Sydney – particularly those parts where the richest live –
is full of wild beauty. Beaches, harbour coves, houses poking up through native
gardens noisy with bird life, and perched on cliffs. According to an AustralianBureau of Statistics report, Sydney has become Australia’s
most unequal city, where 11.4% of all income goes to just 1% of residents.
This class of super-rich Australians can be found in
Sydney’s CBD, the inner-city areas of Haymarket and the Rocks, and the eastern
suburbs Rose Bay, Vaucluse, Watsons Bay, Double Bay and Bellevue Hill – places
where more than 22% of all income went to the top 1% of earners.
The cliffs around the eastern beaches of Bronte and Tamarama
are favoured eyries for Sydney’s banking and finance community, and high real
estate price barriers and a lack of mixed housing means these areas are like
gated communities in all but name. You have to go all around the coastline to
south Coogee and into Maroubra before you come across any significant pockets
of public housing.
In his 2006 book Evil Paradises, Mike Davis edited a
selection of essays examining spaces occupied by a super-elite –
“phantasmagoric but real places – alternate realities being constructed as
‘utopias’ in a capitalist era unfettered by unions and state regulation. These
developments – in cities, deserts and in the middle of the sea – are worlds
where consumption and inequality surpass our worst nightmares.”
Think private islands, gated communities, towers rising out
of the desert built by workers imported for the task, who sleep in shipping
containers. In 2014, public housing in Millers Point was sold. The state
government announced the sale of nearly 300 properties and said with the
proceeds it would build new homes further out – in Sydney’s south-east and
south-west, the Illawarra region and the Blue Mountains. One of the Millers
Point homes was auctioned for a record $4.2m.
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