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Star Entertainment to take Ritz-Carlton decision to the IPC

220-room ultra-luxury hotel rejected by the NSW Government

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Last Updated

August 2, 2019

The Star Entertainment Group is weighing up its options on the future of the proposed six-star Ritz-Carlton after the current plan was rejected last week, fundamentally due to the project’s over towering form.

The setback for the $530 million luxury hotel comes after negative feedback from the public, backed by the Department of Planning which recommended the tower not be authorised for approval. LATTE readers will recall the Ritz-Carlton Sydney’s potential height concern as we flagged exclusively in November last year.

Last week, the Department argued the hotel tower, at 237 metres, was more than 100 metres taller than the next tallest structure on the western side of Darling Harbour – the Sofitel Sydney Darling Harbour hotel. The Ritz-Carlton would have also been the second largest tower in the precinct, standing just 16 metres shorter than the Crown Hotel Resort at Barangaroo that’s under development.

Since LATTE’s original article in November, a number of modifications to the project had been proposed. Among the vast paperwork submitted to the government was the suggestion that the Ritz-Carlton would become an iconic landmark in its own right.

The Architectural Design Statement submitted by fjmt studio late last year, referred to the structure as a “great hotel city landmark” (see extract below).

“This will be a great landmark hotel, a building that gives further identity to Pyrmont and Sydney. Like the great hotel of other cities, this hotel will provide a visitor and public focus for Sydney,” the design statement said, comparing it to the likes of the Shangri-La Hotel at The Shard on London’s Southbank and The Plaza Hotel opposite Central Park in New York City.