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Powerhouse museum: NSW premier dumps plans to close Ultimo site | Powerhouse museum: NSW premier dumps plans to close Ultimo site |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Industrial science museum will not be closed and moved to Parramatta but will operate across both sites | Industrial science museum will not be closed and moved to Parramatta but will operate across both sites |
The New South Wales government has made a U-turn on its decision to relocate Sydney’s Powerhouse museum, more than five years after the announcement was made. | |
The industrial science museum in inner-Sydney’s Ultimo will not be closed and moved to Parramatta, but will stay open and operate along with the new Powerhouse facility planned for western Sydney. | |
The relocation was expected to cost between $420m and $645m, with the staged closure of the Ultimo site due to have begun on 1 July. | The relocation was expected to cost between $420m and $645m, with the staged closure of the Ultimo site due to have begun on 1 July. |
A joint statement from the NSW premier, Gladys Berejiklian, and the state’s treasurer, Dominic Perrottet, on Saturday described the new Powerhouse at Parramatta as the “jewel-in-the-crown” for the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences. | |
The existing museum at Ultimo would complement the new Parramatta centre, Perrottet said. | |
“What’s most important is that the destination that we’ve reached is the right decision for the people of our state,” Perrottet told reporters in Ultimo on Saturday. “In a Covid world, we’ve had to look at new ways of doing things. | |
“We’ll have a world-class facility for the people of western Sydney, a world-class facility here in Ultimo and that’s what our people deserve here in our state.” | |
In February 2015, a month before the NSW election, the then premier, Mike Baird, announced the controversial plans for the Powerhouse move. | |
But the treasurer pointed to the announcement in May that the state government’s infrastructure pipeline had been increased to $100bn. A statement at the time said the government was “looking at options to support the arts community at Ultimo”. | |
“We made the decision at that point in time to be open to the future use here in Ultimo,” Perrottet said on Saturday. “Now the government has reached a final decision that we preserve this site to ensure that the people of central Sydney maintain this great cultural facility here in Sydney.” | |
Berejiklian said: “This will allow us to provide an outstanding visitor experience in the areas of technology, science, engineering and design at two major locations.” | |
The government had planned to sell the Ultimo site for up to $195m with these funds to be put towards the cost of building the new museum at Parramatta. | |
The Parramatta lord mayor, Bob Dwyer, said he was pleased the government confirmed it was “still committed to delivering a world-class museum in Parramatta”. | |
“The decision to retain the Powerhouse museum at Ultimo should not compromise the investment we were promised for an iconic cultural institution in western Sydney,” Dwyer said. | |
Independent Sydney MP Alex Greenwich said the debate should have “never been about Sydney versus Parramatta”. | |
“The passionate community campaign to save the Powerhouse speaks volumes to its special significance to Sydneysiders,” Greenwich said. | |
The Public Service Association general secretary, Stewart Little, also welcomed the decision. | |
“This means hundreds of jobs in the culture sector are saved,” he said. “It also means Australians can enjoy the rich cultural heritage that the Powerhouse has to offer.” | |
The new museum in western Sydney is expected to create more than 1,100 construction jobs, 2,400 indirect jobs, and employ hundreds more people once opened. | |
The state government last year said the Powerhouse Precinct in Parramatta was on track for opening in 2023. |
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