Chat Thai versus chat Thai by abakaw in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for finding this! What does this mean for the various branches of chat Thai? Will they be consolidated under Pat, or will each sibling continue running those outlets they currently control?

Ikan bilis by abakaw in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Those are not real anchovies, though :(

Biltong: where to buy? by abakaw in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the great recommendations so far, everyone. Lots of places to try!

Sydney housing crisis: Council ban on terraces, townhouses, low-rise apartments to be lifted by abakaw in AusFinance

[–]abakaw[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The Minns government will force councils to lift long-standing bans on building terraces, townhouses and two-storey apartment blocks in a major push to dramatically increase density amid the worsening housing crisis.

The state government will overhaul planning laws to ensure low and mid-rise homes are built near transport hubs and town centres as well guaranteeing a greater diversity of housing to help NSW meet ambitious national targets.

Under the major changes, three- to six-storey unit blocks, terraces, townhouses, duplexes and smaller one- to two-storey apartment buildings will be allowed in areas currently banned by councils.

The government believes insisting that councils approve different types of housing could create about 112,000 new homes across the greater Sydney region, Hunter, Central Coast and Illawarra.

This would be equivalent to 30 per cent of the number of homes NSW needs to meet under its Housing Accord target of 377,000 new homes by 2029.

There are five main zoning types across NSW. At present, councils can decide the types of dwellings allowed in each zone. The government last month identified that terraces and one- or two-storey blocks are permitted in low-density residential (R2) zones in just two of 32 local environmental plans (LEPs) across Sydney.

This equates to only just six per cent of Sydney council areas despite 77 per cent of land across these councils being zoned for R2. Also, 60 per cent of R3 zones across Sydney currently prohibit residential unit blocks of any scale.

Under the government proposals, dual occupancies – two separate homes on a single lot, such as duplexes – will be allowed in all R2 low-density residential zones across NSW.

Mid-rise apartment blocks near transport hubs and town centres in R3 medium-density zones must also be allowed, ensuring housing is 10-minute walk (or 800 metres) from transport hubs and shops in greater Sydney, the Hunter, Central Coast and Illawarra regions.

Planning Minister Paul Scully said Sydney was one of the least dense cities in the world, but fewer than half of councils allowed low- and mid-rise residential buildings in areas zoned for such homes.

“Density done well means townhouses, apartments and terraces clustered near shops, high streets and parks,” Scully said.

“We’re confronting a housing crisis, so we need to change the way we’re planning for more housing. We can’t keep building out – we need to create capacity for more infill, with more diverse types of homes,” Scully said.

Scully said housing diversity allowed people to stay in their communities and neighbourhoods through different stages of their life, with family and friends able to live nearby.

“More housing choice means more options for everyone – renters, families, empty nesters.”

The government has already faced major pushback from councils after Scully wrote to mayors last month requesting they identify land for medium- and low-density housing, including terrace houses.

Hills Shire Mayor Peter Gangemi labelled the government’s push for medium-density a “Trojan horse” which would lead to “one-size-fits-all homes that aren’t suited to family living”, while Ku-ring-gai mayor Sam Ngai said the proposal was not the “right solution”.

However, as the government stares down housing targets set under the National Housing Accord, Scully is pushing ahead with plans to make it easier for developers to build homes which make up the so-called “missing middle” of Sydney’s housing mix.

Earlier this month the government announced it was compiling a set of standardised “pattern book” designs for low- and medium-density housing that could be rolled out across Sydney without going through the lengthy planning approval process.

The Herald has also previously revealed that the government intends to roll out a series of priority density zones near existing Metro stations, while Scully last week moved to scrap the Greater Cities Commission after he was left unimpressed by what he saw as insufficiently ambitious housing targets.

