Ascot High Street Racecourse Road Loses 35 Retail Shops

Once a bustling retail destination, Ascot’s Racecourse Road has had an exodus of shops in recent months due to a triad of unfavorable factors: the road closures at Kingsford Smith Drive, the COVID-19 pandemic and the rising cost of rent. 

Reports cited that retail buildings around the precinct are now filled with “For Lease” signs as 35 stores, or about a third of the retail shops in the area, have shut down. 



To entice new tenants, Racecourse Road landlords are offering big rental holidays with free rent for the first six months and half the rental rate for the next six months, amidst continued roadworks and the uncertainty of the pandemic.

Photo Credit: Facebook

Garry Grant, who has been running his news and magazine shop since 2005, said that the situation in Racecourse Road started going downhill when the Kingsford Smith Drive project began. In five years’ time, Grant said that his business dropped to 40 percent.

Fashion house owner Kathy Bucceri said that this high street district used to be where the ladies spent their weekend lunches or coffee breaks in between a day of shopping. Since the roadworks, however, regulars who shopped at the retail stores and dined at the restaurants stopped coming.



Bucceri’s shop has been in the same location for 20 years and benefitted from the clients of the nearby ANZ Bank. But since the bank’s closure, the affluent customers that frequented her store also disappeared. 

Photo Credit: Facebook

But other shop owners remain hopeful that things will turn around as Kingsford Smith Drive is nearing its completion and pandemic lockdown restrictions are easing off.

According to one trader, landlords re-leasing their buildings should pick a good mix of shops and eateries to become more competitive with other shopping precincts.  Appeals to the Brisbane City Council to upgrade the street with more trees and better landscaping are being initiated.

Eagle Farm Becomes the Hub of the Biggest Virtual Dinner Party For Melbourne

Did you know that Melbourne will have its last Saturday night of lockdown on 17 Oct 2020? To celebrate this high point and be one in solidarity with the Victorians, Eagle Farm will become the catering hub of the biggest virtual dinner party happening simultaneously in Brisbane, Melbourne and Sydney.

The online isolation degustation, organised by Urban List and Gathar, will feature a four-course dinner curated by Masterchef star Danielle Dixon and prepared by talented chefs across Australia. 



Featuring premium ingredients from Australian and Victorian farmers and providores, the dishes include the following below, which you can opt to delivered to your home or the home of a family in Melbourne: 

First CourseSeared ruby tuna with Australian Avocados yuzu puree. Served alongside marinated Victorian heirloom tomatoes and wild rice puffs (gf, df).

Vegetarian option: Sesame crusted tofu with Australian Avocados yuzu puree. Served alongside marinated Victorian heirloom tomatoes and wild rice puffs (gf, df, v).
Second CourseHay smoked Victorian free-range Bannockburn chicken served with a corn custard, Victorian black barley and burnt onion jus to finish (gf).

Vegetarian option: Butter roasted pumpkin with Yarra Valley feta, bull horn pepper and hemp seed pesto (gf, v)
Third CourseBavarois dessert made with Melbournes iconic Koko Black chocolate and Victorian alpine strawberries with native pepperberry and a hibiscus syrup drizzle (gf, v).
Fromager D’Affinois Cheese Fourth CourseFromager D’Affinois double cream cheese with a carrot apricot marmalade topped onto a buckwheat cracker with baby celery shoots (gf, v).


Whilst enjoying the course, you’ll be serenaded by homegrown talents, learn from chefs and listen to pairing notes from the experts via video streaming from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. 

All you need to prepare for this dinner party is a good internet connection and device, your oven (for reheating) and your appetite. 

Eagle Farm
Photo Credit: Gathar

Tickets to the isolation degustation will be up for grabs until Monday, 12 Oct 2020. The Eagle Farm caterers will be able to deliver food within 30 kilometres of the suburb.

Devour Cafe in Ascot: Fresh Food, Hot Coffee to Enjoy on Market Day with Missy Mae

Did you know that there’s a newly-opened corner cafe on Lamington Avenue opposite the Doomben train station in Ascot? Devour Cafe & Pantry specialises in gourmet cheese toasties and heaps of flavourful, preservative-free pantry sauces. If you’d like to try what this foodie hub has to offer, the morning of Friday, 11 Sept 2020 would be a good time to drop by.  

