Part 1 General provisions
1 What is this plan called?
This plan is called Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000.
2 What are the objectives of this plan?
The objectives of this plan are:(a) to establish a broad planning framework for future development in
Sutherland Shire which allows for detailed provisions and standards to be made
in development control plans,
(b) a sustainable Sutherland Shire through the efficient and equitable
management of land uses,
(c) to implement the objectives of the Strategic Plan for Sutherland
Shire relating to land use outcomes,
(d) to allow for provision of community facilities and land for public
purposes,
(e) an environmentally appropriate balance of development that is
ecologically sustainable, socially equitable and economically viable and leads
to a more sustainable outcome for Sutherland Shire,
(f) to conserve items of environmental heritage,
(g) to preserve or enhance the quality of life of the local
community,
(h) to preserve and enhance the quality of native
vegetation,
(i) to protect environmentally sensitive areas,
(j) to provide employment opportunities in Sutherland
Shire,
(k) to encourage development which supports access by public
transport, walking and cycling and which is energy
efficient.
3 Where does this plan apply?
This plan applies to all land in Sutherland Shire as shown on the
maps, except for land to which the following plans apply:(a) Sydney Regional
Environmental Plan No 17—Kurnell Peninsula (1989),
and
(b) Sutherland Shire Local Environmental
Plan—Menai Town Centre 1992, and
(c) (Repealed)
4 How does this plan affect other environmental planning
instruments?
(1) All local environmental plans (including Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
1993) that applied to the land to which this plan applies and
that were in force immediately before the appointed day are
repealed.
(2) This plan amends State Environmental Planning Policy No
4—Development Without Consent, by inserting in
alphabetical order of local government area in Schedule 2 the following
words: Land to which Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000 applies
(3) To permit extractive industries in the 7 (a) Environmental
Protection (Waterways) Zone, Sydney Regional Environmental Plan No
9—Extractive Industry is amended by omitting from
Division 5 of Schedule 1, the following matter: The land at Port Hacking within Zone 7 (a) (the Environmental
Protection (Waterways) Zone) under Sutherland Shire
Local Environmental Plan 1993” and inserting instead the
following matter:
The land in Port Hacking within the 7 (a) Environmental Protection
(Waterways) zone under Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000.
(4) This plan amends Sydney Regional Environmental Plan No
17—Kurnell Peninsula (1989) by inserting at the end of
clause 3 the following subclause: (2) Despite subclause (1), this plan does not apply to the following
land:Land at Parraweena Road, Taren Point, adjoining Woolooware Bay, to
which Sutherland Shire Local
Environmental Plan 2000 applies.
5 Definitions
(1) In this plan:Accredited
certifier has the same meaning as in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
Acid sulfate
soils means actual or potential acid sulfate soils, as defined in
the Acid Sulfate Soils Assessment and Management
Guidelines.
Acid
Sulfate Soils Assessment and Management Guidelines means the Acid Sulfate Soils Assessment and Management
Guidelines as published from time to time by the NSW Acid
Sulfate Soils Management Advisory Committee and adopted by the
Director.
Acid Sulfate Soils
Planning Maps means the series of maps marked “Sutherland Local Environmental Plan 2000—Acid Sulfate
Soils Planning Maps” which are kept in the office of the
Council of Sutherland Shire as amended from time to time by the maps so kept
and listed in Part 2 of Schedule 7.
Advertising means the use of a
building or place where the display of symbols, messages or other devices for
promotional purposes is visible from a public place, whether or not the
display involves the erection of a structure or the carrying out of a
work.
Agriculture means:
(a) cultivating fruit, vegetables or flower crops,
or
(b) keeping or breeding livestock, bees or poultry or other birds,
or
(c) cultivating plants in a wholesale plant
nursery,
for business purposes.Ancillary
development means a building, work or use which is used or carried
out in conjunction with the primary legal use of a site.
Animal
establishment means a building or place used for breeding, boarding,
training, keeping or caring for animals for business purposes, and includes a
riding school, but does not include a veterinary hospital.
Aquaculture means the
cultivation of the resources of the sea or estuarine waters for the
propagation or rearing of marine, estuarine or freshwater fish or plants or
other organisms.
Archaeological site
means a site described in Schedule 1.