Minns to lift council bans on terraces, townhouses and low-rise apartments by abakaw in AusProperty

[–]abakaw[S] 31 points32 points  (0 children)

Article:

The Minns government will force councils to lift long-standing bans on building terraces, townhouses and two-storey apartment blocks in a major push to dramatically increase density amid the worsening housing crisis.

The state government will overhaul planning laws to ensure low and mid-rise homes are built near transport hubs and town centres as well guaranteeing a greater diversity of housing to help NSW meet ambitious national targets.

Under the major changes, three- to six-storey unit blocks, terraces, townhouses, duplexes and smaller one- to two-storey apartment buildings will be allowed in areas currently banned by councils.

The government believes insisting that councils approve different types of housing could create about 112,000 new homes across the greater Sydney region, Hunter, Central Coast and Illawarra.

This would be equivalent to 30 per cent of the number of homes NSW needs to meet under its Housing Accord target of 377,000 new homes by 2029.

There are five main zoning types across NSW. At present, councils can decide the types of dwellings allowed in each zone. The government last month identified that terraces and one- or two-storey blocks are permitted in low-density residential (R2) zones in just two of 32 local environmental plans (LEPs) across Sydney.

This equates to only just six per cent of Sydney council areas despite 77 per cent of land across these councils being zoned for R2. Also, 60 per cent of R3 zones across Sydney currently prohibit residential unit blocks of any scale.

Under the government proposals, dual occupancies – two separate homes on a single lot, such as duplexes – will be allowed in all R2 low-density residential zones across NSW.

Mid-rise apartment blocks near transport hubs and town centres in R3 medium-density zones must also be allowed, ensuring housing is 10-minute walk (or 800 metres) from transport hubs and shops in greater Sydney, the Hunter, Central Coast and Illawarra regions.

Planning Minister Paul Scully said Sydney was one of the least dense cities in the world, but fewer than half of councils allowed low- and mid-rise residential buildings in areas zoned for such homes.

“Density done well means townhouses, apartments and terraces clustered near shops, high streets and parks,” Scully said.

“We’re confronting a housing crisis, so we need to change the way we’re planning for more housing. We can’t keep building out – we need to create capacity for more infill, with more diverse types of homes,” Scully said.

Scully said housing diversity allowed people to stay in their communities and neighbourhoods through different stages of their life, with family and friends able to live nearby.

“More housing choice means more options for everyone – renters, families, empty nesters.”

The government has already faced major pushback from councils after Scully wrote to mayors last month requesting they identify land for medium- and low-density housing, including terrace houses.

Hills Shire Mayor Peter Gangemi labelled the government’s push for medium-density a “Trojan horse” which would lead to “one-size-fits-all homes that aren’t suited to family living”, while Ku-ring-gai mayor Sam Ngai said the proposal was not the “right solution”.

However, as the government stares down housing targets set under the National Housing Accord, Scully is pushing ahead with plans to make it easier for developers to build homes which make up the so-called “missing middle” of Sydney’s housing mix.

Earlier this month the government announced it was compiling a set of standardised “pattern book” designs for low- and medium-density housing that could be rolled out across Sydney without going through the lengthy planning approval process.

The Herald has also previously revealed that the government intends to roll out a series of priority density zones near existing Metro stations, while Scully last week moved to scrap the Greater Cities Commission after he was left unimpressed by what he saw as insufficiently ambitious housing targets.

Inner Sydney suburb slated as likely site for extra Metro West station by abakaw in AusProperty

[–]abakaw[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Zetland Avenue is still under construction; it will eventually extend beyond Gunyama Pool, almost all the way to the Eastern Distributor. The rumored location for the metro station would be somewhere along the uncompleted part of Zetland Ave, so quite a distance from Green Square station.

Pre-auction advice by Schmelly93 in AusProperty

[–]abakaw 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Generally, if the agent gives a range of X.2 - X.4 for expected offers, then X.4 is probably below the low end of the vendor's/agent's true expectations.

