in
making it happen. How they do that will vary. There are some that do have
estates, in the same way that Canberra has gone. But in most of the capital
cities where we have a mission of some sort, either we have had property there
for so long that it is almost not an issue now, or it tends to be in cities
where we would negotiate with a private landholder, either for renting or
purchasing, and then we would seek approval from the host government to locate
a mission there.[20]
1.23
DFAT emphasised, however, that Canberra was unique, and that practices
elsewhere were not necessarily applicable to Canberra:
But Canberra is quite a different city in terms of the ACT
regulatory guidelines and how you build and the 99-year leases and those sorts
of things. So there are some things that I think will always be rather
particular to Canberra, and a lot of that has contributed to the quality of
life that we have here in Canberra and the sorts of things that I know the NCA
is very concerned about in terms of broader planning. If you are comparing what
we do in Canberra with what is done in London, it will be very different…A lot
of it will go back to historic reasons—we have had a property for a zillion
years and therefore there have not been any issues—or areas where there are
particular security problems. For example, in Baghdad there are one-off issues
that we are considering.[21]
1.24
One possible comparison is with the Canadian capital, Ottawa, which has
a very different mix of diplomatic premises. According to the National Capital
Commission’s Capital Core Area Sector Plan, ‘diplomatic missions and
international organisations bring an international feeling to the Core Area and
diversify the range of cultural activities and representations available to
residents and visitors’. On the other hand, the Plan notes that the essentially
unplanned mix of locations for diplomatic missions has its shortcomings:
While some of these occupy high profile sites, many
diplomatic missions are located, out of view, in office towers. The potential
for the totality of these uses to contribute to the symbolism and experience of
the Core Area is constrained due to lack of visual identity and uncoordinated
programing/information. At the same time, the extent of security measures
employed at some diplomatic missions detracts from, rather than contributes to,
an enhanced public experience.[22]
1.25
Another point of comparison is Washington DC, which provides a model of
integrated national and civic planning incorporating the diplomatic estate.
Washington DC
1.26
Washington DC provides a useful comparison with Canberra in terms of
managing the diplomatic estate. Both are purpose built capitals and planned
cities with a substantial diplomatic presence. The National Capital Planning
Commission (NCPC) notes in the Foreign Missions and International Organizations
Element of the Comprehensive Plan for the National Capital that:
There are 191 countries in the world, and the United States
maintains diplomatic relations with 180 of them, and with many international
organizations. One hundred sixty nine of those countries have foreign missions
in Washington. These missions are vital to the United States government in
assisting it to manage diplomatic relations with international institutions,
organizations and states.[23]
1.27
The Foreign Missions Act (FMA) of 1982 governs the US Government’s
jurisdiction over diplomatic missions, including the ‘mechanism and criteria
relating to the location of foreign missions in the District of Columbia’.[24]
The regulatory framework established by the FMA ‘leaves the responsibility for
identifying and acquiring sites for chanceries with the foreign governments
under free market conditions with limited regulations depending upon the
desired location’.[25]
1.28
Areas where diplomatic missions may locate without regulatory review are
known as ‘matter-of-right’, principally in areas zoned commercial, industrial,
waterfront or mixed use. ‘Prior to establishing a chancery in one of these
areas, a foreign government need only receive clearance to proceed from the US
Department of State Office of Foreign Missions.’[26]
1.29
Other, ‘non-matter of right areas’, are ‘areas zoned for medium-high or
high density residential uses, and any other area within the District of Columbia
determined on the basis of existing uses’. Chanceries proposed in such areas
are subject to review by the District of Columbia Board of Zoning Adjustment
(BZA) in a public hearing. In making its determinations, the BZA is bound to
specific criteria under the FMA:
Generally, these criteria relate to: the international
obligation of the United States to facilitate acquisition of adequate and
secure facilities for foreign missions, historic preservation, the adequacy of
off-street parking and public transportation, the ability to provide adequate
security, and other municipal and federal interests.[27]
1.30
While the focus of the FMA is US national and diplomatic interests, it
also seeks to strike a balance between federal interests and the potential
impact of foreign missions upon surrounding neighbourhoods:
…the FMA stipulates that the US Department of State shall
require foreign missions to substantially comply with District of Columbia
building related codes in a manner that is not inconsistent with the international
obligations of the United States, and that other laws applicable with respect
to the location, replacement, or expansion of real property in the District of
Columbia shall apply with respect to chanceries only to the extent that they
are consistent with the FMA.[28]
1.31
The result of this planning regime is that 91% of foreign missions are
located on private property under leasehold or freehold arrangements.[29]
While this arrangement potentially allows fairly widespread locations for
diplomatic missions, in practice all chanceries are located in the Northwest
quadrant of Washington DC, ‘with the majority located in the area bounded by 16th
Street on the east and Wisconsin Avenue on the west’. Within that area there
are several distinct concentrations of chanceries.[30]
The Northwest quadrant has attracted foreign missions due to historical
developments, availability of land and buildings, proximity to government and
other chanceries, ‘and Comprehensive Plan policies that encouraged chanceries
to locate in Northwest DC’.[31]
1.32
In addition, the International Centre Act of 1968 provided for the
establishment of a diplomatic enclave known as the International Chancery
Centre (ICC):
The purpose of this Act was to facilitate the conduct of
foreign relations by the US Department of State in Washington, DC, through the
creation of a more favourable atmosphere for foreign missions to establish
offices and other related facilities.[32]
1.33
The Comprehensive Plan observes that:
This enclave provides low-cost federal land that has allowed
foreign missions to avoid protracted negotiations and regulatory review
sometimes encountered when they initially locate, relocate, or expand their
facilities on private land in the District of Columbia.[33]
1.34
Developments within the ICC ‘are not subject to local zoning and
building requirements’. Instead, ‘these developments are subject to review and
approval by the National Capital Planning Commission’.[34]
1.35
The US Government is now in the process of acquiring a site for a new
foreign missions centre:
Similar to the existing ICC, proposals for chanceries and
similar facilities within the new foreign missions centre will be subject to
NCPC review and approval, and therefore, NCPC is working closely with the US
Department of State to develop a master plan that will guide the development.
In addition, it is anticipated that a set of development controls, similar to
the ICC, will be prepared which take into consideration not only the policies
of the Comprehensive Plan and the programmatic needs of the diplomatic community,
but also lessons learned from ICC, future development plans of the local
government, impacts to the surrounding community, historic constraints, and
sustainability goals and objectives.[35]
1.36
The Comprehensive Plan highlights an expectation of future demand, both
from new missions and existing missions wishing to expand or relocate within
Washington DC. The Plan states:
Trends of the past 20 years suggest that locations for as
many as 100 new and relocated chanceries may have to be found in the next 25
years. This could require the identification of four to five chancery sites per
year. Forty-eight foreign missions relocated within the nation’s capital in the
last 20 years, and if this trend continues, some 60 foreign missions will
relocate by 2030. In addition, approximately 40 new foreign missions could
locate new chanceries in the District.[36]
1.37
In evidence before the Committee, the NCPC reiterated an expectation of
future demand from a combination of sources—new missions, consolidation and
relocation—and stated that ‘we do feel there is a need for additional land to
accommodate these needs’. Hence the development of a new international chancery
centre.[37] It also noted that while
Washington had been well served by the private market, the market had changed:
… what we have also found over the course of the last 10 to
15 years is that, firstly, security requirements have made it more difficult
for many of these chanceries to either remain in their current facilities or be
able to retrofit their facilities to meet their security needs. Second, we have
also found that many of our foreign missions have a main building but they also
have a lot of satellite buildings. A lot of them want to consolidate into a
single building, which leads to a second issue, which is that to do that they
have to acquire a large tract of property to develop that sort of structure. In
our city that is a very difficult thing to do unless you have a large piece of
vacant land that you could subdivide, like at our International Chancery
Centre, and then offer the sites up for new development. China, for example,
had a very large facility in one of our neighbourhoods, but they have also
moved to the International Chancery Centre because they needed the security and
because they are growing. They also wanted to consolidate their many
satellites. So I do think we have been well served, but the market has changed
in terms of the needs of the embassies, and that is one of the things we have
been seeing recently.[38]
1.38
The NCPC highlighted several issues governing the location of diplomatic
missions, including security, visibility and their impact on local
neighbourhoods. With regard to security, the NCPC stated:
With regard to security, there is an overarching layer of
security provided by the uniformed division of the US Secret Service. So at the
International Chancery Center, there is a building and they have a permanent
presence on the street. For those foreign missions that are located throughout
the city in facilities that they own—for example, in an area of the city called
'Embassy Row'—you will often see the Secret Service patrolling the area by
vehicle, but you will also find that a lot of the individual chanceries, or
foreign missions, have their own security. They might have a security detail on
premises. Some of them have fences or gatehouses that control access into the
property. I would say that there is a combination of different types of
security that you would find.[39]
1.39
The NCPC further noted that:
The Secret Service provides the level of security that it
deems appropriate working with the particular embassy, regardless of the
location. Clearly, in what we call our embassy row or areas where there is a
high concentration it is easier because they can have patrols working in
tandem. For the outlying areas that you have defined, they still have the
responsibility and must provide that security.[40]
1.40
Visibility was regarded as an important attribute of location, the NCPC
stating that ‘foreign missions do enjoy their own visible presence and they
tend to like to locate in very prestigious neighbourhoods in close proximity to
each other’.[41] The NCPC observed that:
In the area of the city that I referred to called ‘Embassy
Row’ where there is a lot of existing and very historic building stock, that in
and of itself provides the prestige that the foreign missions are looking for.