This new Ascot eatery proudly makes dietitian-approved, handcrafted meals from scratch using the freshest ingredients. Dan Hernandez is the owner and chef running the kitchen. 



“If we can’t make it we will make sure to find the best products out there so we can provide a quality service with the best quality products. “

Photo Credit: Devour Cafe & Pantry/Instagram

The newest cafe on the block will be hosting its first-ever fresh food and produce market with Missy Mae Flavour Finders from 7:30 and 11:30 a.m.  

“We’ll have an even bigger selection of the freshest, farm direct flavours in south east Queensland, so come on down and snaffle up a basket full of goodness (and don’t forget the coffee will be hot and the toasties are on tap),” Missy Mae said on social media. 

Photo Credit: Missy Mae’s Flavour Finders/Instagram

Devour Cafe & Pantry serves a rotating menu every week. For busy locals with no time to spare in the kitchen, this cafe has your healthy food sorted out. Just ask Dan and the staff for the menu.

Follow the store’s Instagram page for updates on trading hours and other activities. The cafe is also a pet-friendly site. 



Ascot Wildlife Carer Louise Dingle Recognised as Local Legend for Saving Animals After Devastating Bushfires

For her efforts in saving and protecting wildlife in her community, Ascot’s Louise Dingle has been recently honoured in LG Electronics Australia’s Local Legends Program

The Local Legends Program is meant to recognise individuals in the community who have gone above and beyond to make positive contributions through their time, actions, talents, and dedication to others. The Local Legends Program lauded her actions that not only preserves Australia’s fragile ecosystem but also teaches children about the importance of wildlife care in the community. 

A proud mum to one son, Qantas flight attendant, and pro bono refugee therapist, Louise spends her free time helping protect the precious wildlife in the country. In the last 10 years, she has worked to save and protect the wildlife in her community. It all began when she noticed the number of animals getting injured during new runway construction at the airport. 

Ascor wildlife carer Louise Dingle

Her admirable dedication to preserving the wildlife became even more prominent during the tragic bushfires that happened in early 2020. Louise responded quickly by mobilising her community, network, and the refugees she works with to help rescue injured marsupials and other species that lost their homes. She and her group of volunteers kept the animals hydrated and warm before calling the RSPCA to organise care for them. 

Organising Wildlife Care

Louise took inspiration from her father who was always giving back to the community. Having lived in Rockhampton, she would often see kangaroos getting hit by cars. 

This was basically why she felt she needed to do something when she noticed that animals were getting wounded during demolition works for the second airport runway. The injured animals would run away from the bulldozed areas of land and head towards the roads where people drive past them. 

She recognised the issue and did something about it. 

Using her space as a resource, she started the rescue of injured animals for rescue or rehab. In some unfortunate cases, the animals would have to be euthanised, but even so, Louise felt that it’s important to lessen the time the animals spent in pain before they get euthanised. 

Since she’s working as a volunteer therapist with refugees, she managed to get their help in supporting the wounded animals. The refugees often help in moving the animals to the vet or to RSPCA or help bundle them up to keep them warm before transport. 

“The support was overwhelming and the refugees I supported found a sense of purpose,” Louise said. 

“They often said to me that helping heal an animal helped heal them too.”

People in her neighbourhood, as well as her fellow flight attendants, also lend a hand in sewing and knitting warm clothing for the animals that needed to be kept warm. 

“So, I had all of these people who gave up their spare time to help out and they were usually really keen to help out too.”



Sense of Achievement

In her volunteer work as a wildlife carer, Louise finds achievement in having rescued hundreds of animals, especially the joeys and the baby possums. 

Louise is also glad that she’s able to raise awareness through her Facebook page

“Since the fires, people need to realise that what you see in the suburbs now is actually a really important habitat,” Louise said. 

“We lost so many animals in the devastating bushfires and what we see in the suburbs are truly important to Australia and to the DNA chain replenishing itself. 

