Three Australian outlets publish matching opinion pieces arguing that Australia’s housing affordability problem cannot be solved solely by building large numbers of towers. Brisbane Times, The Age (Melbourne), and the Sydney Morning Herald each frame the issue as a broader policy failure, saying leaders have not delivered effective, durable solutions to the housing crisis. While the articles do not present new, specific policy details in the provided excerpts, they share the same central contention: endless high-rise construction is not an adequate strategy for making homes cheaper. The pieces instead call for looking to earlier approaches and “taking us back to the future,” implying that lessons from past housing policies, planning decisions, or development models may be more effective than continuing with an exclusive focus on vertical growth. Overall, the outlets’ common message is that housing affordability requires a wider set of measures and better policy execution, rather than an overreliance on towers as the primary remedy.