Terry Snow

From AviationSafetyX Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Use Australian English

<templatestyles src="Module:Infobox/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Terry Snow
Snow in 2011
Born
Terrence Mark Snow

Template:Birth year
DiedTemplate:Death date and given age
NationalityAustralian
EducationCanberra Grammar School
Occupation(s)Businessman; entrepreneur; philanthropist
Known forRedevelopment of Canberra International Airport and associated business parks
SpouseGinette Snow
Children4

Terrence Mark Snow Template:Post-nominals (1943 – 3 August 2024) was an Australian businessman, accountant, entrepreneur, and philanthropist based in Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory.

Background[edit | edit source]

Terry Snow was the grandson of Canberra's first general store owner.[1] His parents owned a hotel in Queanbeyan and the young Snow attended Canberra Grammar School, initially as a boarder. He subsequently supported the school through a number of significant philanthropic gifts.[1][2][3] Snow died on 3 August 2024, at the age of 80.[4]

Career[edit | edit source]

Commercial development[edit | edit source]

Snow was Executive Chairman of the Capital Airport Group,[5] the company which owns the lease for the land which contains Canberra Airport and Brindabella Business Park.[6] Snow's Capital Airport Group acquired the 99-year lease from the Australian Government in 1998 for $65 million.[7] The site includes Fairbairn Business Park, formerly a Royal Australian Air Force base, as well as the Majura Business Park and Majura Park Shopping Centre. Snow was responsible for a $250 million development of a new terminal for Canberra Airport including an “extravagant” international interior design-winning terminal.[8][9] Singapore Airlines and Qatar Airways were the first two international air carriers to Canberra; that arrived at Canberra international Airport in 2017 and 2018 respectively.[10]

Snow developed Brindabella Business Park. One of these landmark buildings is 8 Brindabella Circuit, which was awarded five stars under the Green Star rating system of the Green Building Council of Australia – the first and highest rating awarded in Australia at the time.[11] Snow's attempt to develop land around the Canberra Airport was described by Patrick Troy as controversial. Specific criticisms include that it removes jobs from Civic, diminishes Canberra's town centre, and causes unnecessary congestion on roads originally designed exclusively for airport traffic.[6] The development of Brindabella Business Park attracted international corporates including KPMG, Deloitte and Raytheon[12] as well as the Department of Home Affairs and has been recognised as an emerging aerotropolis[13] that has helped to grow the Canberra workforce.

Snow’s nearby Majura Park Shopping Centre attracted international retailers Costco, Aldi[14] and Ikea,[15] with nationwide retailers Bunnings, Woolworths and Dan Murphy's.[16]

Capital Property Group also developed Constitution Place,[17] a commercial and hospitality complex adjacent to the Canberra Theatre and the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly in Canberra's central business district, which houses a five-storey government office building and a 12-level commercial building that is Canberra’s first WELL-rated building with a hotel and dining spaces.[citation needed]

In 2017, Snow opened Willinga Park,[18] an award-winning, 810-hectare (2,000-acre), equine facility in Bawley Point. Willinga Park was developed to include an equestrian centre with three Olympic-sized dressage arenas, showjumping fields and a campdrafting arena.[19] In 2018, Snow sponsored the largest campdrafting purse in Australian history at the World Championship Gold Buckle Campdraft centre. Pete Comiskey, a Queensland campdrafting rider, won the $100,000 purse after only four rounds lasting four minutes.[19] Willinga Park also includes native gardens and a sculpture walk. It has been referred to as “Jurassic Park with horses.”[20] In June 2018, it was announced that Sculpture on the Clyde, an outdoor art exhibition usually held on the Clyde River in Batemans Bay would be moved to Willinga Park to avoid being cancelled after the Eurobodalla Shire Council and event organisers were unable to come to an agreement on event logistics, insurance and security.[21] During the 2019–20 Australian bushfire season, Willinga Park and its well constructed and defended fire breaks were credited as providing a much-needed fire break that saved Bawley Point from destructive fires.[22]

Residential development[edit | edit source]

Snow was also the owner of Capital Property Group and Capital Estate Developments which is responsible for the development of Template:ACTcity,[23] a master-planned community in the Molonglo Valley and the first Australian suburb to have a minimum requirement for solar power generation on every home.[24] It is also the first suburb in Australia to commit to the Homes for Homes initiative which donates 0.1 per cent of the sale price of all properties to projects that address the shortage of social and affordable housing in the ACT.[25]

