19 April 2016

Screaming out for Independence in Braddon

| Alexandra Craig
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supermarket

Braddon is pumping. It’s pretty much your one stop shop. You can indulge in a delicious breakfast at Elk and Pea, get a killer haircut at AXIS, stop for a cold pressed juice and some scrumptious bread at Autolyse and then grab some groceries from the IGA on your way home. One problem: there is no IGA in Braddon!

If you live in Braddon, chances are you’re not happy that we don’t have a supermarket. I am one of those people.

Braddon has three liquor stores (four if you count the brand spankin’ new Bentspoke Brewery), a plethora of cafes and restaurants, some quirky homewares stores, an Officeworks and even an optometrist! You can buy a used car in Braddon and even get it washed on the way home but you can’t buy toilet paper or a box of Dilmah tea.

‘Don’t be so lazy, just walk to the Canberra Centre and go to Supabarn!,’ I hear you scream. I get this. Kind of. I often walk to Supabarn instead of driving (really, who wants to pay $73 to park at the Canberra Centre for eight minutes?) but if I’m hanging out on Lonsdale Street and I want to grab a few groceries on my way home, I don’t want to walk nearly a kilometre in the opposite direction. No one does. The Canberra Centre is the absolute pits, and on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly.

If you don’t want to walk to the Canberra Centre, your next option is to drive (or bike) to the IGA at either Ainslie or O’Connor, or make the trek to Dickson Woolworths which is it’s own special kind of hell.

I want quick. I want easy. I want convenience. Don’t try and tell me to go to one of Braddon’s four petrol stations. Convenience does not equal overpriced random branded ‘groceries’ from the 7-11 or the BP. The options available at petrol stations just don’t cut it.

Other IGAs in Canberra stock a decent variety of brands, including the delicious Lindsay and Edmunds chocolate – bonus points for stocking handmade chocolate entirely produced in Canberra! The only chocolate you’ll get at a petrol station is a squished Mars Bar or a semi intact Caramello Koala if you’re lucky.

Braddon is where it’s at. We have everything here and most of us are really cool. We desperately need an IGA though. Our O’Connor and Ainslie neighbours have had their own IGA for ages and we can’t deal with their bragging any longer.

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crackerpants8:46 am 29 Jul 14

For various boring, non-hip reasons I get my groceries delivered from one half of the evil duopoly, via the internets. It’s terribly uncool, but this could be countered if conducted via iPad and free wifi at the cold-pressed juice bar.

I did once score an iceberg lettuce at my local shops, but realistically it’s 2.8k to the nearest supermarket. It’s a lovely walk to load up the pram baskets with fruit and veg, but not doable when I have the older kids with me…but long story short, we chose to live in the Creek with its single petrol station for 10 suburbs, and we stand by our decision 🙂

Alexandra Craig4:03 pm 28 Jul 14

Postalgeek said :

You moved to Braddon to be close to Civic, and all that entails.

No, I didn’t. I moved to Braddon because I found a house that I liked there. Civic being close played zero part in my decision. But thanks for the tip.

Masquara said :

Postalgeek said :

Yeah, I guess a “human brochure” might be prone to spruiking any message that pays. That’s the conundrum of the new media environment – none of these PR people have a hope of developing any form of trust in their audience. Treasure traditional journos while you still can!

Nothing to do with the Human Brochure. Being part of the Brochure isn’t something that I’m paid for. Even if it was, the Brochure is about bringing new visitors to Canberra – not about getting an IGA for Braddon.

Also, I haven’t even mentioned the Brochure on RiotACT. You obviously took the time to look at what I’ve been posting on social media – nawwwwwwww, aren’t you just so sweet?!

Postalgeek said :

PS You should only ever think you’re ‘really cool’. If you say it, it doesn’t come true.

Awww, I’m sorry that’s been your experience. How unfortunate for you.

Watson said :

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

No way. Otherwise I would have just moved to Casey.

Masquara said :

If having a cheap supermarket within a couple of minutes walk of where you live is your top priority – why on earth did you move to Braddon?

