Scotch College Council Intelligence
City of Mitcham · Council intelligence · Updated 2026-04-28
“Council provides in-principle support for the Denman Tennis Club to apply for Development Approval to extend the hours of use for the lighting on Court B... at Denman Reserve, Lower Mitcham”
City of Mitcham Full Council Meeting, 14 April 2026, Item 10.3
Electrical trades — extended lighting use may require electrical works, sportsfield lighting upgrades, controls/timer installation.
“Authorises the purchase of an electronic key management system at a one-off capital cost of $75,000 (ex GST), and ongoing operating cost of $1000 per annum”
City of Mitcham Full Council Meeting, 14 April 2026, Item 10.4
Electrical and security trades — installation of electronic locking/key cabinet systems across council facilities, low-voltage wiring, networking.
“Council endorses for community consultation the amended Community Land Management Plans for: Conservation/ Biodiversity Reserves... Parks (Playgrounds)... Community Centres and Halls... Kindergartens”
City of Mitcham Full Council Meeting, 14 April 2026, Item 10.2
Plumbing, electrical, roofing — CLMPs guide future maintenance and capital works on council facilities including kindergartens, halls and recreation complexes.
Scotch College falls within the City of Mitcham local government area in Southern Adelaide, South Australia.
If you're in Scotch College and the water's not flowing right, or you've just heard a crack in the pipes during that cold spell, that's the sort of job we handle 24/7. The foothills suburbs around here — Belair, Blackwood, Torrens Park — all have that same aging housing stock, so plumbers who know the area know what to expect. Scotch College's mix of heritage stone and post-war brick means most of the plumbing work is reactive: a burst, a block, a slow drain. We turn up, we find out what's actually broken, we fix it. No guessing, no surprises.
- Clay sewer lines backing up or collapsing in post-war homes (1950s–70s stock)
- Burst copper pipes during cold snaps (original plumbing in older homes)
- Low water pressure from mineral buildup and aged galvanised steel pipework
- Leaking roof gutters and downpipes after heavy rain — common in tree-lined foothills suburbs
- Failed or corroded water meters and isolation valves
- Blocked drains from tree root intrusion (bushland-adjacent properties)
- Cracked or subsiding sewer lines under established gardens and mature trees
- Leaking taps and ballcocks in homes with original 60+ year old fittings
- Damp basements and weeping holes failing in stone-built heritage homes
- Water pooling around foundations after heavy rain (clay soil, older drainage design)