Western Sydney Business Access - November 2020

Page 8

News

www.wsba.com.au

Have your say about The Joan HE Joan Sutherland Performing Arts Centre (The Joan), in partnership with Penrith City Council, is inviting local residents and those from surrounding LGAs to have their say in a new survey about our City’s performing arts hub. CEO of Penrith Performing & Visual Arts, Hania Radvan, said The Joan is looking to the future and would like to hear residents’ feedback on topics such as performances, accessibility, amenities and more. “While COVID-19 has interrupted our usual programming at The Joan, we’re excited to embrace this oppor-

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tunity to seek community input to reshape our offering,” Ms Radvan said. Penrith Mayor Karen McKeown OAM said that with more than 210,000 residents in the LGA, the survey will provide valuable insights into the tastes and interests of our diverse community - to ensure The Joan has something for everyone on offer. “After nearly 30 years in the heart of our City, I’m proud that The Joan continues to be one of the best performing arts hubs in Western Sydney,” Cr McKeown said. The survey is open for four weeks from October 26 to 5pm on November 23,

2020. Those who complete the survey will also have a chance to win one of 5 x $100 Westfield gift vouchers (T&Cs apply). Following the survey, two community reference groups will be held via Zoom from 10am to 10.45am and 6pm to 6.45pm on Wednesday 9 December. The groups will help The Joan and Council to further understand and explore the themes of the survey and the responses received. To take part in the group, simply tick the box in the survey indicating your interest in doing so. Visit: www.yoursaypenrith.com.au/joansurvey

The iconic Joan at Penrith.

Young buyers head to the Blue Mountains Continued from page 3

Belle Property agent Catriona Swan told local media she noticed at the start of COVID-19 an influx of Sydneysiders moving or renting in the area. In March - and for the first time ever - their Leura real estate agency was asked to lease furnished Airbnb properties for “the stability of a permanent rental” for their owners. “The market is driving it,” she said. “It’s sales and rentals supply and demand. There’s not enough properties and a high level of people wanting to get out of apartments and congested living.” Ms Swan said buyers were searching for options in the “two hour ring” from Sydney and some other capital cities. She said compared to 2019 when it was a 60-40% split between Sydney and local buyers, now it is a 75 to 25% split - three quarters of buyers are from Sydney. “It used to be retirees coming here but

now it’s also families and young professional couples all looking for a better quality of life and to get more for their money,” she says. “Western Sydney now has so much more employment, the transport infrastructure is so much better and technology means people are much more flexible in the way they work, and might work from home a couple of days a week now. “We’re seeing people coming from semis in the inner west and apartments in the eastern suburbs and lower north shore and getting a three to four-bedroom house on a large block for the same money,” Blue Mountains has also seen the volume of sales up by 14% Ms Swan recently sold 8 Railway Parade - a two-bedroom character cottage near the station in Wentworth Falls to a young Sydney IT couple for $890,000. To get something for under a million dollars with a view to the city and 1000sqm of land, ticked all their boxes.

Chief economist at AMP Capital Shane Oliver said the inner city was out of fashion and the new appetite for living further from work would revolutionise the market. “If you can live in the Blue Mountains and only have to come into the city one or two days a week or not at all, then that’s going to revolutionise the Australian property market.” Brendan Coates from the Grattan Institute said it was unlikely Sydney would experience property price bubbles in the near future as “people have been voting with their feet” and moving out of inner-city areas to the suburbs or regional centres. Even before COVID-19 people were moving out and travelling to the city for work but now most people don’t need to go to the city provoking interest in the Blue Mountains. The number of vacant rental properties in the Blue Mountains hit ten-year lows in August dropping to just 49 vacancies or 0.7%.

There were 1448 vacant rentals in the CBD in August down from May when 1796 rental homes sat empty and pushed vacancy rates to 15-year record highs of 15%. Katoomba once drew honeymooners in their thousands, now is proving particularly attractive for young people moving there permanently, driving prices up 22% in the past year and 87% in the last five, but still with a median of just $610,000. The lower reaches of the mountains, where most commuters might find the commuting easier, is also showing strong price growth. Blaxland, with a median of $750,000, has risen 72% in the past five years and Springwood, 60% during the same period to $680,000. Scenic Wentworth Falls has a median price of $715,000, which sits above the overall house median of $680,250 in the Blue Mountains region.

Youth Insearch is a very proud recipient of the 2019 Excellence in Small Business Award from the Western Sydney Awards for Business Excellence. Over 33 years we have empowered 33,000 at-risk young Australians aged between 14-20 years to turn their lives around. We are looking for corporate partners or pro-bono support from organisations which share our values, vision and mission.

CONNECTING A UNITED PASSION TO GROW THE LOCAL BLACKTOWN ECONOMY

admin@youthinsearch.org.au 02 9659 6122

BECOME A MEMBER from $299 p. 0439 812 709 8

www.greaterbbc.org.au WESTERN SYDNEY BUSINESS ACCESS NOVEMBER 2020


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