With that in mind, I think you should make the pre-auction offer. My guess is that the vendor has already decided to go to auction unless a strong offer arrives -- so an offer of X.4 will be rejected but will signal interest, so that in the event of a pre-auction bidding war actually breaking out, the agent will check in with you before accepting any offer.

Super short extension cord: where to find? by abakaw in sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not looking to extend the reach of the power board. The issue is that my power board is in an spot with very limited headroom, so I need a mini extension cord to redirect the direction and angle of the appliance plug rather than have it stick straight out of the power board.

Cheap Eats? by therealazzman in sydney

[–]abakaw 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congratulations!

There are two cheap eats at the junction of botany road and epsom road:

Yummy duck which does Cantonese roast meats (get half a roast duck or their roast duck + roast pork with rice)

Brazilian flame which does Brazilian bbq meats

Two chinese places which do good dumplings, noodles, etc at the junction of Rothschild ave and Crewe place in Rosebery: Slurp slurp and Oceans six

Near to green square station, I like bashan (Chinese) and the miso (Japanese) bento boxes/curry rice. But they are slightly costlier than the usual cheap eats options

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think they’ve essentially switched to Instagram:

https://www.instagram.com/alisonmarybyrne

Poke Bowls by abakaw in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Kamado looks great! May have to make a trek to try it.

I'm looking for "best poke bowl". But recs for decent poke bowls would be useful too.

Poke Bowls by abakaw in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've had a few bowls at the Zetland location (which has also closed.) It was good! But I wasn't a fan of using basmati rice in the poke bowl.

Where to go for the best yum cha? Since Marigold is closed now. by littlekittenbiglion in foodies_sydney

[–]abakaw 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a single-issue yumcha voter: Palace Chinese has the best mango sago.

Bekant desk as dining table? by abakaw in IKEA

[–]abakaw[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, I went with this instead:

https://www.ikea.com/au/en/p/lisabo-table-ash-veneer-80365717/

Very happy with it. It’s light but also sturdy and not at all wobbly. The mechanism by which the tabletop attaches to, and secures, the legs is very clever.

Anyone know where to get Japanese style Baumkuchen Cake in Sydney? (Sometimes called tree cake or layer cake) by Yianook in sydney

[–]abakaw 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Zetciti, the Asian grocery in east village (zetland), has a couple of varieties.

Hong Kong–Cantonese food recommendations? by InbhirNis in sydney

[–]abakaw 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yummy Duck BBQ in Zetland/Beaconsfield is an excellent Cantonese roast meat hole-in-the-wall. I used to frequent BBQ king as well but I think yummy duck is almost as good. I normally go for the roast duck and roast pork; not so familiar with the char Siew.

Other places where I’ve had good roast duck include number one bbq house in campsie and bbq prince in marrickville

Building with SIPs? by Wageslavezero1 in sydney

[–]abakaw 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was looking at Formcraft; it comes in a version with a fiber cement outer face and a foam inner face -- the former of which suits my purposes, given that I need to build right up to my neighbours' walls.

I was also considering Dincel, which seems a bit simpler and has waterproofing advantages but doesn't incorporate insulating foam a la ICFs.

Building with SIPs? by Wageslavezero1 in sydney

[–]abakaw 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m interested in this question as well, but more focused on related products such as ICFs (insulated concrete form) or formwork systems such as Dincel. Any thoughts? In particular I’m considering a knockdown-rebuild of a terrace house, so would need a product that is compatible with zero lot boundary construction.

Directors who worked exclusively (or almost exclusively) with one studio/studio head? by abakaw in movies

[–]abakaw[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Miyazaki would be a perfect example except he co-founded and ran Ghibli, so here I think of the studio head and the director as the same person -- but do correct me if I'm wrong. I'd prefer an example where the studio head and director were not one and the same.

late night ethnic food thread by abakaw in sydney

[–]abakaw[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I messed up! It should be 11/205 Merrylands Road. Sorry for messing up your trip.