Just being in such a historic neighbourhood and in such a high concentration of
foreign missions, where their individual identity comes from displaying their
flag out front, provides the prestige. In the international
centre, the development controls were purposefully developed to be kind of
loose and to define a general envelope within which a foreign government could
come and build and express their own architectural identity native to their
country. So you would find—and we would be happy to send you images of the
international centre—the architectural styles are very diversified. That
provides their own presence in that way.[42]
1.41
With regard to the impact on local neighbourhoods, the NCPC advised that
there were some issues surrounding the location of chanceries in residential
neighbourhoods. The NCPC stated:
We do have a neighbourhood that is considered to have an
overconcentration of chanceries in a residential neighbourhood. The traffic that
those office functions generate, both on a daily basis in conducting their
business and also at larger events such as national day celebrations—it is
traffic, it is parking—impacts on the public space. You might find visitors
parking across sidewalks or in areas where they are not supposed to be located.
Some issues are related to noise, oftentimes associated with a large
celebration. We have had to address issues related to
countries that have relocated to a new facility but retain ownership of the old
one and it sits there vacant. They can see that it leads to overgrown yards and
is falling into disrepair. The countries perhaps do not have the resources to
maintain that property, and that has caused those types of issues in
neighbourhoods.[43]
1.42
The Comprehensive Plan notes a mix of building types amongst missions,
including stand-alone multi-use chancery buildings, rehabilitated structures
and commercial office spaces. Trends include an increase in lot size and
increased security requirements, including larger setbacks. The Plan states
that:
The availability of sites that meet the needs of foreign
missions within traditional diplomatic areas is increasingly limited, and the
International Chancery Centre has no available sites for chancery development.
Therefore, additional development opportunities in areas zoned for chancery use
may be required for the future location of chanceries within the nation’s
capital, and it may be necessary for foreign missions to look beyond
traditional diplomatic enclaves. In addition, it may be necessary to establish
new foreign missions centre development areas.[44]
1.43
The Foreign Missions in the District of Columbia—Future Location
Analysis, which informs the Comprehensive Plan, highlighted the problem of
diplomatic overdevelopment in certain neighbourhoods, and growing resistance
from residents and officials to new chanceries in these areas. It also
highlights issues that can arise when planning regimes do not keep pace with
reality on the ground.[45] The Future Location
Analysis identifies a range of solutions, including revising planning
regulations to open up new areas to diplomatic missions, make better use of
established areas, take advantage of urban redevelopment schemes, and open up
new foreign missions centres on the model of the current International Chancery
Centre.[46] Under the Comprehensive
Plan, establishing new foreign mission centres is seen as an important element
in the future development of the diplomatic estate:
The anticipated demand for an average of four or five new chancery
sites within the District of Columbia each year, the build-out of the existing
International Chancery Centre, and increasing private-sector land and
development costs demonstrate the need to plan and establish one or more
additional foreign missions centres to assist in the accommodation of new and
expanding foreign missions.[47]
1.44
The Plan notes the opportunity to pursue a variety of development styles
within such centres:
A high-density centre with urban characteristics
incorporating a combination of attached townhouse-type chanceries and mid and
high-rise structures could be developed at several scales: a large-scale
centre could accommodate several dozen chanceries in one location and
accommodate several years of demand, while one or more smaller centres that
could accommodate a lower number of chanceries would offer geographic
dispersion and a shorter time horizon. Ideally, new foreign mission centres
would be developed on land that is already owned by the federal government.
However, foreign missions centres could also be built on privately owned land
in new developments…[48]
1.45
Within the policies elaborated by the Plan the federal government is
encouraged to:
- Give priority
consideration for the location of a new foreign missions centre at the Armed Forces
Retirement Home.
- Give priority
consideration for the location of a new foreign missions centre in the South Capitol
Street corridor.[49]
1.46
Foreign missions are encouraged to:
- Locate chanceries
within the diplomatic districts of the 16th Street corridor and the adjacent
Columbia Heights, Adams Morgan, and Mt. Pleasant neighbourhoods.
- Locate chanceries
within the diplomatic districts of the South Capitol Street corridor and adjacent
Anacostia waterfront development areas in the Southwest and Southeast quadrants
of the District.[50]
1.47
Policies governing the siting of chanceries include:
- Land Use and Zoning. Foreign
missions are encouraged to:
- Locate
their chancery facilities in areas where adjacent existing and proposed land
use is compatible (e.g., office, commercial, and mixed use), giving special
care to protecting residential areas.
- Ensure
that chancery locations are compatible with existing or proposed zoning, giving
special care to protecting the integrity of residential areas.
- Urban Design. Foreign
missions are encouraged to:
- Protect
the historic open space system of the L’Enfant Plan, and develop structures and
landscaping that enhance and preserve its historic qualities.
- Preserve
and enhance the urban spaces, circles, squares, and plazas generated by the L’Enfant
Plan and the unique views and vistas of the nation’s capital.
- Protect
the historic legacy of Washington, D.C. by ensuring that buildings and
landscapes are consistent with the grandeur of a great world capital.
- Construct
chanceries to complement or reflect neighbouring buildings and settings and ensure
that the height, size, and spatial orientation of chanceries are consistent
with the character of the neighbourhood.
- Construct
buildings and landscapes that demonstrate an appreciation of the architectural style
and landscape of the surrounding environs while representing the finest
architectural thought of the corresponding nation.
- Historic Preservation.
Foreign missions are encouraged to:
- Protect
the integrity of historic districts and historic structures when locating
chanceries in them.
- Ensure
that chanceries in historic districts are sensitive to the character of the
district.
- Protect
and enhance historic landscapes by ensuring that development adjacent to such landscapes
promotes their protection and integrity.
- Preserve
and maintain the features and character of historic properties.
- Access. Foreign
missions are encouraged to:
- Locate
chanceries such that access is possible by different transportation modes, including
walking, public transportation, and automobile.
- Consider
urban design qualities, neighbourhood characteristics, and traffic capacity in
the configuration of vehicular access.
- Provide
pedestrian access and offer safe, clean, and pleasant environments for pedestrians
that include sidewalks and other amenities.
- Provide
adequate off-street parking that accommodates employees, visitors, and special event
participants.
- Open Space and
Parkland. Foreign missions are encouraged to:
- Preserve
existing open space and parkland.
- Enhance
and make accessible open space or parkland, including waterfront locations, when
chanceries are located adjacent to it.
- Construct
landscapes that promote a beautiful and healthy environment by preserving the tree
canopy and avoiding the destruction of mature trees.[51]
Committee conclusions
1.48
The Committee notes that the practices for locating diplomatic missions
in the Australian Capital Territory have evolved within bureaucratic control
which is unsurprising considering Canberra is a planned city. This is in stark
contrast to most capitals, where diplomatic missions have historically
established in the best location available at the time, without any particular
planning or direction. This is not to say, however, that the allocation of land
to diplomatic missions in the ACT has been conducted in accordance with an
overarching plan, but rather that a certain set of principles and practices
have been applied, more or less consistently, over time.
1.49
In this regard, the experience of Washington DC is instructive. There,
the location of diplomatic missions has been explicitly incorporated into a
broader planning framework which allows a great deal more flexibility in
allocating land to diplomatic missions. Washington operates as an open market,
with missions able to locate anywhere within prescribed zones according to
clearly defined regulations. This allows for a much larger range of
accommodation options in terms of location and style, without placing undue
pressure on the US Government to find suitable locations. It also allows
effective integration of the diplomatic community with the rest of the
community.
1.50
This highlights the main shortcomings of the Canberra model: its lack of
transparency; its ad hoc nature; and the lack of an obvious mechanism for
coordinating the needs and aspirations of the national and local governments.
It also points to the essential weakness in the model—its reliance on a limited
and declining supply of National Land to meet the needs of the national
government and the diplomatic estate. These issues will be elaborated below.
Agency role in the allocation of land
Role of Commonwealth agencies
1.51
The NCA has two roles in the allocation and administration of the
diplomatic estate. It is responsible for the strategic planning for the
selection and provision of National Land for lease, sub-division and servicing
of diplomatic sites, issuing works approval for development applications and
the management of unleased diplomatic sites on National Land.
1.52
It also administers diplomatic Crown Leases on National Land on behalf of
the Commonwealth in consultation with the Department of Foreign Affairs and
Trade (DFAT) and relevant security agencies. This involves:
- lease negotiations
- organising valuations
of diplomatic sites by the Australian Valuation Office
- liaison with
diplomatic missions
- registration of
leases with the ACT Land Titles Office
- invoicing and
collection of land rent
- debt recovery
- conducting land rent
reviews
- lease compliance
activities
- surrender of leases
- compensation
arrangements for improvements when leased land is surrendered.[52]
1.53
The NCA consults with DFAT, through the Protocol Office, on foreign
policy considerations related to the management of leases. These include:
- the identification of
land for offer
- lease offers
- lease surrender
- termination and
issues of non-compliance.[53]
1.54
The principal role of DFAT is in identifying potential demand for
diplomatic missions and acting as a liaison and first point of contact between
the NCA, the AFP and diplomatic missions. In evidence before the Committee, DFAT
noted that it worked ‘extremely closely’ with the NCA and the AFP in managing
the diplomatic estate.[54]
1.55
The role of the AFP is to provide protective security arrangements to
foreign government missions, their staff and families. The AFP’s Diplomatic
Protection Unit provides ‘high visibility mobile and foot patrols, alarm
response and incident response to diplomatic missions in the ACT’. It also
‘performs static guarding functions at missions and residencies when threat
levels become elevated, specific risks are identified or when assistance is
requested’.[55]
1.56
There was concern expressed amongst residents groups over the apparent
conflict of interest in the NCA’s role. In its submission, Friends of
Grasslands argued that ‘the NCA has competing roles in this exercise, as
developer and manager of diplomatic estates versus that of custodian of natural
and cultural heritage in the ACT’. Friends of Grasslands was ‘therefore
concerned that achievement of the best environmental outcome is underweighted
in the decision-making process’.[56]
1.57
Similar concerns were raised by the Save Stirling Park Group. It stated:
NCA is not an independent agency when it comes to new
diplomatic estates. It is the proponent of the development but it is also the
planning authority that approves the development. There should be a separation
of these two responsibilities as happens in other normal property development.