Arts and
craft centre means a building or place owned by the Council which
provides facilities for the cultural, intellectual, social and educational
needs of the community and which may incorporate all or any of the
following:
(a) an art or craft gallery,
(b) art or craft workshops and storage areas,
(c) outdoor or indoor exhibition and performance
space,
(d) a museum,
(e) an ancillary restaurant and a place for retail
sales,
(f) meeting and lecture rooms,
(g) ancillary administration space,
(h) a caretaker’s residence.
Backpackers
accommodation means a building used for the purposes of providing
accommodation for tourists, travellers or persons engaged in recreational
pursuits and that:
(a) may have shared facilities, such as a communal bathroom, kitchen
or laundry, and
(b) will generally provide shared accommodation in which there are two
or more persons in a room, and
(c) must only provide temporary
accommodation.
Beach and foreshore
protection works means works undertaken on land abutting a waterway
between dry land and Indian Spring Low Water for the purpose of
rehabilitation. They include construction or reconstruction of sea walls and
works in accordance with an adopted plan of management by or on behalf of a
public authority.
Boarding
house means a building:
(a) that is wholly or partly let in lodgings, and
(b) that provides lodgers with a principal place of residence for 3
months or more, and
(c) that generally has shared facilities, such as a communal bathroom,
kitchen or laundry.
Brothel means
any building or place used habitually for the purposes of
prostitution.
Building
line means the line which is parallel to the street frontage as
specified in any development control plan that applies to the land
concerned.
Bulky goods
retailing means use of a building or place primarily for the sale by
retail or auction, or the hire or display, of goods or materials which are
individually so big, bulky or heavy as to require:
(a) a large area for handling, storage or display,
and
(b) direct vehicular access to the site of the building or place by
members of the public, for the purpose of loading items into their vehicles
after purchase,
but does not include use of a building or place for the sale of
foodstuffs or clothing.Bus depot
means a building or place used for servicing, repairing and garaging of buses
and other vehicles used for the purposes of a bus transport
undertaking.
Bushfire
hazard reduction means the reduction or modification (by burning,
mechanical or manual means) of material that constitutes a bushfire
hazard.
Bushfire
interface area means an area identified as such on a bushfire hazard
map held by the Council and includes improved or unimproved properties within
or immediately adjacent to bushland.
Bushfire prone
area means an area identified on a bushfire hazard map held by the
Council as having a high or medium bushfire hazard and includes land within
100 metres of such an area.
Bushland
vegetation means vegetation which is either a remnant of the natural
vegetation of the land or, if altered, is still representative of the
structure and floristics of the natural vegetation.
Business
premises means a building or place used for the purpose of
administrative, clerical, technical or like activities for an occupation,
profession or trade, but (in a development control table) does not include a
building or place elsewhere defined in this plan.
Car
parking means a building or place used for parking vehicles, and any
manoeuvring space and access to it, whether operated for gain or not, but does
not include car parking ancillary to a permissible use.
Child care
centre means a building or place used for the purpose of supervising
or caring for children which:
(a) caters for 6 or more under school age children, whether or not
those children are related to the owner or operator of the building or place,
and
(b) may include an educational function, and
(c) may operate for the purpose of gain,
but does not include a building or place providing residential care for
those children.Cluster
housing means three or more dwellings grouped on a site to take
advantage of good building areas or views and to conserve large areas of open
space.
Community
advertising means:
(a) advertising of community events or community uses, or charity
events, or
(b) display of health or safety notices, or like notices,
or
(c) advertising which is ancillary to the primary legal use of
community or recreational land, but is not for the purpose of advertising the
sale of a product, or
(d) display of a notice by a public
authority.
Community
facility means a building or place owned or controlled by a public
authority or a body of persons, and that provides for the physical, social,
cultural or intellectual development, welfare or safety of the local
community. It includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:
(a) a police, ambulance or fire station,
(b) a rescue or emergency service centre,
(c) a public library,
(d) rest rooms or meeting rooms,
(e) a child minding centre,
(f) a public health service centre.
Complying
development has the same meaning as in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
Contaminated
land means land in or under which any substance is present at a
concentration above that naturally present in, on or under the land and that
poses, or is likely to pose, an immediate or long-term risk to human health or
the environment.
Convenience
store means that portion of a building on a site, with a floor space
not exceeding 100 square metres, that is used for the sale of groceries and
other small items and is operated in conjunction with a service station, but
does not include a building or place licensed to sell liquor under the Liquor Act 1982.
