Westfield Doncaster

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Westfield Doncaster
Westfield Doncaster
Facts and statistics
Location Doncaster, Victoria, Australia
Coordinates 37°47′00″S 145°07′30″E / -37.783333, 145.125Coordinates: 37°47′00″S 145°07′30″E / -37.783333, 145.125
Opening date September 30, 1969
Management Westfield Group
Owner Westfield Group 50% since Aug 2007
No. of stores and services 238 approx.
Parking 1,595 approx (april 2008)
No. of floors 2
Website westfield.com/doncaster

Westfield Doncaster (sometimes referred to as 'Shoppo' by locals or simply 'Doncaster' is a shopping centre 50% owned by the Westfield Group and 50% owned by LaSalle Investment Management (as of August 2007) located in Doncaster, a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It is located on the corner of Williamsons Road and Doncaster Road in the Doncaster Hill precinct, an ongoing planning initiative by the local Manningham council.

Located 20 minutes east from the central business district of Melbourne, plans were approved in 2004 for a long-delayed major redevelopment that was seen as a major boost to the Doncaster Hill strategy.

Contents

[edit] History

Westfield Doncaster officially opened on September 30, 1969. The original $12-million centre consisted of the four storey Myer building at the north end, two levels of shops running along the west side to the then white eight-storey office tower. On the east side the two layers of shops turned into one layer. Coles New World was where the food court later opened.

In the early 1980s the centre was extended south with two single-storey rows of shops, Kmart, Coles and Village Cinemas. A major redevelopment completed in 1992 saw the centre expand further. A second level of shops was added to the south end including Franklins and a fresh food court above Coles and Kmart. Outside, the colours were a jarring Californian design and local protests saw Westfield alter the image in line with local tastes.

[edit] Revitalisation

Comparison table
Before After
Number of shops 202 stores 400 stores
Major stores Myer
Coles
Kmart
Safeway
Village 2 Cinemas

Myer
Coles
David Jones
Safeway
Borders Books
Target
Big W
Aldi
JB Hi-fi
Dick Smith Electronics
Village 9 Cinemas
Fitness First Platinum
Colonial Fresh Markets

Car park spaces 3,480 5,500 (currently 1,595 approx.)[1]
Retail space
(gross lettable area)
51,000m² 109,732m²

Preliminary works at the centre from September to December, 2006 provided a platform for the main construction works that commenced on January 15, 2007. By October 2008 the centre will be double the previous size, costing approximately $600 million. It will feature more than 200 new retailers (for a total around 400), a Village Cinemas complex and dining areas that take advantage of the site’s elevated views towards the city skyline. The works required the closure of around 100 stores during 2007 and early 2008, with Myer the only major store remaining open throughout the project.

Due to the revitalisation, Kmart shut down and is set to be replaced in the Centre by Target.[2] Coles and Safeway closed in January 2007 and both supermarkets re-opened on 10 April 2008[2]. Target and Big W are expected to open on June 18 2008.[3] The Village Twin Cinemas on Williamsons Road were demolished in September 2006 to make way for a multi-level car park, with new cinemas to be built above. The Westfield Shoppingtown Library was also demolished and moved to a temporary location in the Municipal Offices. Since then, the Manningham council has decided to permanently relocate it to the council's civic precinct rather than return it to Westfield Doncaster.[4]

Arrivals include a new David Jones department store, a Big W discount department store and the new Target store - all in the second half of 2008. Other features include new electrical stores, Dick Smith Electronics and JB Hi-Fi, which are both now open, expanded dining areas including rooftop restaurants and gourmet fresh food shops. The Village Cinemas complex on the rooftop level will include Gold Class cinemas[2]. The centre will also have improved access, mostly undercover parking and new landscaping.

On April 10 2008 the first stage opening saw a much-larger Coles supermarket (latest format) and Safeway supermarket return to their old locations at the south (Doncaster Rd) end, alongside 70-plus other new and returning retailers. Some retailers are opening their first stores, including Jones The Grocer, which will open its first Melbourne store, OxFam opening its first food store and That Store[5]. Many other stores have relocated to the new precinct or to other positions in the centre and stores that were gone throughout the revitalisation have returned.

Westfield doncaster also introduced a new service called Westfield Butler. This service is for people who don't have the time to do shopping themselves. A group of six butlers will do different tasks, from grocery shopping, to planning weddings or functions. And you can get delivery. Unfortunately, the service does not come cheap, you will be charged 20 percent of the total cost or 10 dollars a delivery.[6][7]

Big W will open on June 18 2008 on the second floor at the east side of the centre near where David Jones will be opening in October, to the east of Myer. Underneath the Big W location, the new Target store will open (August 7th 2008) on the 1st level. Most previous food court operators closed in late January 2007. The new dining area to be known as 'The Drum' with around 900-seat capacity will open on 18 June 2008 in a new location overlooking the corner of Doncaster and Williamsons Rds.