It’s not my top priority. It would just be nice to have one. And once more, IGAs are NOT CHEAP. They are usually more expensive than Coles/Woolworths etc – you’re paying extra for the convenience or because you believe in supporting independent retailers instead of big business.

Back in the olden days when I was a child, the milkman and the bread man delivered by horse and cart, the butcher and grocer had men/boys on bicycles to bring your groceries right to your door and you had the same order most times.

Guess what – it’s the 21st century now and Coles/Woollies allow you to choose from 1000s of items, order on-line and will deliver right to your door 7 days a week and you won’t have even cross the street let alone stagger from Braddon to City.

Postalgeek said :

So it could be a reference to pulp and no pulp, but I can’t imagine anyone would be so brazenly pretentious as to do that.

If you can’t imagine that level of pretentiousness I assume you haven’t been to Braddon for a while have you?

Maya123 said :

tuco said :

That’s just the sort of common sense we are trying to address with our beards, fixed gear bikes and cold-pressed juice.

None of which I have. What is cold-pressed juice? My orange juice comes out of an orange.

Well, I know of cold- and hot-press paper, cold-press being with texture and hot-press being smooth. So it could be a reference to pulp and no pulp, but I can’t imagine anyone would be so brazenly pretentious as to do that.

tuco said :

Maya123 said :

milkman said :

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

Cycling is fine in good weather and when you have plenty of time. When it’s raining, windy, freezing, night, you’re in a hurry, kids are sick, or many other things, cyclking sucks.

I can’t imagine taking kids for a 5km round trip on a bike on a rainy night to pick up some bread and milk from the local.

Bread and milk (milk anyway) are often available from petrol stations and other places, as well as supermarkets, so they might be an alternative (esp. for those living in Braddon). It can also be a matter of thinking ahead when doing the shop. Freeze a spare loaf of bread or two and have several long life cartons of milk as backup for the occasions you run out. Saves the rush to the supermarket in the rain.

That’s just the sort of common sense we are trying to address with our beards, fixed gear bikes and cold-pressed juice.

None of which I have. What is cold-pressed juice? My orange juice comes out of an orange.

Postalgeek said :

There’s the smell of astroturf about this post:

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/braddon-supermarket-haggling-heats-up-again-20140724-zw1pc.html

I doubt anyone outside of Braddon cares much whether Braddon gets an IGA or not. But IGA isn’t a charity and it’s up to Braddon to present a convincing business case for IGA. You moved to Braddon to be close to Civic, and all that entails. An adolescent declaration of self-entitlement is not the best strategy to win over people or businesses.

PS You should only ever think you’re ‘really cool’. If you say it, it doesn’t come true.

Yeah, I guess a “human brochure” might be prone to spruiking any message that pays. That’s the conundrum of the new media environment – none of these PR people have a hope of developing any form of trust in their audience. Treasure traditional journos while you still can!

Maya123 said :

milkman said :

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

Cycling is fine in good weather and when you have plenty of time. When it’s raining, windy, freezing, night, you’re in a hurry, kids are sick, or many other things, cyclking sucks.

I can’t imagine taking kids for a 5km round trip on a bike on a rainy night to pick up some bread and milk from the local.

Bread and milk (milk anyway) are often available from petrol stations and other places, as well as supermarkets, so they might be an alternative (esp. for those living in Braddon). It can also be a matter of thinking ahead when doing the shop. Freeze a spare loaf of bread or two and have several long life cartons of milk as backup for the occasions you run out. Saves the rush to the supermarket in the rain.

That’s just the sort of common sense we are trying to address with our beards, fixed gear bikes and cold-pressed juice.

VYBerlinaV8_is_back10:16 am 25 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

milkman said :

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

Cycling is fine in good weather and when you have plenty of time. When it’s raining, windy, freezing, night, you’re in a hurry, kids are sick, or many other things, cyclking sucks.

I can’t imagine taking kids for a 5km round trip on a bike on a rainy night to pick up some bread and milk from the local.

Bread and milk (milk anyway) are often available from petrol stations and other places, as well as supermarkets, so they might be an alternative (esp. for those living in Braddon). It can also be a matter of thinking ahead when doing the shop. Freeze a spare loaf of bread or two and have several long life cartons of milk as backup for the occasions you run out. Saves the rush to the supermarket in the rain.