In our view diplomatic property management should be the
responsibility of either DFAT, because of the diplomatic relations aspects, or
the Department of Finance and Administration because of their property
management expertise.[57]
1.58
The Save Stirling Park Group suggested instead that the role of
developer be given to DFAT, with the NCA remaining the planning authority. This
‘would also have a financial disciplinary effect on DFAT if each new diplomatic
block it requested became a cost to the DFAT budget’.[58]
1.59
The NCA vehemently rejected the idea that it was incapable of both
planning and managing the diplomatic estate, stating:
At the start, we heard an assertion that the NCA is not
independent in this work. For avoidance of all doubt, I would like to point out
that we have no beneficial interest in the administration of leases. Revenue
raised from diplomatic leases goes directly to Commonwealth consolidated
revenue; it does not in any way fatten our budget. So I do believe the NCA is
well placed to fill these two closely related roles. Some of the views we heard
really bring together and typify the complexities of this issue. There are a number
of competing demands. At least one of the submissions says we should hold on to
Stirling Ridge and make it available for National Capital use. At the other
end, there is a fair bit of support for the idea that we should put a fair bit
of it into open space and protect the conservation issues. There is a tough
issue for us to analyse there.[59]
Role of ACT Government
1.60
Because of the structure of the planning regime in the Australian
Capital Territory, the ACT Government has no direct role in the planning of the
diplomatic estate while that estate remains confined to National Land. On the
other hand, the potential use of Territory Land for the diplomatic estate does
engage the ACT government directly. In its submission, the ACT Government
recognised ‘the importance of diplomatic missions to the role of Canberra as
the National Capital and the need to provide sites for diplomatic missions to
enable the city to perform this role’. However, the ACT Government also noted
that ‘it is important that the selection of sites for diplomatic missions do
not compromise the Territory’s capacity for urban intensification along major
transport corridors or near major centres’. It stated:
We are willing to assist the NCA in assessing the suitability
of sites and/or identifying potential sites, taking into account the
Territory’s planning and transport strategies, maintenance costs, location of
infrastructure and possible revenue implications. [60]
1.61
The ACT Government observed that it continues ‘to work effectively’ with
the NCA ‘to identify appropriate sites to meet the growing needs of diplomatic
missions’.[61]
1.62
For its part, the NCA was at pains to point out that it worked
cooperatively with the ACT Government on these matters, and indeed had deferred
to the ACT Government on the matter of the Yarralumla brickworks site. The NCA
stated:
At the brickworks the primary blockage at this point is that
the land is being actively considered by the ACT government. We are trying, and
it is government policy that the NCA work so, to work cooperatively with the
ACT government in this shared city and it is not an area that we think we want
to start a fight with the ACT government on. If they have active plans on foot
and we would have to usurp them in an aggressive way, it is not a space that we
are in anymore. If the ACT decided that they thought it were suitable for
diplomatic use, we would be very keen to talk and if the Commonwealth had to
contemplate buying the land from the ACT we would mount that argument quite
happily. But it was struck out because the ACT had alternate ambitions.[62]
1.63
The lack of integrated planning between the ACT government and the NCA
with regard to the diplomatic estate was criticised by Dr Alan Cowan, Secretary
of the Save Stirling Park Group—a residents association focused on the future
of Stirling Park and opposed to its use in the diplomatic estate:
Planning for diplomatic estates is not integrated with
planning for the ACT as a whole. It is done in isolation, yet it still has
externalities that impact on Canberra.[63]
1.64
In its submission, the Save Stirling Park Group stated:
There needs to be closer cooperation between ACT Government
and the Australian Government/NCA to coordinate ACT urban development with the
need for diplomatic accommodation. Major developments such as new diplomatic
estates also impact on ACT government infrastructure such as roads and
utilities as well as affecting the ACT community. [64]
1.65
Mr Peter Wurfel, President of the Deakin Residents’ Association, also
expressed concern about the lack of planning coordination, stating:
Much of Deakin is subject to both the territory plan and the
National Capital Plan, and this is true also for Yarralumla. These plans
interrelate, and for this reason it is surprising and also disappointing that
the ACT government, as far as I can see, is not at this public hearing. It is
especially surprising, given the trend to high and medium development in
Canberra and the need to protect streetscapes, maintain the character of inner
South Canberra and manage the impact of traffic, parking and security with
respect to any current and future diplomatic missions.[65]
1.66
The Save Stirling Park Group also expressed concern about the lack of a
clearly defined role for the ACT Government in addressing amendments to the
National Capital Plan, arguing that that role should be clearly defined in law.
It stated:
The ACT Government represents the community in Canberra and
there may be occasions where a proposed Commonwealth development impacts
unfavourably on that community to such an extent that the ACT Government should
be able to step in and protect the community interest.[66]
1.67
Mr Wurfel also believed that residents ‘expected some leadership from
the ACT government which would have been consistent with, and represented the
needs of, ACT residents’.[67]
Committee conclusions
1.68
The Committee is of the view that there should be no significant change
to the current roles of federal agencies involved in the allocation of land to
diplomatic missions. The role of the NCA, as both the development proponent and
planning agency, is potentially problematic. However, the dual role is
inevitable in most of the NCA’s functions—proposals cannot advance without the
NCA’s support; and once they have that support they will advance. Moreover, the
NCA is subject to a rigorous planning regime, which involves parliamentary and
ministerial scrutiny, public consultation, and impact assessments. While it is
unlikely to ever satisfy all stakeholders in any given planning process, the
Committee believes that the role of the NCA has sufficient safeguards to ensure
proper outcomes.
1.69
The Committee also believes that the NCA is best placed to carry out the
administration of the diplomatic estate, as the agency with the expertise and
experience in conducting this role. Transferring the role to other agencies
could produce less than optimal outcomes and provide a distraction from their
essential role.
1.70
The role of the ACT Government should also be considered. Its role, from
its perspective, is to defend the needs and aspirations of Canberra as a city,
as against a National Capital. It has primary responsibility for planning on
Territory land, and is rightfully protective of its prerogatives. The NCA has
deferred to the ACT Government upon planning issues on Territory land, while
the Territory Government in turn has deferred to the NCA on planning issues
affecting National Land. Yet, given the limited supply of National Land, it is
almost inevitable that some coordination of planning processes will be
required, that National functions will need to be accommodated on Territory
land. The planning process needs to be adapted to accommodate this.
Demand and supply
Demand
1.71
Evidence presented by the NCA and DFAT indicates that there will be a
steady increase in the number of new diplomatic missions wishing to establish a
presence in Canberra. NCA stated that ‘the DFAT Protocol Branch has advised
that they expect one to two new missions to establish within the diplomatic
estate annually over the next twenty years’, and that ‘this advice accords with
the queries received by the NCA and the number of countries that have
registered their interest in acquiring a site for diplomatic use’. The NCA
notes that ‘the current demand for blocks outstrips the supply of viable sites’
and that ‘due to the lengthy timeframes involved in making additional
diplomatic land available for lease, it is important that estates are
established in advance of requirement’.[68]
1.72
In its submission, the NCA notes that 60 countries currently hold 69
leases over 72 blocks within the diplomatic estate and that ‘fifteen sites are
likely to be needed in the short term for those countries that have formally
expressed interest in obtaining a site or have leased or reserved a site now
known to be affected by environmental constraints’. The submission further
notes that:
The NCA is currently negotiating with two countries for
alternative sites due to environmental constraints. Investigations are
currently underway on a number of other sites which may also be affected. These
investigations may result in a further three missions requiring alternatives to
their reserved sites.[69]
1.73
In its submission, DFAT noted that:
Current demand to establish new diplomatic missions in
Australia reflects positively on Australia’s growing profile in the
international arena. We are a member of the G20 with a strong and growing
economy and are engaged on international issues, highlighted by our current
term as a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, and the
Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group.[70]
1.74
DFAT further stated that the ‘Australian Government supports the
establishment of new diplomatic missions in Canberra, recognising that this
reflects positively both on Canberra and Australia’.[71]
1.75
DFAT noted that there were several sources of demand—new missions and those
wishing to relocate from temporary accommodation and those wishing to upgrade
their presence. The Committee was advised that:
Last year, there were three new missions that established a
presence in Canberra and the year before that there were two. I certainly think
that over the next couple of years there will continue to be interest, and that
may be more than one a year. We have a couple of missions that have at the
moment a small what you might call ‘post-opening’ presence—for example, Kosovo,
that arrived last year and would be the fourth if we regard them as having
established a presence. Often it takes a country 12 or 18 months to ramp up to
the stage where they might be requiring a block of land from the NCA.
The forecast we have for the next couple of years is that
there are certainly in the vicinity of seven or eight that have made those
sorts of exploratory visits and who have sent an envoy out here to discuss how
to go about acquiring land and what is available, and looking at things like
costs and exploring the employment of local staff and so on. It is the full
suite of issues that you might expect from someone who is going to come to
Australia for the first time. The forecast we have is for that sort of ongoing
growth. There was a little bit of a hike in the last two years and potentially
there will be two or three next year and two or three the year after. Clearly,
the number of countries in the world is not necessarily finite—we had a new one
last year—but it is not going to go past a certain point.