“Therefore, what I’ve been able to do through my online platforms is raise awareness around the importance of suburban wildlife.”

 Louise is also happy that children in her community are growing up attached to the wildlife in the neighbourhood. 

“It’s lovely to see, especially during isolation,” she said.

Next Steps for the Initiative

Louise hopes that people would learn to the difference between a baby ring tail possum and a rat, and this is what her initiative is working on as its next step. 

“If you see their tail curling, it’s a possum then what you have is protected fauna. Our fauna is actually protected by the crown,” said Louise. 

“If you see a baby ring tail possum, just get a cloth or t-shirt and pop it in a box then ring the 24-hour RSPCA line. From there just sit with them for an hour or two. Act as the go-between of injury and rescue.”

Louise also wants to see people refraining from using rat poison as this sometimes kill possums that ingest poison left out for rats. The dead possums then get eaten by owls and eagles that also die because of the poison. 

“I just wish Australians who live in the suburbs of Brisbane or Sydney would stop using rat poison. It’s a painful death for the rats and it’s a painful death for owls and eagles.

“We need to realise that we’re in their territory.”

BCC Uses Bugs for Pest Removal in Ascot

Brisbane City Council is holding off on toxic pesticides in preventing a pest invasion in Ascot, choosing instead to pit bugs against bugs to naturally get rid of the destructive moths that have been attacking poinciana trees. 

Lord Mayor Adrian Schrinner announced the natural pest control trial in Ascot to protect about 19,000 of these beautiful flowering plants. 

The council will release native wasps “about quarter the size of a pinhead.” These wasps are known to lay eggs in looper moth eggs, which prevents the pest species from developing into caterpillars that feed off the trees, causing defoliation.

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons


In the early cycle of a looper moth’s life, they hatch in leaves on the ground then migrate up the tree trunks. These caterpillars are active at night but quiet and unnoticeable during the day. 

The council will also use weevils and beetles to attack aquatic weeds and vine weeds that clog and choke the waterways. Some of these natural pest killers were sourced from NSW, such as jewel beetles. 

Photo Credit: annawaldi/Pixabay

“We know that your enemy’s enemy is your friend and in this case it’s weevils, wasps and beetles that are helping look after our native vegetation,” the mayor said.



St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School in Australian Education Awards Finals (Again!)

St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School is once again proving its mettle, appearing as one of the finalists in three different categories of the prestigious Australian Education Awards 2020.

The elite Ascot school has made it to the finals for Best STEM Program and has made a repeat appearance in the roster of finalists for Boarding School of the Year, which it won in 2019.

Photo Credit: Facebook/St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School

Its popular principal, Ros Curtis, is also a finalist for Principal of the Year (non-government category) for the second consecutive year.

Photo Credit: Facebook/St Margaret’s Anglican Girls School

St Margaret’s has annually flexed its academic muscles as it proves itself to be one of Queenslands top schools. From 2017 to 2019, the school has placed within the Top 15 schools in the state across all four NAPLAN categories (Years 3, 5, 7, and 9). Its students topped the Year 3 category of the 2019 NAPLAN in Queensland, no mean feat indeed.

The school has also been given Innovative School awards for 2018 and 2019, for its leading academic advising program and for a program called St Margaret’s Plus, created to recognise and develop students’ skills beyond just the normal academic assessment track.

“To be a finalist in three categories truly speaks to the good work being done by all members of staff, as well as the contribution the girls and their families make to the overall fabric of the school,” Principal Curtis said.

The winners will be announced on the 6th of November at a gala awards ceremony in Sydney.

Telstra Rolls Out 5G To Ascot, Other Brisbane Suburbs

Thirty Brisbane suburbs join three others in Logan in the list of areas covered by Telstra’s latest batch of sites for its much-awaited and long-discussed 5G rollout.

In Southeast Queensland, the rollout covers high-value areas such as Brisbane CBD, Ascot, and Brisbane airport; inner city suburbs such as Fortitude Valley, Spring Hill, Milton, and South Brisbane; and even southside suburbs such as Sunnybank, Eight Mile Plains, Carina, and Murrarie.