I understand that there are things you can do to plan ahead, and be super organised, but that still doesn’t address issues of weather, convenience, supervising your kids, etc.

Like I said, I love to go for a walk, but we live in the 21st century and when it’s a choice between convenience and not, I’ll choose convenience.

It’s good that you like your bike. Great. But I am a busy person and will continue to use a car when it suits me.

milkman said :

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

Cycling is fine in good weather and when you have plenty of time. When it’s raining, windy, freezing, night, you’re in a hurry, kids are sick, or many other things, cyclking sucks.

I can’t imagine taking kids for a 5km round trip on a bike on a rainy night to pick up some bread and milk from the local.

Bread and milk (milk anyway) are often available from petrol stations and other places, as well as supermarkets, so they might be an alternative (esp. for those living in Braddon). It can also be a matter of thinking ahead when doing the shop. Freeze a spare loaf of bread or two and have several long life cartons of milk as backup for the occasions you run out. Saves the rush to the supermarket in the rain.

VYBerlinaV8_is_back8:25 am 25 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

I have never been a big cycler (sp?) but have always nejoyed walking (my dog gets an hour every morning). Before kids I would walk to my local shops (then about 1.2km from home) for small things, because I enjoyed the walk, but I didn’t tend to do this if I was in a hurry, had lots to carry or the weather was bad.

With kids, the biggest issue is making sure they’re properly supervised. I sometimes walk with them to my local shops (one is under 2), but never if I have stuff to carry, bad weather, etc.

Perhaps my comment was a bit hasty, and I apologise for that, but I don’t think it’s realistic to have cycling or walking as your main form of transport when raising a family. Yes, it’s possible, but very inconvenient a lot of the time. It’s those less normal situations when it would really bite you – sick kids needing to see the doctor, that terrible realisation you’ve run out of stuff for school lunches (and need to make the 7am dash), etc.

Maya123 said :

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

Cycling is fine in good weather and when you have plenty of time. When it’s raining, windy, freezing, night, you’re in a hurry, kids are sick, or many other things, cyclking sucks.

I can’t imagine taking kids for a 5km round trip on a bike on a rainy night to pick up some bread and milk from the local.

There’s the smell of astroturf about this post:

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/braddon-supermarket-haggling-heats-up-again-20140724-zw1pc.html

I doubt anyone outside of Braddon cares much whether Braddon gets an IGA or not. But IGA isn’t a charity and it’s up to Braddon to present a convincing business case for IGA. You moved to Braddon to be close to Civic, and all that entails. An adolescent declaration of self-entitlement is not the best strategy to win over people or businesses.

PS You should only ever think you’re ‘really cool’. If you say it, it doesn’t come true.

HiddenDragon6:09 pm 24 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Yes, those contraptions can also be had locally – at DJs if you want a snazzy, well-designed one, or at the “2 dollar” shops if you want something cheaper, but still fairly practical. In earlier days, they were quite common – depending one how old one is, it’s likely that your mother, grandmother, or great-grandmother had one. But, of course, the world has changed – in the days when those trolleys were relatively common, the great majority of Australian kids managed to walk to and from school (without being abducted or molested).

Those trolleys I think are much more fashionable than they used to be. I once associated them with older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets. These days I don’t. They are now fashionably retro, and come in much more exciting materials.

“older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets” – my vague recollection, too (Ena Sharples probably had one). They would have been useful in the pre-supermarket/shopping mall days when shopping was done at the “corner shop” or at “high street” shops which were a manageable walk from home – but not easy to get on and off public transport.

“but not easy to get on and off public transport.”

I imagine most people could manage it. I accept a few people couldn’t. I once brought home two dinner sets on the bus, so a trolley should be manageable.

That’s admirable (the dinner sets) – I mean that, and not in a sarcastic way, but I think it makes you fairly atypical by Canberra standards, if not by the standards of somewhat larger cities (speaking from experience here). By comparison, and for all the predictable swipes Alexandra has received, her expectations are much more typical of Canberra – which takes me back to my earlier point about the practical limitations on the willingness of a diverse range of people to move to and remain in inner inner locations in Canberra.