A number of countries also have a representation in Australia
in the form of an honorary consulate. While, for some countries, that continues
to be adequate for their needs, there are some that are now looking to move to
a more permanent residence. The exact type of land or the exact type of office
arrangements they seek will vary from the first couple of years, where they
might also start off smallish, getting to know Canberra and getting to know
what their own needs will be, before they might come to the National Capital
Authority and DFAT and say, ‘Okay, we are ready to have land.’ Certainly the
forecast is for that continued, steady growth.[72]
1.76
The level of anticipated demand was questioned by residents. Mr Mike
Lewis of the Save Stirling Park Group argued that recent demand had been the
factor of particular international conditions and was unlikely to continue
indefinitely. He stated:
I think the point we were trying to make was that there has
been an expansion of countries in recent years as a result of the breakup of
the former Soviet Union and the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, and so there
has been a bit of a spurt lately. But also most of the countries that we have
major trade and diplomatic and defence relationships with are already here. I
guess we are getting into diminishing marginal returns in terms of countries
that might want to come here. It is very difficult to predict the number of
countries that will come here. Things change. Countries split, as you say. But
we think that, say, 40 to 50 countries, which was one of the figures being
bandied around, over the next 25 years is probably a bit excessive, but it is
just difficult to forecast.[73]
1.77
Mr Lewis also noted the other side of the equation, the number of
countries leaving:
One of the other things we were concerned about is that all
of the figures talk about the new countries that are coming here but seem to
forget about those countries that actually leave—there are not many, I agree,
but Syria has left, and North Korea left, though it might be coming back; who
knows? You need to look at both countries that are coming here and those that
are leaving.[74]
1.78
DFAT argued that the current level of demand was unlikely to continue
indefinitely, but that there was already a level of unmet demand, that some
level of demand was expected to continue, and that ‘what we are expected to do
as a department of the Commonwealth government is to accommodate reasonably,
and there are certain countries who feel as though they have not been able to
start when they wanted to’.[75] The NCA and DFAT argued
that to some extent the need for a new estate was being driven by a backlog of
missions, the NCA ‘trying to meet the needs of people who are here but may wish
to change’.[76] The NCA stated: ‘Our
current issue is a backlog that we do need to house and address, and we are
just caught.’[77]
1.79
The Committee notes that some trends in Canberra are similar to
Washington. Many countries want to display flags, or occupy buildings that
convey some national character and be close to where business in the capital is
done. There is a general demand for a diversity of sites and some countries
have a desire to move and consolidate on a single site.
Supply
1.80
The official view of the current availability of sites within the
existing diplomatic estate is set out in the draft Assessment of Three Sites
for Diplomatic Use, prepared by SGS Economic & Planning Pty Ltd for the
NCA in May 2012.[78] The assessment notes
that currently the diplomatic estate consists of 101 blocks. Of these, 93 are
located within three estates at Yarralumla, Deakin and O’Malley. The remaining
eight blocks are within the Central National Area in Deakin, Forrest and
Yarralumla. Within the diplomatic estate:
- 74 blocks are leased
to 61 diplomatic missions; 52 missions are established and operating, with nine
missions yet to develop their leased blocks
- One block is subject
to final lease negotiations
- Seven blocks have
been reserved for diplomatic missions wishing to relocate from premises outside
the diplomatic estate
- 15 blocks have been
deemed unsuitable for diplomatic use due to easements, environment or terrain
- Four blocks within
the diplomatic estate remain suitable and vacant for new missions.
1.81
The assessment thus concludes that ‘identification of new areas suitable
for diplomatic estates is therefore necessary to meet the anticipated growing
demand for the establishment of diplomatic missions’.[79]
1.82
This assessment rests on the assumption that all reserved or undeveloped
land within the diplomatic estate is unavailable for allocation to diplomatic
missions, existing blocks will not be subdivided, or that alternatives cannot
be found to current land allocation practices. These assumptions have been
challenged by a number of groups.
1.83
Dr Cowan argued that there was a plentiful supply of land within the
existing diplomatic estate. He told the Committee:
The need for a new diplomatic estate is not urgent. It is
interesting to note that some 40 per cent of the diplomatic estate is actually
undeveloped. We believe the current demand for 15 blocks can be met from the
six vacant and the 22 undeveloped blocks within the existing diplomatic estate.
There is also the potential for another 12 blocks from subdividing existing
blocks. Countries wishing to establish a new diplomatic mission in Canberra can
also be located in commercial office space or in O’Malley, where there is ample
accommodation available in the special residential area set aside for
diplomatic use.[80]
1.84
Other witnesses also highlighted the number of vacant blocks within the
existing estate, particularly in O’Malley, and urged better use of the existing
diplomatic estate before any move was made to allocate new land to diplomatic
missions.[81] Mr Brett Odgers,
Convenor of the Walter Burley Griffin Society called for ‘a proper review of
the O’Malley estate’, stating that ‘it has been neglected, in that sense, as
being a supply and as being an amenable area. It is designed to be so, and it
is a very agreeable place to be in, as it is not far from anywhere else in the
national capital.’ He suggested that there might be as many as 23 readily
available blocks in O’Malley alone.[82]
1.85
The NCA conceded that a more flexible suite of options was possible, and
that ‘we probably do need to put more information into the community about
developing new types of properties’. There was also the question of better
managing or packaging some of the existing sites. On the other hand, there were
sites which because of environmental constraints would have to be abandoned.
The aggregate demand could be managed in a range of ways, but this would
include new developments.[83]
1.86
On the other hand, DFAT noted that there was already some flexibility in
the options available to diplomatic missions, and that there were good reasons
for some limits:
…that flexibility does exist at the moment. For example, a
number of embassies, including those of Argentina and Colombia, are currently
using office space. That choice has been available to them. Our concern is
often where embassies are planning to rent or buy, because of our other
responsibility, security. The NCA has the responsibility for managing those
Crown leases, under the set of legal regulations under which we currently
operate. So that has naturally been where the embassies will start. There is
also the sense that Canberra is a different environment than many other capital
cities, and to a certain extent they also take their lead from what other
missions have done. There are physical presences that are identifiably the
Papua New Guinea High Commission, the Solomon Islands High Commission, the
American embassy and the South African Embassy, and the real sense that they
have become part of the Canberra landscape. So other missions see that that is
how it works here. And we, of course, steer them into discussions with the NCA
to explain to them the options under the existing regulations—that is in the
set of guidelines that we operate under.[84]
Committee conclusions
1.87
The Committee is of the view that given the information available to it,
and the inherently unpredictable nature of future demand, the level of demand
and supply of land for diplomatic missions presented by the NCA and DFAT is a reasonable
assessment of the current situation, although the Committee notes that such
assessments are difficult to make with any accuracy. This is not to say that
improved management of the existing estate could not free up more blocks for
disposal, or that other options could not be pursued to relieve pressure on
National Land. Indeed, it is readily apparent to the Committee that if the anticipated
demand for new diplomatic missions is to be met, we must improve the management
of existing sites, new approaches must be developed, and a more flexible suite
of accommodation options must be put in place. These will be discussed further
below.
Property types and options
1.88
The need for an expanded suite of property types and other options to
meet the different needs of diplomatic missions was agreed by all concerned.
The constraints imposed by the current regime were to one degree or another
recognised by everyone. There was, however, widespread disagreement as to the
best alternatives to the current arrangements. A number of options were
canvassed in the evidence presented to the Committee, including
- Resumption of leases
- Increased density
- Subdivision
- Use of residential
premises
- Use of commercial
premises
- Increasing the role
of the market in land supply and for leaseholders relinquishing existing
holdings.
Resumption of leases
1.89
The surrender or termination of existing leases on undeveloped sites has
been raised as a possible option for freeing up land for diplomatic missions.
Mr Wurfel argued that there ‘are opportunities for the existing stock of sites
to be better managed’, that there were already incentives in place to ensure
the proper and orderly development of existing sites and that those incentives
should be used.[85] He stated that ‘rather
than identifying and allocating greenfield land, the key priority is to
address the current stock of leases, including buyback of those already
allocated, and to effectively manage development conditions for these leases in
conjunction with the ACT government’.[86]
1.90
Ms Marea Fatseas, President of the Yarralumla Residents Association,
also expressed frustration at the apparent inability or unwillingness of the
Australian Government to enforce the conditions of leases:
DFAT has protocol guidelines, which are not mentioned in
their submission but are mentioned in the NCA’s submission, that say that if
land is allocated to a diplomatic mission, they should start building within 18
months and complete building within three years. Quite clearly, walking around
Yarralumla, you can see a few vacant blocks that have been there for years and
years. I guess that is a key problem with establishing a public policy when you
cannot enforce it. Any policy that is developed should be able to be complied
with. If you are going to establish a policy that you cannot enforce because of
foreign policy considerations then what is the point of establishing policy of
that kind?[87]
1.91
In its submission, the NCA noted that it rigorously monitors the
obligations of diplomatic missions under the Ordinance and had recently
terminated two leases in O’Malley. It observed, however, that ‘foreign policy
and bilateral relationship issues significantly influence pursuit of site
surrender or termination of leases due to non-compliance with lease
conditions’.[88]
1.92
The NCA stated that while this matter has been under review, a more
rigorous pursuit of lease condition would require clear protocols embodying
flexibility and fairness to ‘ensure that foreign policy objectives are upheld
(avoiding any perception of inequality in treatment) while enabling efficient
development of existing diplomatic land’. The NCA noted that ‘lease termination
could be achieved by consent—possibly using a financial incentive’; that
unilateral termination could proceed following reminders or extensions, but
that this course of action was ‘constrained by foreign policy considerations’;
and that ‘unilateral action may compromise security and/or foreign policy
ambitions in other areas’.[89]
1.93
The difficulties surrounding the enforcement of lease conditions were
also highlighted by DFAT, who also noted that allocated blocks, even if not
developed, were not sitting there for free:
The countries which have signed onto them are either paying
rent for them or have made an up-front payment. So it is not as though there is
no conditionality. There is a sense of there being an ongoing payment.[90]
Increased density
1.94
In its submission, the NCA canvassed the possibility of developing high
and medium density alternatives to the current property types available to
diplomatic missions. The submission noted that:
Canberra, like most cities around the world, is presently
undergoing urban renewal and adopting new forms of development. The majority of
renewal and new development is focused on more efficient land use, including
medium and high density development. It is appropriate to consider whether such
styles of urban development should also be adopted for Diplomatic development
in the National Capital.[91]
1.95
The NCA suggested the possibility of a diplomatic ‘office’ building,
with shared services and facilities. This would
- Allow efficient use
of the limited number of diplomatic sites available and potentially allow use of
the sites compromised by environmental constraints and topography (i.e. Deakin
and O’Malley)
- Reduce costs for
countries wishing to establish diplomatic representation in Australia in a
prestigious site
- Facilitate the
effective provision of security services.[92]
1.96
The NCA also canvassed the development of medium density diplomatic
estates, thereby increasing the efficient use of vacant land and providing
greater choice for diplomatic missions.[93]
1.97
Potential issues were:
- Diplomatic missions
may have a view about who they share services with
- Facilities management
function requires consideration (who would do it and how much would it cost?)