Demolish a
heritage item means wholly or partly destroy, dismantle or move the heritage
item.
Demolition
means the partial or total destruction, dismantling or moving of a building.
It includes decontamination, rehabilitation or remediation of land on which a
building has been partially or totally destroyed or dismantled, or from which
a building has been removed.
Development
consent has the same meaning as in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
Drainage
means works carried out for the purpose of drainage which are not ancillary to
development for which consent has been granted.
Dual
occupancy housing means two dwellings on land that is one allotment
or that was one allotment when development consent was granted for the two
dwellings.
Dwelling
means a room or suite of rooms occupied or used or so constructed or adapted
as to be capable of being occupied or used as a separate permanent
residence.
Dwelling
house means one dwelling on one allotment except where that dwelling
forms a component of a dual occupancy housing development.
Educational
establishment means a building used for educational purposes but
does not include a building used wholly or principally as business premises,
an institution or a child care centre. It includes, but is not limited to, a
school, college, technical college, lecture hall, gallery or
museum.
Exempt
development has the same meaning as in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
Extractive
industry means an industry or undertaking, not being a mine, which
depends for its operations on the winning of extractive material from the land
upon which it is carried on.
Extractive
material means turf, sand, gravel, clay, soil, rock, stone or
similar substances.
Floorspace
ratio means the ratio of the gross floor area of all buildings on a
site to the area of the site. The site is taken to be only that part of the
site zoned to permit the development for which the buildings are or are
proposed to be used.
Food shop
means a building or place, the principal purpose of which is the preparation
and selling of food and refreshments to people for consumption off the
premises, whether or not the selling involves a drive-through
service.
Generating
works means a building or place used for the purpose of making or
generating gas, electricity or other forms of energy.
Gross floor
area means the sum of the areas of each floor of the buildings on a
site where the area of each floor is taken to be the area within the outer
face of the external enclosing walls, excluding any of that area occupied
by:
(a) lift towers, motor rooms and stairwells within a basement or above
the roof level, and
(b) car parking needed to meet requirements of the Council, up to 20
square metres per required parking space, and
(c) storage areas needed to meet requirements of the Council,
and
(d) plant rooms, garbage storage areas, switch rooms or the like
within a basement.
Ground
level is the ground surface of a site as it was prior to any
cutting, filling or grading of the site.
Health
care professional means a person who renders professional health
services to members of the public and includes a legally qualified medical
practitioner, a dentist within the meaning of the Dentists Act 1989, a chiropodist, a
chiropractor, an osteopath, a physiotherapist, an optometrist, an
acupuncturist, a psychologist, a herbalist, a homoeopath or the
like.
Height is
measured vertically from the ground level.
Heritage
item means a building, work, tree or place described in Schedule 1
or 2.
Home
activity means a business that is ancillary to a residential use and
is carried out, or partially carried out, in a dwelling or within an allotment
which contains a dwelling house or dwellings, but only if:
(a) that use is undertaken by the permanent residents,
and
(b) not more than two non-residents are employed in it at any one
time, and
(c) the use does not interfere with the amenity of adjoining
properties or the locality, whether or not by the generation of vehicular
traffic or parking or the emission of noise, vibration, smell or creation of
some other nuisance,
but does not include a bed and breakfast establishment or a building or
place elsewhere defined in this plan.Hotel means
premises specified or proposed to be specified in a hotelier’s licence
granted under the Liquor Act
1982, which may provide accommodation.
Housing
for older people or people with a disability has the same meaning as
in State Environmental Planning
Policy No 5—Housing for Older People or People with a
Disability.
Industry
means a building or place used for the manufacture, storage, repair, cleaning,
maintenance, supply, hire or handling of any goods, materials, food or
machinery, or for like or ancillary activities, but (in a development control
table) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this
plan.
Institution means a mental
hospital or a penal or reformative establishment.
Internal
allotment means an allotment within a residential zone where there
is no practical lawful vehicular access to any existing or proposed building
on the allotment, or where the only practical lawful vehicular access to any
existing or proposed building on the allotment is by way of an access corridor
(a hatchet shaped allotment) or a right-of-carriageway over another
allotment.