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

What has this to do with it, except that you don’t want to walk or cycle and would rather drive everywhere? My guess you did this before children and nothing changed. Please be honest. It’s not children holding you back from walking/cycling to the shops, but your attitude. There are parents who have no problem with walking and cycling to the local shops. No wonder we have such an obesity problem. Those with children have even more reason to cycle/walk, so as to lead by positive example and give the children the exercise they should be getting.

VYBerlinaV8_is_back1:45 pm 24 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

You obviously don’t have children.

Entitlement Syndrome sufferer Alexandra: If having a cheap supermarket within a couple of minutes walk of where you live is your top priority – why on earth did you move to Braddon? And don’t get your hopes up – a small supermarket failed in Lonsdale Street just a few years ago AND much of the commercial real estate in Braddon is owned by people who have common interests with several local IGAs.

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Yes, those contraptions can also be had locally – at DJs if you want a snazzy, well-designed one, or at the “2 dollar” shops if you want something cheaper, but still fairly practical. In earlier days, they were quite common – depending one how old one is, it’s likely that your mother, grandmother, or great-grandmother had one. But, of course, the world has changed – in the days when those trolleys were relatively common, the great majority of Australian kids managed to walk to and from school (without being abducted or molested).

Those trolleys I think are much more fashionable than they used to be. I once associated them with older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets. These days I don’t. They are now fashionably retro, and come in much more exciting materials.

“older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets” – my vague recollection, too (Ena Sharples probably had one). They would have been useful in the pre-supermarket/shopping mall days when shopping was done at the “corner shop” or at “high street” shops which were a manageable walk from home – but not easy to get on and off public transport.

“but not easy to get on and off public transport.”

I imagine most people could manage it. I accept a few people couldn’t. I once brought home two dinner sets on the bus, so a trolley should be manageable.

HiddenDragon11:51 am 24 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Yes, those contraptions can also be had locally – at DJs if you want a snazzy, well-designed one, or at the “2 dollar” shops if you want something cheaper, but still fairly practical. In earlier days, they were quite common – depending one how old one is, it’s likely that your mother, grandmother, or great-grandmother had one. But, of course, the world has changed – in the days when those trolleys were relatively common, the great majority of Australian kids managed to walk to and from school (without being abducted or molested).

Those trolleys I think are much more fashionable than they used to be. I once associated them with older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets. These days I don’t. They are now fashionably retro, and come in much more exciting materials.

“older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets” – my vague recollection, too (Ena Sharples probably had one). They would have been useful in the pre-supermarket/shopping mall days when shopping was done at the “corner shop” or at “high street” shops which were a manageable walk from home – but not easy to get on and off public transport.

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

You will get a group centre soon.

HiddenDragon said :

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Yes, those contraptions can also be had locally – at DJs if you want a snazzy, well-designed one, or at the “2 dollar” shops if you want something cheaper, but still fairly practical. In earlier days, they were quite common – depending one how old one is, it’s likely that your mother, grandmother, or great-grandmother had one. But, of course, the world has changed – in the days when those trolleys were relatively common, the great majority of Australian kids managed to walk to and from school (without being abducted or molested).

Those trolleys I think are much more fashionable than they used to be. I once associated them with older women in dowdy overcoats and hairnets. These days I don’t. They are now fashionably retro, and come in much more exciting materials.

HiddenDragon5:55 pm 23 Jul 14

Maya123 said :

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Yes, those contraptions can also be had locally – at DJs if you want a snazzy, well-designed one, or at the “2 dollar” shops if you want something cheaper, but still fairly practical. In earlier days, they were quite common – depending one how old one is, it’s likely that your mother, grandmother, or great-grandmother had one. But, of course, the world has changed – in the days when those trolleys were relatively common, the great majority of Australian kids managed to walk to and from school (without being abducted or molested).

Watson said :

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

All within a short cycling distance fortunately.

Couldn’t bother even reading that whole post.