- Potential
difficulties liaising with multiple missions with differing views and
priorities
- May require the
development of a new pricing regime for the new property types
- Potential security
implications of shared facilities
- Possible private
sector involvement
- Would require
consideration through a new policy and budget process.[94]
1.98
In evidence before the Committee, the NCA acknowledged that there was a
gap in the market as far as providing medium/high density or office style
accommodation was concerned. The NCA stated:
It is a gap that we have identified in the market. The
missions that rent office accommodation at the moment are, with the greatest of
respect, nothing more than premium tenants, so they are subject a lot to the
views of their landlord. Where we have a gap is we do not have a Commonwealth
controlled next step for them to take. So it might be that they quite like the
idea of staying in office style accommodation but they—and perhaps even
we—would prefer to have the formalities of a Commonwealth controlled agreement
that is more tightly bound by international conventions and the parameters of
our foreign relationship. We do not have that available, so it is one of the
things we have on our list. We need to fill that gap.[95]
1.99
There was also a need to promote a cultural shift towards new types of
accommodation by demonstrating new models to encourage missions to take them
up.[96]
Subdivision
1.100
The subdivision of existing blocks within the diplomatic estate is
another option for increasing the supply of land for diplomatic missions. In
its submission, the NCA stated:
A number of diplomatic missions have not fully developed
their blocks. A sub-divided portion of these blocks is likely to produce viable
sites for other diplomatic missions seeking to acquire land.[97]
1.101
A possible incentive for subdivision could be a pro-rata buy back
arrangement:
The pro-rata amount could be based on the time the mission
has occupied the site, the premium or rent paid and the size of the block. The
financial costs incurred for the ‘buy-back’ and sub-division would be recovered
from the diplomatic mission acquiring the new block, thereby resulting in nil
impost on the Commonwealth.[98]
1.102
The NCA noted that ‘this incentive scheme would require approval though
the new policy and budget processes’.[99]
1.103
The NCA believed that such lease variations could potentially yield up
to 12 additional blocks in Yarralumla, of small to medium size, but emphasised
that such lease variations would require mutual consent, would have to yield
subdivided blocks that were viable, and be negotiated on a case by case basis.[100]
A more conservative estimate was given in evidence at the public hearing, the
NCA stating:
It is always a little bit hard until we actually settle down
to site-specifics. We think we could free up potentially half a dozen
realisable parcels in Yarralumla alone if missions will learn to come on board.[101]
1.104
The NCA stated that it had ‘obtained advice confirming there is a legal
mechanism which could be employed to affect a policy of sub-division by mutual
consent including payment of an upfront financial incentive’.[102]
1.105
There was some support for subdivision amongst residents groups, but this
was conditional on good planning outcomes. Mr Wurfel stated that ‘you would not
envisage subdividing and having a dual or triple or quadruple occupancy in an
embassy location that would be out of character with a street and would bring
with it a whole range of other problems’. His conclusion was that he had ‘no
problems with subdivision but it has to be done sensibly’.[103]
Likewise, Dr Cowan told the Committee:
You could only subdivide provided the resulting blocks were
all individually sufficiently large to accommodate the traffic that comes with
people coming for visas and so on, surely. It has got to be carefully regulated
and examined, but some of those blocks are very large and we think could easily
accommodate at least two buildings.[104]
Use of residential premises
1.106
The possibility of following overseas practices and placing diplomatic
missions in residential settings was also canvassed. Potential problems with
this approach were raised by representatives of government agencies, but it
also found little support from residents.
1.107
In its submission, DFAT noted that under the current regulatory regime,
there were strict limits on diplomatic missions locating in residential areas.
Missions had to seek specific permission to use residential premises for their
chanceries and the ‘grant of relief from the purpose clause of Crown leases for
residential premises can only be temporary—for a period of up to three years’.[105]
1.108
Both NCA and DFAT emphasised the advantages of retaining the diplomatic
estate on Commonwealth owned land. NCA stated:
Diplomatic issues are a component of foreign affairs and thus
a Commonwealth, rather than a Territory function. This means that, ideally, all
diplomatic missions would be located on National Land sites, identified for
Diplomatic Use, within a Designated Area defined by the National Capital Plan.[106]
1.109
In its submission DFAT argued that:
Locating missions within a defined Commonwealth owned
diplomatic ‘estate’ has foreign policy advantages. Primarily, this arrangement
allows the Australian Government to visibly demonstrate our commitment to
fulfilling our international obligations. We can enhance a bilateral
relationship by actively assisting a foreign country to acquire land that meets
the needs of a diplomatic mission.[107]
1.110
Retaining diplomatic missions on Commonwealth land enhanced
opportunities for reciprocity, including land swaps, and gave the Australian
Government greater control over costs.[108]
1.111
DFAT, the NCA and the AFP all argued against dispersal of missions in
residential areas on security grounds. The AFP informed the Committee that ‘the
more geographically dispersed the diplomatic missions are, the harder it
becomes from the security point of view—the AFP’s resources being stretched’.
This also had potential implications for the core business of community
policing.[109] The NCA emphasised that
the security arrangements typical of a diplomatic mission—fences, cameras and
lighting—were out of place in a residential context.[110]
DFAT argued a diplomatic mission was not just another residence—it had different
needs and should be judged by different criteria:
The difficulty is that it is a very different set of demands
to what you are going to have from someone who buys the same block for a house
or even for a business. So that security element is just something that is not
going to go away. It will not apply equally, but you have to understand that,
if the diplomatic estate idea goes away and the Australian government agrees
that there can be houses here, there and wherever that are sold privately or rented
for the long term by missions, there may well be quite complex security
arrangements that that country will want to put in place. So it is certainly a
factor. There are extremes. If you have a look at the American embassy and the
Israeli embassy, clearly for them security is a huge priority. There are others
that take a much more relaxed approach, and we can expect those two extremes to
continue. But increasingly the trend will be that governments will not want to
leave properties unfenced, for example. So that is the most obvious first step
that many governments are taking.[111]
1.112
The use of residential premises for diplomatic missions was largely
opposed by residents groups. They supported diplomatic enclaves, but questioned
their location. Ms Fatseas thought ‘the idea of having specific precincts that
are planned to meet the needs of larger numbers of embassies is a good one’;
the question was where it should be located and whether other options, such as
commercial premises or subdivision, were also available.[112]
Mr Lewis noted that ‘chanceries are essentially office blocks…with all the
associated traffic and that sort of stuff’. He stated that: ‘We do not have
commercial office blocks in residential areas and so I do not think we should have
chanceries in residential areas’.[113] Dr Cowan argued for a
purpose built estate, based on a long term plan, separate from existing or
proposed residential areas:
As we indicated we feel that sure, embassies should not
really come into residential areas but in the long run we would like to see a
diplomatic estate developed from the ground up in some such area—perhaps
Molonglo Valley—where it could be planned from the beginning as a diplomatic
estate and any adjacent suburban residential areas can be properly distanced
and protected and the impact avoided and so on. So provided it is done as a
long-term planning project, that would be our preferred long-term plan.[114]
Commercial
1.113
The use of commercial office space for diplomatic missions was actively
promoted by residents groups. In its submission, the Save Stirling Park Group
stated:
It would seem desirable and preferable, and ultimately
inevitable, that office premises, presumably mainly in the CBD, should become
the normal practice for accommodating chanceries. There is an abundance of
quality office space and this makes obvious sense particularly to small
countries seeking a low cost location.[115]
1.114
In its submission, the Yarralumla Residents Association noted that a
number of embassies already used commercial premises, and that DFAT guidelines
provided that diplomatic mission may be located in commercial office buildings.