This development comes in as welcome news, following previous safety concerns about 5G technology. In a report prepared by the House Standing Committee on Communication and the Arts, federal Parliament has given Telstra’s 5G network clearance to proceed, citing the “safe and transformative” nature of its 5G mobile infrastructure.

Photo Credit : Telstra

The latest rollout of sites comes at an opportune time, when schoolchildren more home computer and device usages are expected, as households and tackle homeschooling or online curricula, with many families upgrading to the latest 5G devices.

At present, the rollout for 33 suburbs on the list are halfway done, and steps are being taken to complete the rollout in the soonest possible schedule.

Telstra chief May Boisen assures subscribers that the upgrade will deliver greater network capacity, lower latency, and faster download speeds.

While 5G service advertises that its 100Mbps minimum download speed is equivalent to what is considered to be today’s fastest NBN speed, the network is actually capable of a blazingly fast 20Gbps.

Photo Credit: iTNews

However, the actual download speed that 5G network users will experience depends upon the network configuration, the device being used, and the number of devices in use on the network.

Telstra is also quick to point out that the network upgrade will also benefit present 4G users, as increasing the 5G capacity for other users means greater capacity for 4G users as well.

In greater Brisbane, 33 suburbs are already halfway to being fully covered by the technology and some have full coverage.

Here are the areas covered by the present rollout.

AlbionLota
AscotMilton
AuchenflowerMt Warren Park
BanyoMurarrie
Brisbane AirportPinkenba
Brisbane CBDSeventeen Mile Rocks
Cannon HillSouth Brisbane
CarinaSpring Hill
Chermside WestSunnybank
Eagle FarmTennyson
Edens LandingTingalpa
Eight Mile PlainsVirginia
Fortitude ValleyWoolloongabba
HendraWooloowin
Heritage ParkWynnum West
Kangaroo PointYeerongpilly
Kenmore

Will Ascot be Affected by Aircraft Noise from New Runway Opening in July?

Brisbane Airport has announced a projected opening date of July 2020 for its new runway and residents in Ascot and other suburbs are wondering how (and if) aircraft noise from the projected runway traffic will affect their suburb.

The new runway, which has taken eight years to build due to the need to pile sand onto the river delta, will seemingly double the capacity of the present airport, bringing it closer to the capacity of those in Melbourne and Sydney.

Coming in under its $1.3 billion budget by around $200 million, the runway will be able to accommodate widebody aircraft, with its 3,300-metre length. The current short second runway which is exclusively for smaller aircraft.

Brisbane Airport and its runways. Photo Credit: Brisbane Airport

“It’s surreal to think we are just months away from seeing the first aircraft land and depart on this infrastructure masterpiece,” said Brisbane Airport Chief Gert-Jan de Graaff.

New Runway Noise

Based on Brisbane’s new runway flight path tool, Ascot does not directly fall under a flight path. However, it should be noted that since flight paths do not precisely follow a single line and can be more accurately called flight path ‘swathes,’ the flight path can vary up to several kilometres. So it is highly possible that aircraft will fly over the suburb.

Through the flight path tool, users can also get an overview of the noise level that the suburb will experience. The following is a comparison of the noise level with the existing runway versus noise level when the new runway is in use, with the green pin placed on Ascot.

Noise level with the existing runway
Photo Credit: flightpathtool.bne.com.au
Noise level with new runway
Photo Credit: flightpathtool.bne.com.au

The flight path tool indicates that aircraft flying near Ascot are likely to be at an altitude where the aircraft noise level will be less than 70 decibels. According to Australian standards, a noise level of 70 decibels is likely to interfere with people speaking indoors (with the windows open). 

Since Ascot is only a few kilometres from an arrival flight path, it will experience noise from 36 average flights and a maximum of 74 flights.

Average and maximum flights near Ascot
Photo Credit: flightpathtool.bne.com.au

Effect on Real Estate Values

A study commissioned by Brisbane Airport Corporation and conducted by the Queensland University of Technology (QUT) explored the impact of aircraft noise on Brisbane residential properties.

Analysing 25 years of data, the QUT research highlighted that: “housing and units in Brisbane located under designated flight paths have their value and price determined by a range of factors and these factors are not detrimentally impacted by aircraft noise.”