Casey. 2.5 kms to nearest shop which is a tiny Spar. 2.5 kms to the closest bakery and (bad) take-away. 6kms to nearest restaurant, chemist, cafe, big supermarket, department store, butcher, etc.

Wanna swap?

The only chocolate you’ll get at a petrol station is a squished Mars Bar or a semi intact Caramello Koala if you’re lucky.

cliched and false stereotypes are unbecoming [you’ve clearly not been in a petrol station trying to find something vaguely healthy; almost impossible for the swathes of packets of overpriced confectionary of many sorts and freezers filled with myriad icecream varieties]

resorting to such reduces further one’s symapthies to your plight…

gazket said :

superbarn is a long way to ride your fixed gear bike

If you find that, why do you have a fixed gear bike?

superbarn is a long way to ride your fixed gear bike

HiddenDragon said :

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Shopping trolleys are available to take the shopping home in. Example: http://www.petersofkensington.com.au/Public/D-Line-Shop-Go-Mode-Shopping-Trolley-Red.aspx
I have also found a backpack can be helpful; as are large panniers on a bicycle. A bicycle can carry a lot, especially for short distances.
JC in comment #28 made good comments.

Ryoma said :

It’s interesting to see the different takes on this. It depends upon what amount of shopping people wish to do. If it’s just bread and milk, then yes, it’s not too far to walk in my opinion. But if people actually want to be able to buy a week’s worth (or more) of shopping, then carrying 6-10 bags over that distance is not fun in either summer or winter.

Having lived in Sydney and in London in high density housing (like what is popping up in places like Braddon), I found that when the shops are within walking distance you change shopping habits and don’t do a big weekly shop.

Especially if said shops are on the way home (walking from office or public transport) it was always easier to just pop in on the way home from work and of course many inner city apartments have tiny kitchens.

Now living in the burbs of Canberra my family has gone back to the big weekly shop at the larger supermarkets and a milk run when needed.

So in short peoples shopping habits are very much changed by where they live.

Ryoma is welcome to look more closely at the brickworks debate. Lot’s of details on our website at http://www.yarralumlaresidents.org.au/planning-development/brickworks/
Unfortunately, no new shops or new community facilties are proposed for the Yarralumla side of Adelaide Avenue, so its hard to imagine why anyone would voluntary move into one of the 6 or 8 storey apartments when Braddon is beckoning with much more vitality and infrastructure. Retirees will also face difficulties getting to the shops, so we can’t quite work out who would want to live in the area based on the current proposal. Walkable cities with great public transport such as Tokyo are still a distant dream, but we could start by relocating dense housing developments such as the one proposed near the brickworks close to town centres or civic that already have the infrastructure to encourage more walking and less reliance on cars.

Steven Bailey6:48 pm 22 Jul 14

Alex, what a passionate advocate for Braddon you are. It’s great to hear someone barracking for the independent retailers instead of the small business destroying duopoly of Coles and Woolworths.

However, it must be said that in Braddon you have a TAKEAWAY beer bar!!! Local craft beer that you can take away pretty much trumps any mere grocery expedition.

HiddenDragon6:09 pm 22 Jul 14

“….on an icy cold day the last thing I want to do is walk a longer distance to get my hands on some decent groceries. Besides, if you’re walking back to Braddon with shopping bags your arms are going to get sore very quickly..” – which illustrates, nicely, that the claimed convenience (and consequential health and environmental benefits) of urban densification is over-hyped at times.

I’ve seen similar comments about the practicalities of living in inner-city Sydney and Melbourne – which probably answers those who might think that once Braddon gets enough residents, the supermarkets etc. will follow.

Holden Caulfield6:05 pm 22 Jul 14

Mess said :

I work about halfway up Lonsdale street and it takes me roughly 7 minutes to walk to the IGA in the bus interchange. Not a far walk by anyone’s standards.

God forbid Alex ever lived inb Gungahlin back in the day when all they had was an IGA at Ngunnawal and Palmerston and that was pretty much it. The closest supermarket was Kaleen Supabarn or Belconnen Woolies.

I love the presumption here, stamp your feet and demand it, that a decent supermarket has to be in walking distance. It’d be nice sure, but this is Australia, this is Canberra and this is not realistic.