The Association could see ‘no reason why future diplomatic missions could not
use commercial office space in this way’.[116]
1.115
As discussed above, the NCA certainly supports commercial office style
accommodation as an option, but within the context of a diplomatic estate. The
AFP has concerns about any move which may disperse diplomatic missions, thereby
make security more difficult. Similar concerns were raised by DFAT concerning
any move to locate diplomatic missions in residential or commercial
accommodation:
A number of missions will always want to be on their own site
so they can very much control the perimeter. It might be a small site; it might
be multistorey. But there are a number of countries who will not want to share
their premises. If we consider those—and do not worry about the size aspect for
the moment—and they have a security concern, certainly fences and the exterior
perimeter would be something they would want to put up.[117]
Committee conclusions
1.116
Of the potential options for expanding the supply of properties
available for diplomatic missions, resumption of existing leases is the most
fraught. Nonetheless, the Committee is concerned that valuable land is going to
waste under present arrangements, including leases that have remained
undeveloped for fifty odd years. The Committee is of the view that regulations
need to be put in place to uphold the terms of diplomatic leases with regard to
development timeframes, and diplomatic missions left with no uncertainty as to
their obligations. The policy of
resumption of land within 36 months where development has not commenced needs
to be rigorously enforced.
1.117
Increasing the density of the diplomatic estate, pursuing medium or high
density accommodation options, is something the Committee supports. The
Committee recognises the potential security implications of putting several
missions in one locality, but believes that these can be managed, and that the
efficiencies to be gained in terms of land use and property management outweigh
the risks. Smaller, low profile, missions would probably find such
accommodation preferable to stand alone buildings on large blocks. The
Committee appreciates, however, that the move to this option will require
something of a cultural change, not just on the part of the Australian
Government and its agencies, but also on the part of the diplomatic corps. The
Committee urges the Australian Government to pursue this option.
1.118
Subdivision of existing diplomatic properties is another option that the
Committee believes should be pursued. Again, the Committee accepts that there
are practical limits to the process of subdivision, and that subdivision will
be subject to diplomatic as well as practical imperatives, but the opportunity
to develop mutually advantageous mechanisms for releasing property through
subdivision should be undertaken. The Committee notes that the NCA is already
exploring the best mechanism for this option and urges the Government to adopt
it at the earliest opportunity.
1.119
The Committee notes that the use of properties in residential areas is a
common practice in other countries, and already occurs under certain
circumstances in Canberra. The committee also notes that Canberra’s historical
growth pattern means that residential areas have grown side by side with
diplomatic premises close to Government activity centres. There is an existing
interface between the Canberra community and Canberra’s diplomatic community.
1.120
Washington DC provides an excellent model of the way free market
practices guided by appropriate regulation have allowed diplomatic missions to
integrate into the fabric of the city. The Committee believes that this is a
model that Canberra should follow. As in Washington, a planning regime could be
put in place which encourages diplomatic missions to locate in certain areas
which would meet the AFP’s need for a defined security footprint—perhaps the
inner north and the inner south—while allowing a great deal of flexibility
within those areas. Potential problems surrounding security, traffic and public
amenity are recognised, but they are manageable. Allowing access to residential
areas has the further benefit of taking pressure off greenfield sites.
1.121
The Committee observes that the use of commercial premises is also a
common occurrence in other countries. This option is already available to
diplomatic missions in Canberra and a number have chosen to pursue it. As with
residential properties, the use of commercial premises could be encouraged on
free market principles lightly constrained by regulation, and with preference
given to some areas over others. There is no reason why the use of commercial
premises would cause especial difficulties in terms of traffic or public
amenity, and the security issue should be manageable. The Committee notes, for
example, that existing missions in commercial premises are located within the
security footprint provided by the AFP’s Diplomatic Protection Unit. This is
another option that should be directly encouraged.
Recommendation 1 |
1.122 |
The Committee recommends that, in order to better utilise
limited resources for the allocation of land to diplomatic missions, the
Australian Government implement:
- Strengthened
policies and regulations surrounding diplomatic leases to ensure compliance,
with the policy of resumption of land within 36 months where development has
not commenced being rigorously enforced
- Medium-
and high-density options for housing chanceries
- Policies
to allow the subdivision of existing sites within the diplomatic estate
- A
policy framework that allows more extensive use of residential and commercial
properties to house chanceries, along the lines adopted in Washington DC
- In
the future, a steady evolution towards a more commercial approach (as in
Washington DC) should be encouraged.
|
Options for future locations
Potential locations
1.123
The discussion about potential locations for a new diplomatic enclave
has been going on for a number of years. In 2008, consultants GHD produced a
report for the NCA entitled Report for Diplomatic Land Supply: Opportunities
and Constraints. This report canvassed 12 possible new sites, including:
- Block 3 Section 128
Yarralumla
- Block 3 section 94
& Block 7 Section 102 Yarralumla (brickworks)
- Block 4 Section 22
Yarralumla (Stirling Park)
- Block 5 Section 100
Yarralumla
- Part Block 4 Section
22 Yarralumla (western part of Stirling Park)
- Block 11 Section 100
Yarralumla (Yarralumla Bay Oval)
- Block 1 Section 44
Yarralumla (Casey House)
- Block 5 Section 121
Curtin (Curtin horse paddocks)
- Block 4 Section 106 Curtin
- Block 1176 WDC
(Parks, Conservation and Lands)
- Block 664 WCD
(Oakvale Stud)
- East O’Malley
(comprising 93 individual residential blocks).[118]
1.124
The report found that the Curtin horse paddocks, combined with the
adjacent Parks, Conservation and Lands site, ‘provides the optimal location for
establishing a new diplomatic area’.[119] The report recommended
that those areas be declared National Land for the purpose of diplomatic use,
along with the adjacent Oakvale Stud. It also recommended East O’Malley, Casey
House and Block 3 Section 31 Yarralumla be made available for diplomatic use.
The report recommended against using Stirling Ridge, the Yarralumla brickworks
or Yarralumla Bay for the diplomatic estate. It also noted that Block 4 Section
106 Curtin (adjacent the horse paddocks) had been reserved for an Islamic
school.[120]
1.125
In October 2011, the NCA issued a consultation report on three proposed
sites:
- Land to the
south-west of Stirling Ridge
- Land near the Old
Canberra Brickworks
- Land adjacent to the
Federal Golf Club
1.126
As part of the of the consultation process the NCA received submissions
proposing alternative sites, including:
- North Curtin Horse
Paddocks
- Land West of Empire
Circuit
- Land between Forster
Crescent and Alexandrina Drive
- Mugga Lane or
Symonston
- Majura Road
- Yarralumla Bay Oval
- Land between Mugga
Way and Hindmarsh Drive
- Land South of
Carruthers Street in Hughes
- Land along
Northbourne Avenue[121]
1.127
This indicative list is interesting not so much because it represents a
list of sites under serious consideration, but rather because in its submission
to the inquiry the ACT Government has already effectively ruled them all out,
stating:
The development of diplomatic missions in many of these areas
does not present the most efficient use and would compromise the Territory’s
capacity for urban intensification; this is especially the case for sites on
Northbourne Avenue and the North Curtin Horse Paddocks.[122]
1.128
The result of the NCA’s investigation of the three sites—adjacent the
Federal Golf Course (Red Hill), near the Old Canberra Brickworks (Yarralumla)
and south-west of Stirling Ridge (Yarralumla)—is that:
- the land adjacent to
the Federal Golf Course has been ruled out for further consideration because of
environmental constraints
- further consideration
of the brickworks site has been deferred pending discussion with the ACT
Government, which has its own priorities for the site
- the Stirling Ridge
site is now the subject of Draft Amendment 78.[123]
1.129
Draft Amendment 78 provides for most of Stirling Ridge to be converted
from ‘National Capital Use’ (i.e. available to the Commonwealth to develop) to
‘Open Space’, with the concomitant protection of heritage and environmental
values. It also provides for a Prime Minister’s residence to be located at
Attunga Point.
1.130
Draft Amendment 78 will:
- Reduce the area of
land for ‘National Capital Use’ on Stirling Ridge
- Change the land use
for the majority of Stirling Ridge to ‘Open Space’ in recognition of areas of
high conservation values
- Remove Stirling Ridge
from consideration as a possible future site for the Prime Minister’s residence
- Retain ‘National
Capital Use’ for Attunga Point, recognising the potential partial realignment
of the Alexandrina Drive road reserve
- Amend reference to
consideration by the Official Establishments Trust of Stirling Ridge and
Attunga Point as possible future sites for the Prime Minister’s residence
- Remove provisional
land use for the intended extension of Empire Circuit from ‘National Capital
Use’ to ‘Open Space’ in recognition that the road will not be extended through
Stirling Ridge and the former Westlake community site
- Change land use for
part of the land adjacent to Stirling Ridge from ‘National Capital Use’ to
‘Diplomatic Mission’.[124]
Stirling Park
1.131
The critical reception to the proposal to use part of Stirling Park for
the diplomatic estate has been the catalyst for the current inquiry. Community
concern over the way that Stirling Park has been selected has raised broader
issues about the overall process for planning the allocation of land to
diplomatic missions.
1.132
From the point of view of the NCA, the selection of Stirling Park has
been part of a rigorous process of matching requirements to constraints and
coming up with the optimum outcome. In evidence before the Committee, the NCA
stated:
We applied the process that I have just described in our
assessment and subsequent selection of a portion of land at Stirling Ridge. We
have identified that the nominated land is highly suitable in terms of the
national interest. In particular, I want to draw the committee's attention to
the fact that, although the vast majority of Stirling Ridge is of very high
environmental value, there are no environmental values attached to the subject
land, which is located at the fringe of the greater Stirling Ridge area. In
relation to local community concerns, including issues such as traffic
movements, design, character and the environmental buffers, the NCA is
confident that these can be readily addressed through careful planning and
approval controls.[125]
1.133
Residents refuted this statement. Dr Cowan argued that the development
would have a significant impact on ‘an extremely precious environmental area’.[126]
He argued that the environmental assessment had been carried out under a false
premise, comparing the environmental values of Red Hill bushland to those of
the Stirling Park grassland. He stated:
I have lived in the vicinity of Stirling Ridge for 25 years,
I have walked there every day and I have compiled a list of 95 bird species, as
well as a number of mammals and reptiles. The site is of great value and
consists of not only grassland but also the woodland on the ridge, and at the
eastern end the pin oaks, which line Fitzgerald Street, and the pine plantation
at the western end of the reserve.
