As mayors affected by the changes prepare a summit to discuss one of the most dramatic overhauls to planning in Sydney in decades,Planning Minister Paul Scully has revealed that key suburbs in the east including Bondi Junction and Edgecliff were “currently limited in additional growth” because of constraints on infrastructure that proved difficult to overcome.
“We examined 305 sites based on their infrastructure to support new homes. The sites announced …[last week] were released first because they have essential infrastructure capacity available but still need rezonings for density to be delivered,” Scully said.
“There are parts of Sydney’s east that are currently limited in additional growth because of limited sewer and water infrastructure. Edgecliff as just one example is one of those.”
While Scully said the suburb and other parts of the east and north shore would see housing uplift as a result of zoning changes which will meanlong-standing bans on building terraces,townhouses and two-storey apartment blocks will be lifted across council areas in Sydney,he revealed “this situation isn’t uniform across the eastern suburbs”.
“Bondi Junction,for example,already resembles a transport-oriented development site;they’re already building on their transport hubs with density,” he said.
The government provided Opal card data for both Bondi Junction and Chatswood to point to its transport infrastructure already being at “high capacity”. The data shows 10.3 million people passed through Bondi Junction and 12.6 million at Chatswood between January and October this year. That compared to 6 million at Lidcombe station in Sydney’s west,according to comparison data provided by the planning minister’s office.