Now forgive me as I’m about to forego the Kingston IGA and walk to Mauka Coles for my nightly shop, haha.

watto23 said :

If there was a market for this there would be one. I notice Spar express is popping up as well. Maybe send IGA and Spar an email asking if they have planes to build a supermarket in Braddon.

How do they build with planes?

I work about halfway up Lonsdale street and it takes me roughly 7 minutes to walk to the IGA in the bus interchange. Not a far walk by anyone’s standards.

Holden Caulfield said :

By the year 2020 no Canberran will live more than 5 minutes walk from a proper supermarket.

After all, it’s a basic human right, right!

Maybe a few carriages of the light rail could contain a supermarket?

Holden Caulfield2:35 pm 22 Jul 14

By the year 2020 no Canberran will live more than 5 minutes walk from a proper supermarket.

After all, it’s a basic human right, right!

” …stop for a cold pressed juice and some scrumptious bread at Autolyse”

And to think us suburban plebs have to make do with hot pressed juice (or whatever passes for the less trendy version of “cold pressed” juice sold in reused orchy bottles)!

You can indulge in a delicious breakfast at Elk and Pea, get a killer haircut at AXIS, stop for a cold pressed juice and some scrumptious bread at Autolyse

Oh god help us. Yuppy/Metrosexual heaven. Avoid.

Ghettosmurf87 said :

Alexandra Craig said :

MrPC said :

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

No. That’s further away than Supabarn. If there was a Coles on Lonsdale Street I’d go there. I’m not brand specific. The only reason I said IGA was because that’s the most common small grocer but I’m not going to walk extra way so I can just go to an IGA.

Google maps says that, by foot, it is 1.2km from Haig Park at the end of Lonsdale Street to the IGA in the bus interchange. That is approximated at a 14min walk according to said website.

As I mentioned earlier, that’s a whole lot closer than a lot of people in other suburbs are to their own local shops

When you put it like that it does seems close.
I did the same on my closest shops and it’s 3km and a 37min walk according to Google.

It’s interesting to see the different takes on this. It depends upon what amount of shopping people wish to do. If it’s just bread and milk, then yes, it’s not too far to walk in my opinion. But if people actually want to be able to buy a week’s worth (or more) of shopping, then carrying 6-10 bags over that distance is not fun in either summer or winter.

I also agree that Braddon is very, very lucky in terms of what’s on offer there relative to the rest of Canberra.
But this post goes to the heart of a discussion the city should be having on a far larger scale than it seems to be having currently: namely, what type of urban form do we want?

Braddon is right next to Civic, and Civic (probably, I’m guessing here) has the city’s highest population density. What that translates to is, basically, more potential and actual customers per square kilometre. Along with zoning changes over the past 10-15 years, that makes Braddon an investment hotspot for more than just housing. And I’d suggest that exactly the same process would happen in Reid if the zoning was changed there too – imagine having another trendy shopping strip running along Ainslie Avenue, for example.

I agree with Maya 123’s comments that the Canberra Centre has killed off much of Civic, and ideally, that wouldn’t have happened. I don’t loathe the Canberra Centre to the point I do other shopping centres, but it’s certainly not what I’d have in Civic given my choice.

But that’s only my opinion – and I think that any shopping centre is trying to respond to many of the same trends that apartment housing is; time-poor customers who want the convenience of being able to buy much of the same stuff in the one place at the one time. Put that trend together with it being cheaper to build upwards rather than taking over more land, and voila – we get shopping centres.

The challenge now is to see if Canberra can grow the entire pie of retail offerings; the Canberra Centre for mass-market stuff, and for other suburbs to develop a distinct vibe of their own.

Forgive me for the following, as I grew up in Melbourne, but I think Braddon is something along the lines of Bridge Road in Richmond (based on the same diversity of different businesses along it). It could be suggested that Kingston is (something like) St.Kilda, and Manuka something like South Yarra/Toorak.

Over time, it would be great if various parts of Canberra actually developed distinctive styles catering to different retail markets, as happens in larger cities. I don’t want Canberra to actually copy the Melbournian suburbs, I just used those as examples.