Once you start this proposed development,
it would involve the destruction of many of those pin oak trees and all or most
of the pine trees, a substantial fringe of the native woodland along the ridge
with a fire zone of unspecified width and, of course, all sorts of other
threats to the environment there such as would come with development—noise,
lights, security, domestic animals, weed invasion, water run-off and so on. So
we regard it as an extremely valuable area, and those trees are not just exotic
trees, they are also feeding and shelter trees for birds and they provide
corridors along which birds can move from one part of the area to another. Once
you start destroying things around the edges, you are degrading, you are
fragmenting and you are greatly diminishing the environmental value of this area.
It is probably the last extensive area of native woodland within the inner
city. If it goes, it would be an unmitigated tragedy.[127]
1.134
Dr Cowan argued for a new environmental assessment of the site.[128]
1.135
Ms Fatseas argued that DA 78 was inconsistent with the Griffin plan and
the Griffin legacy. She argued it was also inconsistent with the Lake Burley
Griffin and Adjacent Lands Heritage Management Plan, which ‘envisage natural
woodland and a naturalistic foreshore’.[129] Mr Odgers also argued
that the proposal was inconsistent with the Griffin plan and the Griffin
legacy—indeed that much of the existing diplomatic estate was inconsistent with
those concepts, and urged that DA 78 be withdrawn.[130]
1.136
In response to the claim that DA 78 was inconsistent with the plan, the
NCA argued that:
Plans, by their very nature, are subject to change. They are
constantly developing to embrace the new world, the new environment. The
planning system established in the fifties did not think about medium and high
density, but we now know that we must think about that. So I think we have to
allow for changing use over time.
… we did not understand all those environmental values as
well. The purpose of putting forward DA78 is to have that discussion about a
potential change. We have lost the original and intended use of places like
Casey House and I am not sure it is helpful to try to drag them back. I do not
think it helps move us forward.[131]
1.137
With regard to Stirling Park, the NCA noted that many of the trees on
the site were ageing Pinus radiata that would be ‘gone within five years
regardless of this proposal’ and would not be replaced.[132]
Nonetheless, the NCA conceded that as part of the Draft Amendment process, a
further environmental evaluation ‘would be appropriate’:
If DA78 is to proceed, the NCA could make a formal referral
to the Commonwealth environment department under the EPBC Act. That puts the
highest test in the land on it. We believe that our work is robust. With that
confidence, there is no reason for us not to submit to that process.[133]
Alternative sites
1.138
In the evidence presented to the Committee, a number of other potential
sites have been mentioned as possible alternatives to Stirling Ridge. These
include:
- Curtin horse paddocks
- Yarralumla brickworks
- Carruthers Street,
Hughes
- Molonglo
1.139
In evidence to the Committee, Mr Wurfel stated:
If there is to be any consideration of future sites for
estates, the Curtin horse paddocks—recommended by a consultant to the NCA—and
the Yarralumla brickworks site—preferred by inner-south residents in a recent
consultation process—should be considered ahead of Stirling Ridge, which is a
green area well used and increasingly valued by both Deakin and Yarralumla
residents.[134]
1.140
The Yarralumla Residents Association certainly preferred the brickworks
site to either of the alternatives—the diplomatic estate at Stirling Park or
the ACT Government’s proposal for high-density residential development at the
brickworks.[135]
1.141
Ms Fatseas also raised the option of Molonglo—creating a new diplomatic
estate on a greenfield site and integrating it with the surrounding
developments. She stated:
I think the idea of having specific precincts that are
planned to meet the needs of larger numbers of embassies is a good one. For
example, the idea of having an area within Molonglo is something that would be
a longer-term strategy, together with a mix. I think it is about having a
diversity of approaches that could meet the needs of different diplomatic
missions. So you might have some commercial office space, you might have some
land in existing areas, in existing diplomatic precincts, and you might perhaps
have an existing mission surrendering some land so that another mission can
also have some of that land. It could also mean having custom-built areas in
new areas like Molonglo.[136]
1.142
Dr Cowan expressed a similar view, telling the Committee:
As we indicated we feel that sure, embassies should not
really come into residential areas but in the long run we would like to see a
diplomatic estate developed from the ground up in some such area—perhaps Molonglo
Valley—where it could be planned from the beginning as a diplomatic estate and
any adjacent suburban residential areas can be properly distanced and protected
and the impact avoided and so on. So provided it is done as a long-term
planning project, that would be our preferred long-term plan.[137]
1.143
The Save Stirling Park Group did ‘not consider that proximity to
Parliament House, government departments and other diplomatic enclaves or a
prestigious location are relevant criteria in Canberra in the 21st century’
given modern communications technology and ease of vehicular access.
Nonetheless, they identified a number of locations ‘which meet some or all of
these guidelines include the following: the North Curtin horse paddocks, the
Molonglo Valley, the Yarralumla brickworks, the south side of Carruthers
Street, Hughes, sites to the north of Lake Burley Griffin and commercial
zones’.[138]
1.144
Two potential problems arise with all of the possible alternatives. The
first is the view of the ACT Government. In its submission, the ACT Government
noted that ‘the Brickworks site presents an opportunity for the Territory to
establish in the future a medium to high density development integrated with
public transport’. The ACT Government did not support the use of the site for
the diplomatic estate ‘as it would be a lost opportunity to implement the
directions of the ACT Planning and Transport strategies’.[139]
As discussed above, the ACT Government has also expressed its reservations
concerning most of the other alternatives proposed, including the Curtin horse
paddocks.[140] The ACT Government
expressed the view that it was important for the NCA to seek ‘the Territory’s
views of potential sites as early as possible, given the Territory’s knowledge
of the constraints/opportunities on development of certain sites’.[141]
With regard to DA 78, the ACT Government stated that it ‘is not opposed to the
draft Amendment’:
The proposed adjustment of land use boundaries results in a
net increase in open space for the area while fulfilling the NCA’s responsibility
to provide sites for the purposes of diplomatic use to the south west of
Stirling Ridge and for a future residence for the Prime Minister of Australia.[142]
1.145
The other problem with alternative sites is that they are likely to run
into the same sort of opposition from residents as the Stirling Ridge site. As
the NCA explained to the Committee:
I think wherever we go, if it is an undeveloped site we are
going to have a lot of community opposition. We need to focus on issues rather
than pushing it from neighbour to neighbour. Even within the process that
looked at the Federal Golf Club versus Stirling Ridge, the people who were
interested in the land adjacent to the golf club said ‘Stirling Ridge is ideal,
go there’ and the people who were interested in Stirling Ridge said ‘The golf
club is ideal, go there.’ We do not want to get into a divisive thing. Let’s
look at the issues and try and resolve them.[143]
1.146
With regard to the Curtin horse paddocks site, the NCA stated:
There are obviously community sensitivities around it. If it
were to be developed for general ACT suburban use, that would be a proposal put
by the ACT government and they would need to have that discussion separately
with the community about the trade-off of current open space for future urban
development. We would have to have the same discussion if we decided that it
was suitable for diplomatic use if we wanted to proceed with that. In any part
of Australia, any new green field development proposal is going to be
controversial. One that deals with such a large area of open space in an older
part of the city is going to be at the pointier end of that difficulty.[144]
O’Malley
1.147
The other area raised in the evidence presented to the Committee is
O’Malley, which includes the current diplomatic enclave on National Land and
provision for a diplomatic presence on Territory Land. As noted above, it was
recommended by consultants GHD in 2008 that East O’Malley be incorporated in
the diplomatic estate. In 2008 there were 29 blocks in East O’Malley with a diplomatic
presence either in the form of chanceries, consulates or residences.[145]
1.148
In its submission, the Walter Burley Griffin Society noted that the 2006
census showed at least 51 residential blocks in O’Malley were leased to or
occupied by diplomatic missions, all but one being Territory leases. The
submission observed that:
O’Malley is manifestly a prime Diplomatic Estate with
abundant planning, environmental and locational advantages. From the beginning
it has been the object of vast private sector investments and building designs
in expectation of leasing to embassies. Real estate advertisements regularly
refer to O’Malley as a ‘well regarded and secure diplomatic suburb.’[146]
1.149
The NCA view on O’Malley was focussed on the environmental constraints
within the reserved section of National Land. The view was that certain
sections could be repackaged, but others would be lost:
Where we have got land that has previously been unattractive,
we may need to repackage it and make sure that we do get people on to it. Most of
the problems are, theoretically at least, solvable; there are a couple where we
are just not sure if the ground conditions are ever going to be solvable. We
may have to abandon some sites. There are some sites—in O’Malley in
particular—that could be developed in an engineering sense, but when they were
set aside we did not really understand the environmental values of some of the
remnant trees. There are some sites in the undeveloped portion of O’Malley that
have land that would qualify as yellow box-red gum woodland. We would
voluntarily take those sites out; we would not try to ruin that part by
developing those. Unfortunately, we will lose a couple of the sites in doing
that.[147]
1.150
Mr Lewis acknowledge the problem with the steep sites, but questioned
the existence of other undeveloped blocks:
I do not have a problem with not developing those 12 steep
blocks. They are very steep. In fact, I understand that the NCDC at one stage
said they were never intended to be developed. In our calculations, for
example, we have looked at the number of blocks in O’Malley as part of the
national land for the diplomatic estate and I think there are something like 11
blocks there that are quite flat and level, without any environmental problems,
yet there is only one building on them. The rest are reserved. The UAE I think
has got four or five blocks reserved. There is another block reserved for Laos.