Personal life[edit | edit source]

Snow was married to Ginette, and they have four adult children: Stephen, Georgina, Tom and Scarlett.[26] Stephen was managing director of Capital Airport Group and Canberra Airport.[5][27]

Snow was often accompanied by his dogs, which attended meetings with him at his airport offices.[citation needed]

Net worth[edit | edit source]

In 2013, Snow was ranked by Forbes as Australia's 39th richest person, with a net worth of Template:USD755 million.[28] By 2019, his wealth was estimated by Forbes Asia at Template:USD billion.[7]

Template:Columns-start

Year Financial Review Rich List Forbes
Australia's 50 Richest
Rank Net worth (A$) Rank Net worth (US$)
2017[29][30][31] $1.00 billion n/a not listed
2018[32] Template:Nts $1.46 billion Template:Gain
2019[33][7] Template:Nts Template:Gain $1.86 billion Template:Gain Template:Nts Template:Gain $1.20 billion Template:Gain
2020[34] Template:Nts Template:Gain $3.19 billion Template:Gain
2021[35] Template:Nts Template:Decrease $2.53 billion Template:Decrease
2022 Template:Nts Template:Up $3.60 billion Template:Up
2023[36] Template:Nts Template:Up $3.90 billion Template:Up

Template:Column

Legend
Icon Description
Template:Steady Has not changed from the previous year
Template:Profit Has increased from the previous year
Template:Loss Has decreased from the previous year

Template:Columns-end

Philanthropy[edit | edit source]

Along with his brother, George, Snow established the Snow Foundation in 1991.[37] As of 2016, the Foundation held over Template:AUD40 million in net assets,[38] with a focus on supporting regional charities and organisations helping needy people.[39][26] In 2016 Snow predicted that in the next 10–15 years, the Snow Foundation endowment will “be over $100 million and that will let us do three times what we're doing now".[38]

In 2005 he published the "Living City" proposal for the redevelopment of Canberra.[40][41] This caused some controversy, especially after the proposal's rebuff by the ACT Government and combined with his provocative assertion that Canberra is a "dead-set boring" city that had been "going backwards since self-government".[42]

In 2017, the Australian National Portrait Gallery commissioned Snow's portrait in recognition of the contribution he has made to the growth of Canberra and his work as a philanthropist.[43] In a media interview, Snow said he was proud to call Canberra home: "I was born in Canberra, that's quite something for someone who is 74. I love the place; it's been a big part of my life, a very happy life. I had a wonderful time growing up in Canberra, raising a family here, developing a business career. Some people say Canberra is an economic backwater but I've proven that wrong. It's a great little city."[44]

The Snow family is a strong supporter of, and has provided in-kind contributors to, the Marriage Equality lobby group Australians for Equality,[45][46] of which his son Tom[47][48] was chair until November 2023.[49]

Snow held a commercial pilot licence for fixed wing aircraft and rotary wing aircraft and had a command instrument rating.[50]

Through a gift of Template:AUD8 million in 2013 to Canberra Grammar School,[1] he endowed The Snow Centre for Education in the Asian Century to focus on the advancement of Asian Studies at primary and secondary school levels. The centre was established in 2015 and aims to provide “world-class facilities for the study of Asian languages, history and culture.”[51] Canberra Grammar School also offers The Terry Snow Scholarship for Global Studies for a student who demonstrates excellent academic potential and a commitment to a global outlook who wishes to take the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme.[2] In October 2019 Snow donated Template:AUD20 million to Canberra Grammar School with the plan to rebuild the school's breezeway and library and create a centre for music excellence. The gift was reported as the largest philanthropic gift to an Australian school.[3]

Honours and awards[edit | edit source]

Snow was appointed a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the 2006 Australia Day Honours for service to the building and construction industry, particularly the redevelopment of the Canberra International Airport precinct, and to the community through support for a range of charitable organisations.[52]

Snow owned a large equestrian property, Willinga Park, near Bawley Point in New South Wales. In December 2019 and January 2020, massive fires swept through the area and Snow's "intricate fire plan [is] credited as part of the reason the nearby coastal town of Bawley Point escaped annihilation in the firestorm that swept through the region."[53]

References[edit | edit source]