And in terms of lifestyle, why shouldn’t someone be able to get pretty much everything they need within walking distance? This is one of the pluses of a actual urban lifestyle, as opposed to a suburban one, and is part of why the world’s great cities are such interesting places to live. I’ve lived in Japan and the UK, and found it an interesting contrast to the need to drive everywhere across most of Australia.

A good example is the Yarralumla Brickworks. This is a fine site for the type of things I’ve been talking about. I will happily admit I don’t know what the plans are (yet), but I am heartened to see that there is passion on both sides of the debate.

To make this happen, some of us need to get over our NIMBY stage. Yes, it may be possible that there will be increased noise and traffic, and issues around parking and congestion. But cities need to grow and change over time – or they end up as wastelands. On the other hand, much of our building and development lobby needs to stop throwing up mass-produced garbage in a hurry, and actually try to develop buildings with some sort of character to them – buildings Canberrans will be proud to recognise as Canberran in 50 to 100 years’ time. New Acton is a good example of what’s possible – Gungahlin an example of how to do it poorly.

Rant finished! 😀

Holden Caulfield12:03 pm 22 Jul 14

The bigger issue with Braddon is hoping all the old buildings aren’t knocked down and replaced with Mode 4s, 5s, 6s and so on.

In 10 years or so it could just be wall-to-wall modern 4 storey+ buildings. I suppose by then the hipsters will be all grown up and may not mind so much.

If there was a market for this there would be one. I notice Spar express is popping up as well. Maybe send IGA and Spar an email asking if they have planes to build a supermarket in Braddon.

Ghettosmurf8711:19 am 22 Jul 14

Alexandra Craig said :

MrPC said :

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

No. That’s further away than Supabarn. If there was a Coles on Lonsdale Street I’d go there. I’m not brand specific. The only reason I said IGA was because that’s the most common small grocer but I’m not going to walk extra way so I can just go to an IGA.

Google maps says that, by foot, it is 1.2km from Haig Park at the end of Lonsdale Street to the IGA in the bus interchange. That is approximated at a 14min walk according to said website.

As I mentioned earlier, that’s a whole lot closer than a lot of people in other suburbs are to their own local shops

Alexandra Craig10:51 am 22 Jul 14

MrPC said :

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

No. That’s further away than Supabarn. If there was a Coles on Lonsdale Street I’d go there. I’m not brand specific. The only reason I said IGA was because that’s the most common small grocer but I’m not going to walk extra way so I can just go to an IGA.

Alexandra Craig10:49 am 22 Jul 14

Rollersk8r said :

And I want to commute to work by waterslide! But do you think they’ll build that??

Joking. But there are countless places in the inner north where you have to walk much further to get to a shop.

The shopping centre in Giralang, for example, closed in 2005 and has been caught up in legal fighting ever since – so be thankful for your food, coffee and haircut! 😛

I reckon if you asked Andrew Barr he’d be keen on the waterslide idea. He seems like a fun guy!

Alexandra Craig10:48 am 22 Jul 14

Ghettosmurf87 said :

“‘Don’t be so lazy, just walk to the Canberra Centre and go to Supabarn!,’ I hear you scream. I get this. Kind of. I often walk to Supabarn instead of driving (really, who wants to pay $73 to park at the Canberra Centre for eight minutes?) but if I’m hanging out on Lonsdale Street and I want to grab a few groceries on my way home, I don’t want to walk nearly a kilometre in the opposite direction. No one does. “

You do realise that most people who live in suburbs with local shops and therefore an IGA, already have to walk more than a kilometre to get to those shops? Braddon is not a closed community from which you should never leave you know. Be thankful that there is SO MUCH amenity in the suburb already. You’re doing way better than pretty every other suburb in Canberra. I grew up in Giralang. My place was probably 1.5km from the shops (yes, i remember the days when we had shops there) and I loved doing that walk as a kid to get the newspaper or some groceries and picking up a treat from the bakery or an ice-cream for the walk home.

