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Best Of Local Moreton Bay – April 2021

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Read the April 2021 Edition of Best Of Local Moreton Bay.

To have the magazine delivered direct to your inbox once a month and for advertising enquiries, please visit – 
https://www.bestoflocal.com.au/qld/moretonbay/

Use left and right arrows to flick through and double click the page to zoom.

November 10, 2020 |

USC Moreton Bay Wins Construction Award

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USC’s new state-of-the-art campus at Moreton Bay, which has attracted 1,800 students since opening in February, has just been recognised with a top construction award.

USC-Moreton Bay Campus Petrie

The project team, led by Hansen Yuncken, won the Master Builders Association Award (Brisbane) for an education facility over $10 million at the 2020 Housing and Construction Awards and is now in the running for the Queensland state finals in October.

The three-story, 16,000 square-metre USC Moreton Bay building at Petrie features modern labs, teaching spaces and technology and is Australia’s newest university campus.

USC Chief Operating Officer Dr Scott Snyder said the win recognised the achievement of an exceptional project team, and the completion of a world-class facility that would become a long-standing knowledge and innovation hub for the Moreton Bay region.

“USC Moreton Bay has 1,800 enrolled students and growing, and by 2030 it is expected to cater for 10,000 students across more than 100 study programs,” Dr Snyder said.

“It has everything you’d expect from a modern university, including a 460-seat capacity auditorium, $15 million worth of state-of-the-art technology, nursing simulation and science labs, engineering labs as well as a library, student support facilities, a café and shops.”

Hansen Yuncken Queensland State Manager Greg Baumann said the award was a tribute to how the team worked with USC to deliver such an ambitious project.

“The attention to detail, workmanship and level of quality on this project speak for themselves and these awards are a terrific recognition of the team’s hard work and effort,” Mr Baumann said.

The foundation building is the first stage in a planned 10.5-hectare university precinct that will form the heart of The Mill at Moreton Bay, a vibrant civic, cultural and educational precinct planned by Moreton Bay Regional Council.

It was designed by award-winning architects Hassell Studios.

August 13, 2020 |

Tourism Push For Moreton Bay Hinterland

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Moreton Bay Regional Council will embark on an ambitious project to make its hinterland region the new must-see destination in southeast Queensland.

It’s one of a suite of initiatives designed to rejuvenate the tourism sector and attract more private sector investment in the wake of COVID-19, with a focus on developing the drive tourism sector.

“The breathtaking mountain vistas atop the D’Aguilar Ranges are a secret to most people in southeast Queensland and that’s something we want to change,” he said.

“We want to inspire locals and travellers alike to get off the Bruce Highway and explore more of Moreton Bay by building architecturally astounding lookouts in panoramic locations around our region.

moreton bay hinterland tourism push

“The key will be building structures that are irresistible to Instagrammers, so that they become destinations in their own right and promote themselves online.

“One third of internet users own an Instagram account and 70% of the 95 million photos uploaded to the platform every day are travel-related – so finding an amazing photo location is a real tourism motivator.”

The 2020-21 Budget provides $250,000 for a new tourism strategy to:

  • Investigate the Hinterland’s tourism potential,
  • Explore how Moreton Bay can become the most accessible tourism destination in southeast Queensland (for seniors, attract parents with prams and provide for people living with disabilities); and
  • Investigate major capital investment required to support our growing tourism industry.

Mayor Flannery said accessible tourism is estimated to be worth $10.8 billion in Australia.

“By 2050 it’s estimated that nearly one-quarter of the Australian population will be aged 65 or over and within the next five years, the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) will provide more than $22 billion in funding a year to an estimated 500,000 Australians,” he said.

“This is a real growth industry and a logical fit for Moreton Bay Region given our proximity to Brisbane.

“We already have a significant amount of accessible infrastructure in key locations like Bribie Island and Redcliffe, including boardwalks, pathways, accessible playgrounds, and even accessible beach matting.

“But I’m sure there is more we can do, and this strategy might uncover other great ideas we haven’t thought of.”

July 13, 2020 |
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