The photo on the left shows Aurora in mid construction.
To lots of people I am sure this is just a photo of another building
site. But to me and I hope to those who now enjoy living in one of best
apartment developments in Melbourne, it represents much more.
For those living in the Aurora, it is the early construction of what
is now our home, our residence and even perhaps, our sanctuary. It is
where we invite our friends, where we live a great portion of our lives
and also our home always says something about who we are as individuals.
But to me, this photo represents the building of a wonderful dream.
I originally purchased the two sites that were to form the location
of the future Aurora on the 22nd October, 1996. At the time this was
a slightly brave thing to do with the intention of building a residential
development as the residential property market was still coming out
of a slump due to rising interest rates in 1994 and 1995. Also of course,
St Kilda Road was known as a primarily commercial office precinct.
Upon buying the development site, the first decision to make was whether
to build a fairly bland and cheap residential development, the "square
box with flimsy balconies" style or do something special, a cut
above the rest ofthe market.
There was one major residential developer in Melbourne that particularly
specialises in the cheap end of the market. Most of their developments
have the same square, bland, cheap and nasty look about them. I believed
that this was an inadequate design solution for such an outstanding
location.
It was at this time that I was also lucky enough to meet one of the
really great architectural designers here in Australia, Nigel Fitton,
who had been a collaborator with another great designer, Nonda Katsalidis.
Together Nigel and I determined that we would design and build something
really special; a cutting edge building that would make a statement.
It would be a high quality building but more than any other single issue,
it should be a great place to live.
There are many design issues in the Aurora that set this development
apart from most others. Most are not obvious but they are there. For
example, you will notice that almost every other apartment building
of 60 metres (the general height limit in St Kilda Road) contains 20
storeys, but of course the Aurora holds 19 floors only. This is because
we decided to put in higher than usual floor to ceiling heights. This
of course gives each apartment an enhanced feeling of space and liveability,
distinguishes the apartment design from the average and ultimately adds
value and capital gain.
The balconies are larger than normal and built into the apartment floor
plates rather than hanging off the edge of the building. This means
you can actually enjoy your balcony living space rather than being hit
by a full force gale or suffering from a sense of insecurity typical
of most other apartment balconies.The development is of course air-conditioned
throughout from a central plant rather than the unfortunately too typical
cheap solution of an individual air-conditioning plant located on individual
apartment balconies. All the details of Aurora's design are far too
many to fully describe here. Together they create a superior living
environment.
One of the very key issues in the design of a superior quality building
is the type of construction used to build the development.
Most residential developments use a type of construction called "tilt
slab' construction. This primarily means that the entire structure of
the building is built up out of large tilt slabs of concrete. This type
of construction is usually employed to lower construction costs. It
also forces many compromises in the design. For example, in a typical,
predominately tilt slab building, windows are usually smaller and are
basically square holes in the middle of the slab, rooms tend to be smaller
as the slabs need to be closer together to hold the building up, and
there is usually complete uniformity of apartments through out the whole
of the building, each apartment identical to the one above and below
it. This creates the feeling of actually living in a box.
With the Aurora building we decided that we wanted design flexibility,
to allow larger rooms, especially the open living rooms, large wall
to wall and floor to floor windows and a much greater variety of apartment
sizes. It's more like creating a vertical village, rather than the typical
apartment building. This design flexibility required a different type
of construction technique to the vast majority of "square boxes'
built around Melbourne.
We therefore employed an "open engineered commercial construction".
This type of construction is basically built around a central lift core
with concrete columns and post-tensioned slab floors holding the building
up. This allowed the amazing shape that the building took overall but
most importantly, it allowed us to design much more interesting internal
living spaces and a better relationship between the apartments and the
unique views that each enjoys. Ultimately this again adds value and
capital gain to your purchase.
All of this requires extra expense but adds value in return. Most of
all it requires more intelligent buyers and owners: you! The Aurora
was designed from the very beginning to attract people who would recognise
and appreciate a higher standard of design and building quality. People
who would enjoy living here and in turn form a community in themselves.
A village within a city.
Aurora is an intelligent building designed and created for intelligent
people, people capable of discerning the difference between something
special, above the ordinary instead of the compromises of the average.
Aurora is a dream that came true.
Please enjoy. John Sage