Esplanade set to deliver next-gen living to Sydney's north west
Plans are afoot for a 267 apartment residential project in Sydney's north-west.
Capital Corporation has submitted a development application (DA) with Hills Shire Council for ‘Esplanade’, proposed to be an integrated community comprising 267 apartments across two high-rises, with a host of resident-only facilities, three levels of boutique workspaces, waterfront dining and retail areas.
The DA is the result of a long consultation process with Norwest Association and Council, says Capital Corporation managing director Steve Grant.
“We know and understand Norwest and Bella Vista as a residential area and business park – we were integral in developing that original vision - but what we could see was its future as an integrated lifestyle destination," said Grant.
“We’ve sought input and consulted extensively on our ideas, and overlaid that with what we’ve learnt from our projects in the Fairway Drive area, in terms of understanding the developing family and empty-nester market around Norwest.
The project, designed by architects Turner, will take come up on the waterfront site best known as the location of the Sydney Ice Arena on Solent Circuit, Baulkham Hills.
The Ice Arena is expected to relocate later this year.
“Bella Vista, which sits within Norwest, has always been considered a premium residential area – outperforming beyond anyone’s expectations. People have always looked on it as a high-end neighbourhood," said Grant.
“Esplanade responds to the fact that many families who moved here two and three decades ago are questioning whether the big house and high-maintenance garden is what they want to deal with for the next ten years.
“Moving into a new home, within easy reach of all the things that make daily life more enjoyable is now a real consideration for people living in the suburbs surrounding Norwest,” he says.
The development will have landscaped gardens, a rooftop cinema, a pool and barbecue areas.
The project also proposes to upgrade the boardwalk on Norwest Lake, expanding the public space at ground level.
The Norwest station is close and Grant says he is confident that as the M2 and M7 connected Norwest to the rest of Sydney, so too would the Sydney Metro North-West transform the travel experience in the area and link it even more easily to key education, medical and shopping hubs.
“There are some 20,000 people working in Norwest right now with projections that could grow to 35,000. More than 400 companies base themselves here and investors will see the obvious opportunity in locating attainable urban-style living within such a successful employment centre," he said.