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The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

The Age18-06-2025
Two Sydney suburbs are set to be transformed as low-rise homes make way for buildings up to 18 storeys tall under a controversial council plan to deliver 4000 new dwellings.
Canterbury-Bankstown City Council has voted to endorse its alternative plan to the state government's transport-oriented development (TOD) scheme for Wiley Park and Punchbowl.
The council had been required to allow at least 1600 new homes in those suburbs under the government's TOD plans. Instead, it more than doubled the target.
Under the council's alternative, up to 4000 new homes could be built and high-density rezoning extended to 800 metres from Wiley Park and Punchbowl metro stations. Low-density streets would be transformed, with buildings of between four and 18 storeys.
The TOD controls would cap building heights to a maximum of 24 metres, while the council alternative would allow buildings as high as 62 metres around Punchbowl station.
In a fiery council debate on Tuesday, independent Councillor Barbara Coorey protested against the plans, claiming the proposal would turn suburbs from Canterbury to Bankstown into Hong Kong's Happy Valley.
'This is a super TOD that will rip the heart and soul out of Wiley Park and Punchbowl,' she said before the meeting.
She told her fellow councillors that while she did not support the state government's TOD, in this case it was 'the lesser of two evils'.
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The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks
The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

The Age

time18-06-2025

  • The Age

The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

Two Sydney suburbs are set to be transformed as low-rise homes make way for buildings up to 18 storeys tall under a controversial council plan to deliver 4000 new dwellings. Canterbury-Bankstown City Council has voted to endorse its alternative plan to the state government's transport-oriented development (TOD) scheme for Wiley Park and Punchbowl. The council had been required to allow at least 1600 new homes in those suburbs under the government's TOD plans. Instead, it more than doubled the target. Under the council's alternative, up to 4000 new homes could be built and high-density rezoning extended to 800 metres from Wiley Park and Punchbowl metro stations. Low-density streets would be transformed, with buildings of between four and 18 storeys. The TOD controls would cap building heights to a maximum of 24 metres, while the council alternative would allow buildings as high as 62 metres around Punchbowl station. In a fiery council debate on Tuesday, independent Councillor Barbara Coorey protested against the plans, claiming the proposal would turn suburbs from Canterbury to Bankstown into Hong Kong's Happy Valley. 'This is a super TOD that will rip the heart and soul out of Wiley Park and Punchbowl,' she said before the meeting. She told her fellow councillors that while she did not support the state government's TOD, in this case it was 'the lesser of two evils'.

The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks
The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

Sydney Morning Herald

time18-06-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The next Sydney suburbs in line for 18-storey apartment blocks

Two Sydney suburbs are set to be transformed as low-rise homes make way for buildings up to 18 storeys tall under a controversial council plan to deliver 4000 new dwellings. Canterbury-Bankstown City Council has voted to endorse its alternative plan to the state government's transport-oriented development (TOD) scheme for Wiley Park and Punchbowl. The council had been required to allow at least 1600 new homes in those suburbs under the government's TOD plans. Instead, it more than doubled the target. Under the council's alternative, up to 4000 new homes could be built and high-density rezoning extended to 800 metres from Wiley Park and Punchbowl metro stations. Low-density streets would be transformed, with buildings of between four and 18 storeys. The TOD controls would cap building heights to a maximum of 24 metres, while the council alternative would allow buildings as high as 62 metres around Punchbowl station. In a fiery council debate on Tuesday, independent Councillor Barbara Coorey protested against the plans, claiming the proposal would turn suburbs from Canterbury to Bankstown into Hong Kong's Happy Valley. 'This is a super TOD that will rip the heart and soul out of Wiley Park and Punchbowl,' she said before the meeting. She told her fellow councillors that while she did not support the state government's TOD, in this case it was 'the lesser of two evils'.

The government wants more houses. Ku-ring-gai finally comes to the table
The government wants more houses. Ku-ring-gai finally comes to the table

Sydney Morning Herald

time06-06-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

The government wants more houses. Ku-ring-gai finally comes to the table

A council spent more than a year battling Premier Chris Minns' push for new housing development and has come up with an alternative plan, including 28-storey high-rises on Sydney's leafy North Shore, that also eclipses the expectations imposed by government legislation. Ku-ring-gai Council claimed its plan would create about 1569 more homes than the government's Transport Orientated Development planning scheme, which sets a blanket planning rule of six-storey buildings within a 400-metre radius of railway stations. Ku-ring-gai's plan is aimed at preventing developments in small residential streets and focusing them around town centres and allows for buildings as tall as 28 storeys around Gordon station; 18 storeys would be supported around Lindfield station; and buildings up to eight storeys could get the green light around Roseville and Killara stations. Minns has staked his political future on delivering desperately needed homes. In winter 2023, he unveiled the signature policy of his government: in the biggest rezoning shake-up in Australian history, regulations dramatically changed to increase density, especially around transport hubs, to create capacity for a claimed 170,000 new homes. The reform was widely welcomed. Twelve of the 13 councils targeted by the TOD planning scheme reached an agreement with the government. But with 25 large, state-significant developments slated along its tree-lined streets, Ku-ring-gai was the only hold-out. The issue quickly turned political: the Liberals planned to wreck the legislation and Ku-ring-gai Council spent more than a year battling the Minns government plan. There was widespread disagreement within the community over the plan, the towering 28-storey blocks prompting most debate. But the council voted unanimously this week to support the counter housing strategy that paves the way for up to 24,500 new homes. NSW Planning Minister Paul Scully confirmed that the Planning Department would consider Ku-ring-gai's alternative, but no timeframe has been confirmed. In today's crowded Sydney with its attendant chronic housing shortfall, the best way to boost the supply of housing is to be to put them near train stations. The forces of NIMBYism invariably cloak objections to projects around planning and heritage. The Ku-ring-gai proposal is also touched by such sentiments with Mayor Christine Kay declaring the council's alternative scheme would 'protect the area's heritage and environment' by focusing density near existing town centres. Ku-ring-gai has possibly blazed a trail for other municipalities. Several other Sydney councils have proposed alternative planning schemes to the TOD controls, including Canterbury-Bankstown Council and the Inner West Council. Inner West is now seeking public feedback on a plan that would support higher density in parts of the local government area, including along Parramatta Road and in The Bays Precinct. The Minns government tempted councils to come on board TOD reforms, promising a $200 million grants pool to fund green spaces, sports facilities and street maintenance. Ku-ring-gai has cleverly dangled the carrot of more housing before the government to green-light what we consider a fair and pretty sensible proposal.

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