Sounds like your tube is perfect! Should make for strong, lightweight frame. 1.5 mm wall thickness is plenty.
With the motor and batteries being low in the frame, your COG will be very low. Typically, you want the COG above the wheel centres for a well balanced chassis in terms of handling. And, as you said earlier it's not a cruiser, handling may be important. So, the higher you can position the batteries and still have an aesthetically pleasing design, the better it is. If you keep the motor position as is, I would try to raise the battery box even more. Youd could then make the very bottom of the frame narrower, as opposed to flared out as it is now. Just my thoughts, not a critisism of your design.
If you have a COG below the wheel centres, you will effectively have to lift the weight up as you turn into a corner. Having COG above will help you "tip into the corner", which makes for a more pleasant bike to ride. Of course, you can also have the COG too high, but that won't likely be a problem in your design.
I should temper my comments by saying that these COG considerations become much more important as vehicle speeds go up. The extreme are MotoGP motorcycles where 1 mm increments in COG positioning, both up/down and fore/aft, are often the difference between winning and placing 3rd of 4th. At normal bicycle speeds, i.e. <25 kph, these effects are less of a concern, although can't be entirely dismissed.
However, make sure your trail figure is reasonable. Racing bicycles with very agressive handling have around 45 mm trail figures. For less nervous handling, you'd want to increse this to > 55 mm.