Place: Catherine Hill Bay
Heritage Conservation Area (4 km south of Swansea PC 2281)
Threat: Destruction through uncontrolled development
Photo: National Trust of Australia (NSW)
Significance:
The Catherine Hill Bay
Conservation Area has significance for both the landscape and built form, including its mining history, company town developments,
coastal recreation, characteristic Australian vernacular buildings, undeveloped natural bushland,
habitat for threatened species, significant scenic and environmental coastal conservation values, relative isolation and lack of urban
development. The aesthetic significance of the built form at
Catherine Hill
Bay is significant as a highly intact late nineteenth century company
town characterised by a varied range of finishes and scale typified by simple forms of predominately one story height. The area exhibits a high
visual significance owing to the diversity of landforms, vegetation communities and waterforms. The Moonee site is an integral part of that landform.
(See nomination form for more details)
Statement of Risk:
The character of this
scenic village, the surrounding bushland/landscape and mining heritage
are under threat from extreme overdevelopment with the proposed addition
of approx. 900 new homes.
Degree of Risk:
Immediate risk – no solution agreed
Threats/Risks: Destruction
Fate/outcome: Stuffed (shattered or smashed )
Desired Outcome / Vision:
That the
current Council guidelines for new
development in Catherine Hill Bay and its surrounds continue to be
in force and adhered to and that additional residential development above and beyond those guidelines be rejected

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