In February 2008 a temporary bus interchange opened closer to Willamsons Road. This was to make way for changes to the centre entrance and an upgraded bus interchange. Within the existing centre, new marble flooring is being laid as part of an overhaul that will include new lighting, furniture and amenities. Myer is also set to commence a refurbishment in April. Glazing on the exterior of the centre facing Doncaster and Williamsons Roads is near-complete.

[edit] Retailers and layout

Office tower at Westfield Doncaster
Office tower at Westfield Doncaster

The shopping centre is a single rectangular-shaped building with two individual levels that span most of the length of the complex. Major retailers were previously located on either end of the centre, but now are located in various locations.These retailers include:

[edit] Transport

There were 3,500 car parking spaces, with the majority surface car park variety. The site also had multi-storey and rooftop parking. Due to the current (2007-08) renovations, on-site parking has been heavily restricted.

[edit] Public Transport

Doncaster Shoppingtown only has bus for public transport. The bus interchange off Williamsons Road acts as a major hub for transport activity in the Doncaster district. Situated between two rail lines, the only public transport to Westfield Doncaster is bus services. Westfield Doncaster is served by school routes (155 & 159), services linking it to the Melbourne CBD (200 201 205 203 207 305 & 307) Route 291 which is part of the Red Orbital SmartBus, as well as to local City of Manningham areas (279 281 283 284 285 289 293 295 364 and 365).

The current temporary bus bay is one island and the far end of the carpark which was demolished, repaved, repainted and reconcreted so that it was a bus interchange. Currently, there are simply bus shelters with seating and poles with the orange Metlink signage. Behind the bus interchange is fencing that is clearly labelled 'CONSTRUCTION SITE' and behind, works are going on. The island has 3 bays and the far end has all the other bays. The island's 3 bays are usually buses that go towards Box Hill whilst the far end is used for routes to Manningham, City and the first bay on entrance is used for the school bus services.

bay route destination
1 155, 159 Warrandyte School Bus Services
1 289 Donvale/Tunstall Square
1 295 The Pines
1 305 The Pines or Deep Creek or Warrandyte Bridge
2 200 CITY Lonsdale St via Bulleen and Eastern Freeway
2 205 Melbourne University via Kew Junction
2 291 Heidelberg
3 207 Donvale
3 283 Doncaster-Templestowe Loop
3 307 Mitcham
4 281 Eltham Station via Templestowe
4 293 Greensborough via Templestowe
4 364 Ringwood via The Pines, Warrandyte
5 200, 201, 207 City via Bulleen or Belmore Road or Park n Ride and Kew Junction
6 155,159 Kew Schools - School Bus Service
6 200, 201, 207 CITY Lonsdale St via Kew Junction
6 305, 307 CITY Queen St via Freeway
7 Bus Set Down Bay
8 279, 284 Box Hill via Templestowe and Middleborough Rd or Park n Ride and Union Road
9 289 Box Hill via Elgar Road
9 365 Ringwood via Park Orchards
10 291, 293, 295 Box Hill via Station Street

Throughout the 1970s the Doncaster line was mooted to run down the middle of the Eastern Freeway, with a station at Westfield Doncaster.[8] By 1984 land for the line once it left the freeway had been sold, and by 1991 an independent report investigating construction of the line recommended against it due to the high cost of underground construction.[9] Various plans have also been made for extension of the Balwyn North route 48 tram north to Doncaster.[10]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ according to Manningham Leader 16 April 2008
  2. ^ a b c Westfield Doncaster: About The Project. westfield.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  3. ^ Westfield Doncaster: Regeneration. westfield.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-26.
  4. ^ Westfield - View our plans and artist impressions
  5. ^ according to Manningham Leader, Wednesday 9 April, 2008
  6. ^ New breed of servants in suburbs Herald Sun [1]
  7. ^ Westfield - Doncaster [2]
  8. ^ Stephen Cauchi (February 1998). "Whatever Happened to the Proposed Railway to Doncaster East". Newsrail 26 (2): page 40–44. Australian Railway Historical Society (Victorian Division). 
  9. ^ Russell, E.W. (July 1991). On the Right Track... Freeways or Better Public Transport for Melbourne's East, page 64. 
  10. ^ The Age - 'Rail line would replace 10,000 cars' - October 18, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-07-30.

[edit] External links