The Syrians have just given up two blocks, which are now back in the pool. Of
the diplomatic estate in O’Malley, there are 12 steep blocks. I do not think
they could be built—I do not know—although the NCA says they could perhaps sell
them to the private sector. But of the remaining 11 blocks, there is only one
building—the Croatian embassy, I think—and the rest of them are vacant.[148]
1.151
Mr Odgers not only raised the vacant blocks in the current diplomatic
estate, but looked at O’Malley as a whole. He believed that there was scope for
some 23 blocks to be made available for lease:
In the last year, I have seen two new chanceries established
in Dunoon Street. Dunoon actually runs into Culgoa and Jindalee. We are
getting, right now, a sort of clustering of embassies, maybe of like mind. The
newer ones, of course, are leased, presumably under the ACT leasehold system,
from the market or dealing with the ACT government. So by my count we have
something like 23 readily available blocks—and this is in O’Malley that could
be developed—not counting those that are taken from the private sector.
Therefore, what we need, because my figures can be questioned, no doubt, is a
proper review of the O’Malley estate. It has been neglected, in that sense, as
being a supply and as being an amenable area. It is designed to be so, and it
is a very agreeable place to be in, as it is not far from anywhere else in the
national capital.[149]
Committee conclusions
1.152
The Committee believes that, in the absence of a long-term strategy
designed to balance the future needs of the diplomatic estate against other
planning requirements of Canberra as National Capital and as a living city, it
is difficult to assess the relative merits of potential locations for new
diplomatic estates. There are clearly options available, but all have
drawbacks, and most bring the respective requirements of the Australian and ACT
Governments into conflict with each other. This serves to highlight the need
for a long-term strategy for the future of the diplomatic estate, conducted and
developed in conjunction with the ACT Government.
1.153
There is also the question of the future of O’Malley, a suburb intended
from inception as a diplomatic precinct. The division of the suburb between
National and Territory land has brought about conceptual confusion.
Topographical difficulties may or may not have ruled out building on certain
blocks. Other blocks may or may not be available for diplomatic use. The only
certainty is that the diplomatic estate in O’Malley is currently underutilised,
which in turn raises questions about the need to claim new land for the
diplomatic estate. At the very least, the situation in O’Malley needs to be
subjected to a thoroughgoing review, and clear and coherent decisions made
about how the whole of O’Malley will be utilised for diplomatic purposes into
the future. This should be undertaken in conjunction with the development and
implementation of a long term strategy for the allocation of land to diplomatic
missions in the ACT.
Long term strategy
1.154
The lack of a long term strategy for the diplomatic estate has been
highlighted in much of the evidence presented to the Committee. The NCA noted
that:
There is no extant statement of Government policy to guide
the NCA in relation to the leasing of diplomatic land. Administrative
arrangements have evolved over time since diplomatic land was first leased in
Canberra in the 1940s.[150]
1.155
The essentially ad hoc development of the diplomatic estate was
highlighted in the evidence of the Walter Burley Griffin Society. The result,
according to the society, has been something of a mess, neither in tune with
current or previous plans, nor any obvious planning principles.[151]
Speaking on behalf of the Society, Mr Odgers stated:
Historically, going back to the 1960s the United Kingdom had
imperial blocks on Commonwealth Avenue. In the 1940s the United States of
America estate was more or less on the site that Walter Burley Griffin marked
for the Governor-General's residence. Decisions even since then have paid no
heed to the National Capital Plan and alternative prospective demands on the
national land bank. Land in the central national area of Canberra is now
becoming scarce at the same time as numerous prospective demands for national
land are emerging. Even the earlier DA66 directly impacted on the purposes of
Casey House, once reserved as a residence for the federal Treasurer, and Darwin
Avenue, the last of the state and territory radials symbolising Federation.[152]
1.156
The Society contrasted this to the situation in Washington DC, where the
allocation of land to diplomatic missions was incorporated into an overall
plan:
The National Capital Planning Commission in Washington has a
comprehensive plan for foreign missions and international organisations within
the overall Comprehensive Plan: Federal Elements (2004, pages 57-76).
Foreign missions occupy all kinds of buildings from custom-designed to
commercial office buildings. There are no designated diplomatic estates;
instead ‘foreign missions contribute to the vibrancy and diversity of
Washington’s neighbourhoods (all quadrants).’ There is an historic
concentration in the Northwest quadrant, whilst new developments are being
encouraged [2004] to locate in congenial or harmonious areas and in the
Anacostia waterfront redevelopment area.[153]
1.157
Dr Cowan noted that ‘there are no agreed guidelines as to where a new
diplomatic estate might be located’. This meant that development had been ad
hoc and piecemeal.[154] In its submission, the
Save Stirling Park Group listed a range of criteria for new estates, including:
- Meets long term need
- Appropriate price
signals should apply
- Consistent with
Canberra’s urban development
- Community use not
alienated
- Does not harm the
environment
- Minimal impact on
local residences
- Has community support
- Will not impact on
local traffic
- Protected from
bushfire
- Protects both
Indigenous and European heritage
- Ability to provide
acceptable security.[155]
1.158
The Group recommended a strategy which included the following options:
- Commercial premises
- Subdivision of
existing blocks
- Residential (mainly
for diplomatic residences)
- Private sector (e.g.
business park).[156]
1.159
The Yarralumla Residents Association also had agreed criteria for new
diplomatic precincts:
These are to minimise traffic congestion in the suburb, to
ensure there is adequate parking, to maximise the visual buffer between
developments and existing residential areas, to ensure that relevant government
departments consult with the YRA on subdivision plans, to minimise the impact
on existing trees, to ensure adherence to advice from the environmental experts
on measures to minimise the impact of development, including firebreaks and
pedestrian access, and to ensure continued easy pedestrian access to open green
spaces and pedestrian safety.[157]
1.160
In evidence before the Committee, the NCA conceded the need for a more
transparent process for identifying diplomatic sites and long term planning:
We probably need to say: ‘Let’s presume two sites a year for
20 years. Let’s look for 40 sites. Where would 40 sites be?’ That gives us a
couple of decades forward plan. Let us look at how that occurs. If ultimately
that was something the committee asked us to do, we would do it and I think it
is something we probably need to turn our minds to anyway. We have the
component pieces but we have never joined them together and said, ‘Here’s the
holistic view.’[158]
1.161
The NCA believed that it would be easier to manage the whole process of
land allocation if there was a comprehensive plan setting out a range of
options:
It would certainly be easier for us to have discussions with
missions about what their future options were if we had a more comprehensive
forward plan and were able to say you can start with private office rental and
be a premium tenant and then you can transition to a Commonwealth managed style
of office accommodation and if the relationship grows and you want to upgrade
the premises you can look to stronger, larger and more expensive property. It
would be easier for our dealings with those missions. It would be much better
for the community to know in the long term what our thinking was, rather than
having to respond to individual proposals as they come forward. I think that is
pretty important.[159]
1.162
The NCA also noted that such a plan would ‘give clarity around
government policy in relation to diplomatic relations at the level of
diplomatic mission provision. What does government think it should, at minimum,
provide? It would be good if that could be codified.’[160]
Committee conclusions
1.163
Washington DC demonstrates the benefit of having a coherent long term
policy for the allocation of land to diplomatic missions. Given that example,
and the shortcomings of the current arrangements in Canberra, the Committee is
of the view that the need for a long-term strategy for allocating land for
diplomatic missions is obvious. This strategy should be developed in
conjunction with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, Australian
Federal Police and ACT Government and integrated with the National Capital Plan
and the Territory Plan. It should forecast demand and supply and establish the
various mechanisms by which these forecasts may be met, including:
- Designating sites for future diplomatic enclaves
- Establishing a clear
and binding framework for the granting and resumption of leases to diplomatic
missions
- Establishing a policy
for medium and high density properties
- Creating a mechanism
for the subdivision of existing leases
- Establishing a
framework for more extensive use of residential and commercial properties for chanceries
- Managing impacts on
local residents
- Working out what role
the private market might play to complement the existing leasing arrangements.
Recommendation 2 |
1.164 |
The Committee recommends that the National Capital Authority
develop a long term strategy for the allocation of land to diplomatic
missions in the Australian Capital Territory. This strategy should be
developed in conjunction with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade,
Australian Federal Police and ACT Government and integrated with the National
Capital Plan and the Territory Plan. It should forecast demand and supply and
establish the various mechanisms by which these forecasts may be met,
including:
- Designating
sites for future diplomatic enclaves
- Establishing
a clear and binding framework for the granting and resumption of leases to
diplomatic missions
- Establishing
a policy for medium and high density properties
- Creating
a mechanism for the subdivision of existing leases
- Establishing
a framework for more extensive use of residential and commercial properties
for chanceries
- Managing
impacts on local residents
- Working
out what role the private market might play.
The long term strategy should also involve a thorough review
of land resources in O’Malley, Yarralumla and Deakin to ensure their optimal
use for diplomatic purposes. The views of the diplomatic community should be
sought during the development of the strategy. |
1.165
The Committee is of the view that, in the absence of a long-term
strategy identifying the need for the inclusion of part of Stirling Park in the
diplomatic estate, and given the concerns of residents about the potential
impacts of Draft Amendment 78 on the environmental values and social amenity of
the site, Draft Amendment 78 should be withdrawn.
Recommendation 3 |
1.166 |
The Committee recommends that Draft Amendment 78 be
withdrawn.
|
Senator Louise Pratt
Chair
26 March 2013