Chapter 2 Proposed Works
2.1
The proposed fit-out of new leased
premises for the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) at 735 Collins St, Melbourne
aims to provide the ATO with a single office location for its entire staff
located in Melbourne city, currently spread across five locations. The total
estimated cost of the project is $50.9 million (excluding GST).
Need for works
2.2
The ATO’s submission states that the works are needed to remedy the
ATO’s dislocation across five sites in the Melbourne CBD. According to the ATO,
this situation interrupts work practices as well as being administratively
inefficient. In addition, four of the ATO’s current leases in the Melbourne CBD
will expire in 2012, the fifth in 2017.
2.3
As part of its site inspection on 19 March 2010, the Committee was able
to visit each location, in order to understand the disruption and cost of their
dispersal. It was clear from the site inspection that co-located premises would
provide significant benefits to the ATO in Melbourne.
2.4
The Committee finds that there is a need for the proposed works.
Scope of works
2.5
The proposed scope of the works is detailed in Submission 1: Australian
Taxation Office. In short the project proposes the following:
n base building – integration
of services into the base building works, including electrical, mechanical,
communications, security, fire and hydraulic services;
n supplementary
air-conditioning for rooms with higher than normal cooling and ventilation
requirements;
n lighting control
system and data cabling;
n specific security
requirements, both external and internal;
n office accommodation
including reception areas, open-plan work areas and fit-out, with office sizes
of 28.8m2 and 14.4m2;
n breakout spaces,
quiet rooms and casual meeting spaces, computer rooms, storage, conference and
training facilities;
n first-aid rooms,
kitchens, amenities areas, showers and lockers, secure areas and a separate
secure mail receiving room;[1]
n trigeneration plant,
producing power for the building, and using excess heat produced in power
generation to run chillers and heating, for cooling and heating the building[2],
and a planned ‘ring’ system for the entire site, to enable shared water, power
and by-products.[3]
2.6
The Committee finds that the proposed scope of works is suitable to meet
the needs of the ATO project.
Cost of works
2.7
The total estimated out-turn cost for this project is $50.9 million
(excluding GST). The Committee received a confidential supplementary submission
detailing the project costs and held an in-camera hearing with the ATO on the
project costs.
2.8
The Committee is satisfied that the costings for the project provided to
it are adequate.
Project issues
Occupational density target
2.9
The ATO has indicated that it aims to adhere to the Commonwealth Property
Management Guidelines, in particular the ‘occupational density target’ of 16m2
of usable office area per occupied workpoint.[4]
2.10
As noted by the ATO during the public hearing, it employs a seasonal
workforce each year for processing and support functions related to the ‘tax
time’ period. The ATO must have sufficient office space for this workforce, but
it is unoccupied during other periods of the year. As a result, the ATO has a
workpoint vacancy rate of between six and eight percent, above the normal rate.
2.11
Unoccupied workpoints contribute to the total usable office area,
driving up the average space per occupied workpoint. The ATO has sought
exemption from the occupational density target in certain circumstances (with
some success), as well as proposing innovative designs that provide suitable workpoints
of 12m2 each, in order to drive down the average occupied workpoint
space.
2.12
The Committee is aware that agencies with seasonal fluctuation in
staffing levels, such as the ATO, encounter particular difficulties in adhering
to the Property Management Guidelines. The Committee is pleased to note the
ATO’s use of innovative design to meet its obligations under the Guidelines.
The Committee encourages agencies to explore and embrace practical solutions to
the challenges of providing sustainable, good value and productive workplaces.
2.13
Nonetheless, the Committee is concerned that efforts to meet the
occupational density target not compromise the quality of accommodation for all
staff. Should the accommodation for permanent staff be compromised then the
Committee would support an exemption from the target.
Trigeneration plant
2.14
The Committee understands that the trigeneration plant to be installed
in the building will save significant amounts of fuel, as it captures
by-products of power generation (heat, water) and uses them for building
services.[5] The Committee notes that
the trigerenation plant will have capacity to service the entire block at 734
Collins Street, and commends the ATO and the site developer for this
initiative. The Committee is pleased to note that the ATO is adopting such a
practical and sustainable measure, which will reduce energy use for the
building. The Committee encourages other agencies to consider utilising similar
technologies where appropriate.
2.15
The Committee also notes that many sustainability measures are best used
on a ‘precinct-wide’ scale, rather than to service a single building. The
Committee is pleased that the overall development at 735 Collins Street will be
constructed so as to enable all buildings on site to share ‘water and power and
other sorts of by-products throughout the whole precinct and therefore get
greater efficiency.’[6] The ATO has indicated
that the site could potentially include a black-water treatment facility in future,
which would capitalise on the economy of scale stemming from numerous
buildings.
2.16
The Committee urges other government agencies, when entering into
new-building lease agreements, to encourage building designers to integrate
buildings into the local precinct, to ensure that the consideration of sustainability
extends as widely as possible.
Committee comment
2.17
Overall, the Committee is satisfied that this project has merit in terms
of need, scope and cost.
2.18
Having examined the purpose, need, use, revenue and public value of the
work, the Committee considers that it is expedient that the proposed works
proceed.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the House of Representatives
resolve, pursuant to Section 18 (7) of the Public Works Committee Act
1969, that it is expedient to carry out the following proposed work: fit-out
of new leased premises for the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) at 735
Collins St, Melbourne.
|
Senator the Hon Jan
McLucas
Chair
13 May 2010