100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Complex with six four-bedroom units proposed for cul-de-sac

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Supermarket steps in to ensure town’s postal services continue

A grocery store will take on postal services in a Sunshine Coast town, to the relief of locals. Mapleton IGA is set to open a More

Coast hospitals brace for surge in emergency visits

Sunshine Coast Health doctors and nurses are bracing for a busy time in emergency departments, after treating more than 45,000 people last summer. Typically the More

Beach flags, warnings confuse international visitors

Australia's beaches continue to pose fatal risks to overseas-born people, with a study suggesting many struggle to understand warnings presented on signs. A Monash University More

England cricket boss to investigate team’s Noosa break

An emotional Ben Stokes has defended the England team after a social media video said to feature Ben Duckett at Noosa, was the latest More

Holiday warning as six die on Qld roads in one weekend

Queensland Police are sounding the alarm for road users this holiday season after a devastating weekend before Christmas claimed six lives on the state’s More

Photo of the day: Aussie Christmas

Photographer Prue Henschke was driving between Doonan and Cooroy when she spotted and snapped a photo of this beautiful Royal Poinciana tree in More

Plans to build an eight-storey unit complex on a sloping cul-de-sac block have been submitted to Sunshine Coast Council.

The proposed development at 31 Saltair Street, Kings Beach, would comprise six four-bedroom units plus 15 car parking spaces across two basement levels.

The 653sqm site, which is currently occupied by a post-1946 house, is within the high-density residential zone under the planning scheme.

The site has a fall of about 6.5m from the front boundary to the rear, representing a gradient of about 15 per cent.

A town planning report submitted to the council on behalf of applicant Taura (Saltair) Pty Ltd, by Town Planning Alliance, says the planned building would exceed the allowable height limit because of the block’s slope.

“Due to the site’s natural topography, the development exceeds the prescribed height limit of 21m, with a maximum building height of 25.6m above natural ground level at the rear,” it states.

A side view showing the building heights. Picture: C2 Architecture

“The proposal involves a maximum eight-storey built form at the rear, however presents to Saltair Street in the south as six storeys and a compliant 21m building height.”

The report says the building would adopt a contemporary coastal design.

“The proposal seeks to establish a high-end apartment building that adopts a high-quality architectural style, with significant articulation, building recesses, modulation, as well as the use of a variation of materials and finishes to present as a development with high aesthetic value,” the report states.

“The proposal dedicates a suitable portion of the site to landscaping to soften the building form, creating a balance between the built and natural form, positively contributing to Saltair Street.”

A south-west view of the proposed building. Picture: C2 Architecture

The site is about 400m from the Caloundra town centre and 600m from Kings Beach, which the report says is undergoing transformation.

“In recent years, the traditionally lower-intensity, coastal character of residential uses in Kings Beach and the surrounding area has been slowly transitioning to provide more high-end beachside residential and tourist accommodation developments, including contemporary, architecturally designed larger-scale houses and developments of high-quality architectural form, reflective of the growing proportion of higher socio-economic demographic wishing to reside in or travel to the coastal neighbourhood,” it states.

“The proposed development is reflective of the sought-after residential product emerging in the area, in terms of dwelling typology, form, height, scale and architectural appearance, with high-end premium floor plate dwellings highly sought after in the locality.

“Importantly, the development provides a product to allow local residents to ‘age in place’ within the local community as they downsize from traditionally larger family homes to a more compact, lower-maintenance dwelling typology.”

The house that is currently on the block in Kings Beach. Picture: Google Street View

The application for a material change of use was submitted on April 3 and is subject to impact assessment, meaning it will go through a public consultation process at a later date.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
This field is hidden when viewing the form
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share