You’ve got it damn good already, so yes DON’T BE LAZY. As mentioned, there is Supabarn within a kilometre, even if it means you have to turn your nose up while you’re in it because it’s not hipster enough for you and there’s an IGA in the bus interchange just a few hundred more meteres away if that is what you so desperately crave,

It’s not about not leaving Braddon. It’s about convenience while I’m in Braddon.

Alexandra Craig10:47 am 22 Jul 14

VYBerlinaV8_is_back said :

I’m trying so hard to empathise with the OP, but I just can’t manage it. If you want to live in a neighbourhood where “you can indulge in a delicious breakfast at Elk and Pea, get a killer haircut at AXIS, stop for a cold pressed juice and some scrumptious bread at Autolyse”, and all this 5 mins from the city, then you probably aren’t the target demographic for a discounted grocery store.

I wouldn’t say an IGA is “discounted”. In my experience they’re usually more expensive that larger chain supermarkets like Coles or Woolworths. I don’t think this is a bad thing either. You have to support the little guy from time to time.

VYBerlinaV8_is_back10:24 am 22 Jul 14

I’m trying so hard to empathise with the OP, but I just can’t manage it. If you want to live in a neighbourhood where “you can indulge in a delicious breakfast at Elk and Pea, get a killer haircut at AXIS, stop for a cold pressed juice and some scrumptious bread at Autolyse”, and all this 5 mins from the city, then you probably aren’t the target demographic for a discounted grocery store.

I should go and check out the Braddon area again and see how it has progressed. I saw it ages ago and it was more exciting then than the boring mall. It’s a shame this development is happening here though. It should be happening in the main part of Civic with its bus terminal, but the mall drained the life out of Civic. When I visit the mall to shop it doesn’t invite me to hang around. I get what I need to buy and leave. I was disappointed the mall was allowed to expand and kill off Civic even more.
But now Braddon is responding to that, so that is good, but it should have been in Civic.

astrojax said :

MrPC said :

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

and a supermarket in lowanna street…

I think calling that a supermarket is a bit far. They’re about as good value for money as a petrol station and you have to make sure everything is still within expiry dates.

There used to be a small supermarket next to the bottle shop in Lonsdale St, maybe where Autolyse is now. That was in the mid noughties maybe?

Nobody went there and they shut down after less than a year.

My guess is that if someone thought they could make a buck from it, you’d have one.

Ghettosmurf879:40 am 22 Jul 14

“‘Don’t be so lazy, just walk to the Canberra Centre and go to Supabarn!,’ I hear you scream. I get this. Kind of. I often walk to Supabarn instead of driving (really, who wants to pay $73 to park at the Canberra Centre for eight minutes?) but if I’m hanging out on Lonsdale Street and I want to grab a few groceries on my way home, I don’t want to walk nearly a kilometre in the opposite direction. No one does. “

You do realise that most people who live in suburbs with local shops and therefore an IGA, already have to walk more than a kilometre to get to those shops? Braddon is not a closed community from which you should never leave you know. Be thankful that there is SO MUCH amenity in the suburb already. You’re doing way better than pretty every other suburb in Canberra. I grew up in Giralang. My place was probably 1.5km from the shops (yes, i remember the days when we had shops there) and I loved doing that walk as a kid to get the newspaper or some groceries and picking up a treat from the bakery or an ice-cream for the walk home.

You’ve got it damn good already, so yes DON’T BE LAZY. As mentioned, there is Supabarn within a kilometre, even if it means you have to turn your nose up while you’re in it because it’s not hipster enough for you and there’s an IGA in the bus interchange just a few hundred more meteres away if that is what you so desperately crave,

Holden Caulfield9:38 am 22 Jul 14

Well why don’t you open one yourself.

And I want to commute to work by waterslide! But do you think they’ll build that??

Joking. But there are countless places in the inner north where you have to walk much further to get to a shop.

The shopping centre in Giralang, for example, closed in 2005 and has been caught up in legal fighting ever since – so be thankful for your food, coffee and haircut! 😛

MrPC said :

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

and a supermarket in lowanna street…

There’s an IGA about a hundred metres from the border of Braddon, at the city bus interchange. Close enough for you?

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