Seaford Heights, South Australia

Seaford Heights
Adelaide, South Australia
Seaford Heights
Coordinates 35°11′53″S 138°29′49″E / 35.198°S 138.497°E / -35.198; 138.497Coordinates: 35°11′53″S 138°29′49″E / 35.198°S 138.497°E / -35.198; 138.497
Postcode(s) 5169
Area 77 hectares (190 acres)
LGA(s) City of Onkaparinga
State electorate(s) Mawson
Federal Division(s) Mayo
Suburbs around Seaford Heights:
Seaford Old Noarlunga
Seaford Rise Seaford Heights
McLaren Vale

Seaford Heights is a metropolitan suburb of Adelaide, South Australia. It lies within the City of Onkaparinga and has postcode 5169. Its boundaries are formed by Robinson Road on the north, Main South Road on the west, Victor Harbor Road & Ostrich Farm Road on the east, and The Southern Waste Depot on the south. It covers 77 hectares.

Infrastructure development of Seaford Heights began in early 2014. The first permanent buildings (including an Aldi supermarket) were completed in late 2015. The Aldi supermarket opened in February 2016.[1]

The development of Seaford Heights has gained considerable opposition. It is argued that the suburb represents unacceptable urban sprawl, infringing on The McLaren Vale wine region. A Facebook page titled 'We Oppose Seaford Heights' has attracted almost 1000 'likes'.[2]

The Fairmont Group, an Australian property-development company, was given the tender in December 2008 to develop the property, and planned to start in late 2009. However, local opposition to the development[3] stalled development for several years. Original plans called for the suburb to be completed in 2019 with 1300 allotments and an approximate population of 4,500.

Some concerns have been raised with City of Onkaparinga council that the residential area will be sandwiched between two of Southern Adelaide's busiest arterial roads (Main South Road, Victor Harbor Road) and a dump (The Southern Waste Depot). Local opposition has also questioned placing a "strip mall" next to Adelaide's extensive grape fields.

References

  1. Valerina Changarathil; Cara Jenkin (2 February 2016). "Foodland gears up for competition as Aldi goes with lucky 13 on its SA debut, creates local jobs". The Advertiser. News Corp. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  2. "WE OPPOSE SEAFORD HEIGHTS". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  3. "Seaford Heights housing plan 'endangers tourism'". 20 July 2010. Archived from the original on 22 September 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2016.

See also


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.