“The location of a property under a flight path will have minimal if any impact on the price, saleability, investment performance and capital growth of that property,” the study concluded.

Reporting Noise Issues

Meanwhile, the Australian aviation industry assured they will help identify issues of concern and possible opportunities for improvements through Noise Complaints and Information Service (NCIS).

The service will be managed by Airservices Australia, who will be responsible for Australia’s airspace management, flight paths, providing noise information and managing complaints.

For any questions or concerns about current aircraft activity, lodge a complaint or make an enquiry:

Plans For 234 Homes In Ascot Gets Council Approval

Property development company Poly Australia has received development approval from Brisbane City Council for its major residential project, ‘Ascot Aurora.’ 

Council has given the green light for the 234-dwelling in December 2019, less than six months since the application was lodged. Poly Australia noted that they engaged the community throughout the process to ensure the application positively reflected the needs of the community.

Subject site (Photo Credit: pdonline.brisbane.qld.gov.au)
Surrounding areas (Photo Credit: pdonline.brisbane.qld.gov.au)

Around 209 of these units will be two, three and four-bedroom townhouses, 10 will be freestanding, four-bedroom townhomes, and 15 are one, two and three-bedroom apartments. Vehicular access will be via Lamington Avenue whilst pedestrian access will be at Lamington Avenue and Mordant Street.

The subject site is at 104 Lamington Avenue, Eagle Farm, a 62,090-sqm vacant lot located 7 km away from Brisbane CBD and 500m from Doomben Train Station. In addition to new housing, Poly Australia will deliver a new public park and significant landscaping throughout the site.



“The development proposal for this site harnesses an opportunity to transition this site, the last remaining vacant/disused site north of the rail line on Lamington Avenue, to provide additional residential development, community assets and infrastructure in this central part of Brisbane,” Urbis said in a report on behalf of Poly Australia.

Designed by Arkhefield, the application noted that the “proposal presents a high-quality contemporary design that will contribute significantly to the desired subtropical character of this vacant brownfield site in Eagle Farm.”

The reconfiguration of the lot will be undertaken in three stages. The staging will involve the following:

  • Stage 1A – The future public park;
  • Stage 1B – the detached dwellings and multiple dwellings on the western side of the site;
  • Stage 2 – the apartment building and multiple dwellings in the northern part of the site; and
  • Stage 3 – the multiple dwellings in the south of the site

Construction of Ascot Aurora is expected to commence in mid-2020. Depending on weather and site conditions, it should be complete by mid-2022.



New Campaign Urges Locals To ‘Fight Climate Change With Diet Change’

Can you sacrifice your diet for climate change? Lifestyle changes may not be enough to save the planet, but for every person going vegan each month, that’s equivalent to 30 animals not eaten, 126,739 liters of water saved, and 913 square feet of forest conserved.

These numbers came from Animal Liberation Queensland which recently launched a new billboard campaign urging Queenslanders to “fight climate change with diet change.” This campaign, done with the support of Brisbane Animal Save, has gone up in various Brisbane suburbs since February 2020 and will be up until this April.

It’s the highlight of Vegan4Life, an initiative of Brisbane Animal Save & Animal Liberation Queensland. The group believes it’s the single biggest way that individuals can reduce their impact on the planet.



To keep the billboard up for another three months, the organisation encourages the public to chip in via a crowdfunding platform. As of March, the campaign raised $6,204, almost reaching its $6,500 target. If the target exceeded, Animal Liberation Queensland will use the funds to invest in more billboards and other advertising opportunities. 

“Our campaign aims at highlighting the detrimental impact that animal agriculture is having on our environment. We are already seeing the devastating effects of climate change in Australia – drought, bush fires & floods! There’s never been a more important time to push for massive change, and the single biggest way an individual can reduce their impact on the planet is by going vegan,” the group wrote via Chuffed.org.

The animal rights organisation also sends a free veg kit for people interested in going vegan but don’t know where to start.To get yours and to help spread the word, visit vegan4life.org.au or check out Animal Liberation Queensland’s website