Melbourne Terrace resident, Richard Grace, said he was concerned that such a high tower was going to be built so close to the Queen Victoria Market.
“It’s a bit like living in a development site here, this part of Melbourne, and the government seems to allow anything to go up,” he said. “It seems there are very little controls around it.”
Mary-Lou Howie stands at 380 Queen Street, where there are plans to build a skyscraper. She is concerned about its impact on the nearby Queen Victoria Market.Credit: Wayne Taylor
Mary-Lou Howie, president of the Friends of the Queen Victoria Market, said while Melbourne Terrace and other buildings surrounding the market had been designed so they were low rise and in sympathy with the market, the proposed 67-storey tower development had not.
“The developers are having a great time here I think at the expense of the community,” she said. “The market has already lost one third of its traders because of mismanagement and bad planning.”
City of Melbourne deputy lord mayor Roshena Campbell said the acquisition of the site last year by Malaysian giant Sime Darby for $115 million was one of the most significant sales in Melbourne’s recent history.
“I am very excited about the possibility for significant investment in one of the highest urban growth parts of our city,” she said.
Campbell said it was “ultimately a matter for the minister” to balance considerations about the impact of the height and scale of the development.

An artist’s impression of the proposed 380 Queen Street site against the CBD skyline.
“From a City of Melbourne perspective, we would like to see more investment at this scale, particularly in areas of growth and urban development, like around that Queen Victoria Market precinct,” she said.
The proposed 67-storey tower follows Lendlease and the City of Melbourne’s plans for three high-rise towers adjacent to the Queen Victoria Market as part of a $1.7 billion skyline-shaping project known as Gurrowa Place.
Gurrowa Place includes a 49-level tower for student accommodation, a 46-level residential apartment block and a 28-level office building on the so-called “southern site” bounded by Franklin, Queen and Peel streets.
However, the development which received state government approval in March last year and approval from Heritage Victoria has stalled after a federal heritage review commenced in June last year with an outcome expected next month.
The developers said the plans for 380 Queen Street have been “comprehensively reworked” since the City of Melbourne’s concerns were raised and plans to include a supermarket have been scrapped, though they may pursue it through a separate application.

The ground floor will include a central retail arcade fitted with food and retail stores.
Despite the pushback, the tower is pitched as a key element of urban renewal. “The site is within a significant location, with convenient access to public transport, retail activity and provides a unique development opportunity to enhance the area and contribute to the rising demand for high-quality housing in the central city,” the planning proposal reads.
“The site’s immediate proximity to key CBD amenities provides an aspirational residential location, where this unique and high-quality mixed-use development will create an exciting new place to live.”
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Student residents will have access to communal amenities: a gym, cinema room, virtual reality and gaming lounges, music rooms, and rooftop garden terraces. Meanwhile, private apartment residents will enjoy wellness facilities, including a 25-metre indoor lap pool, meditation and yoga spaces, hammam steam baths, float pods and IV treatment rooms.
It remains unclear when developers anticipate commencing work at the site, as the application is still undergoing initial assessment.
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