External links[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2
  2. 2.0 2.1 Year 11 Scholarships.  Canberra Grammar School.  Retrieved from link
  3. 3.0 3.1
  4. Philanthropist and business leader Terry Snow dead at 80
  5. 5.0 5.1 Board of Directors.  Canberra Airport Group.  Retrieved 23 August 2009 from link [self-published source?]
  6. 6.0 6.1 Template:Cite interview
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2
  8. Canberra Airport opens 'extravagant' international terminal ahead of Singapore Airlines flights.  Clare Sibthorpe.  (16 September 2016)  Retrieved from Traveller
  9. Canberra Airport wins interior design award.  (15 June 2018)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  10. First Qatar Airways flight from Doha lands at Canberra Airport.  Sherryn Groch.  (12 February 2018)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  11. Environmental Commitment.  Retrieved from Airport Business Parks [self-published source?]
  12. Tenant Directory.  Retrieved from Airport Business Parks [self-published source?]
  13. Canberra Airport's workforce predicted to take off.  John Thistleton.  (17 March 2014)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  14. Bunnings Warehouse Canberra Airport to open next month.  Han Nguyen.  (18 April 2018)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  15. IKEA helps build case for international flights for Canberra Airport.  Clare Colley.  (19 January 2015)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  16. Canberra Airport's Bunnings Warehouse opens its doors.  Han Nguyen.  (23 May 2018)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  17. Constitution Place Canberra.  Retrieved from constitutionplace.com.au [self-published source?]
  18. Facilities Archive.  Retrieved from link [self-published source?]
  19. 19.0 19.1 Terry Snow's Willinga Park a 'game changer' for campdrafting.  Karen Hardy.  (2 June 2018)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  20. Why Terry Snow, billionaire and yachtie, put $100 million into a horse park.  (23 May 2017)  Retrieved from Australian Financial Review
  21. Sculpture on Clyde bolts to Bawley Point.  Kate Lockley.  (21 June 2018)  Retrieved from Bay Post-Moruya Examiner
  22. Denman Prospect | Canberra's Most Remarkable New Suburb | Land For Sale.  Retrieved from denmanprospect.com.au
  23. Fact sheet.  (2017)  Retrieved 2019-09-29 from denmanprospect.com.au
  24. The Big Issue - Denman Prospect makes first donation to Homes for Homes - Homes for Homes.  Retrieved 25 January 2022 from www.homesforhomes.com.au
  25. 26.0 26.1 Template:Cite speech
  26. Forbes Profile Terry Snow.  (2013)  Retrieved from Forbes
  27. 2018 AFR Rich List: Who are Australia's richest people?.  (25 May 2018)  Retrieved 26 May 2018 from link
  28. Australia's 200 richest people revealed.  Michael Bailey.  (30 May 2019)  Nine Publishing.  Retrieved 31 May 2019 from link
  29. The full list: Australia's wealthiest 200 revealed.  (30 October 2020)  Nine Publishing.  Retrieved 31 October 2020 from link
  30. The Snow Foundation Annual Report 2018.  Retrieved 2019-04-16 from The Snow Foundation
  31. 38.0 38.1 The Snow Foundation celebrates 25 years of helping those in need.  Megan Doherty.  (13 October 2016)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  32. Snow Foundation. Retrieved 23 August 2009
  33. High Powered Members appointed to Canberra Central Taskforce, ACT Government, 2005-05-05. Retrieved 24 August 2009
  34. Minutes of Proceedings, ACT Legislative Assembly, 2005-05-04. Retrieved 24 August 2009
  35. Govt fights back over 'boring' claims, The Canberra Times, 2005-07-29. Retrieved 24 August 2009
  36. Terry Snow, National Portrait Gallery.  Retrieved from www.portrait.gov.au
  37. Terry Snow: I've loved building a life in this 'great little city'.  Karen Hardy.  (1 December 2017)  Retrieved from The Canberra Times
  38. Equality Australia farewells accomplished board chair Tom Snow.   emily.mulligan@equalityaustralia.org.au.  (2023-11-29)  Retrieved 2024-08-04 from Equality Australia
  39. Board of Directors.  Canberra Airport.  Retrieved from link
  40. The Snow Centre for Education in the Asian Century.  Canberra Grammar School.  Retrieved from link
  41. Template:Cite It's an Honour
  42. The billionaire whose plan helped save a town from bushfire.  Amelia McGuire.  (2020-01-08)  Retrieved 2024-08-04 from The Sydney Morning Herald