Junk yard
means land used for:
(a) the collection, storage, abandonment or sale of scrap metals,
waste paper, rags, bottles or other scrap materials or goods,
or
(b) the collecting, dismantling, storage, salvaging or abandonment of
automobiles or other vehicles or machinery or for the sale of parts of such
items.
Land includes any
ground, soil or earth whatsoever, whether dry or under water.
land at Sandy
Point means the land known as the village of Sandy Point, being land
bounded by the Georges River and Deadman’s Creek and shown edged heavy
black on the map marked “Sutherland Shire Local
Environmental Plan 2000 (Amendment No 7)” deposited in
the office of Sutherland Shire Council.
Landscaped
area means any part of the site of a building or a proposed building
that contributes to achieving the objectives of the landscaped area
development standards of this plan. The site is taken to be only that part of
the site zoned to permit the development for which the building is or is
proposed to be used.
Landscaped area includes any areas used for gardens, lawns, shrubs or
trees, but does not include any part of the site occupied by buildings,
driveways, service accessways, parking areas, communal drying yards, garbage
storage areas, swimming pools, balconies or decks.
Liquid fuel
depot means a depot or place used for the bulk storage for wholesale
distribution of petrol, oil, petroleum or other inflammable
liquid.
Main road
means a road declared to be a main road under the Roads Act 1993.
Marina means an
arrangement of pontoons, jetties or the like, used or intended to be used as a
business to provide moorings for boats. It includes any associated:
(a) slipways, or
(b) facilities for the repair, maintenance and fuelling of, or the
provision of accessories and parts for, boats or boating enthusiasts,
or
(c) facilities for the storage or provision of food,
or
(d) ancillary office.
Medical
facility means a building or place used for the medical or surgical
treatment of persons, whether public or private, and must include facilities
for overnight stay accommodation. It may consist of:
(a) a hospital, or
(b) a sanatorium, or
(c) a health centre, or
(d) a nursing home, or
(e) a home for infirm persons, incurable persons or convalescent
persons,
and includes any shop or dispensary used in conjunction with the
facility, but does not include an institution or a building or place elsewhere
defined in this plan.Motel means a
building or buildings used for temporary overnight accommodation, whether or
not the building or buildings is or are also used in the provision of meals to
travellers or the general public.
Motor
showroom means a building or place used for the display and sale of
motor vehicles, caravans or boats, whether or not motor vehicle accessories,
caravan accessories or boat accessories are sold or displayed and may also
include servicing.
Nightclub
means a building or place to which a nightclub licence relates under the
Liquor Act
1982.
Offensive or hazardous
industry means an industry which by reason of the processes
involved, the method of manufacture or the nature of the materials used or
produced, requires isolation from other buildings.
Passenger transport
terminal means any building or place used for the assembly of
passengers travelling by any form of passenger transport, including any
required facilities for parking, manoeuvring, storage or routine servicing of
any vehicle.
Place of
assembly means a public hall, theatre, cinema, music hall, concert
hall, dance hall, open-air theatre, drive-in theatre, music bowl or any other
building of a like character used as such and whether used for the purpose of
gain or not, but does not include a place of public worship, an institution or
an educational establishment.
Place of
public worship means a building or place used for the purpose of
religious worship by a congregation or religious group whether in the
Christian faith or not, and whether or not the building or place is also used
for counselling, social events, instruction and religious
training.
Plan of
management means a plan of management as defined under the Local Government Act
1993.
Potential archaeological
site means a site known to the Council to have archaeological
potential.
Public
utility undertaking means any of the following undertakings carried
on in pursuance of any Commonwealth or State Act:
(a) railway, road, water or air transport, telecommunications, wharf
or river undertakings, and
(b) undertakings for the supply of water, hydraulic power, electricity
or gas or the provision of sewerage or drainage
services,
and a reference to a person
carrying on a public utility undertaking includes a reference to a
council, county council, government department, corporation, firm or authority
carrying on the undertaking.Recreation
area means:
(a) an area of open space for passive recreation activities,
or
(b) a children’s playground, or
(c) an area used for sporting activities or sporting facilities,
or
(d) an area used to provide facilities for recreational activities
which promote the physical, cultural or intellectual welfare of persons within
the community, being facilities provided by:(i) the Council, or
(ii) a body of persons associated for the purposes of the physical,
cultural or intellectual welfare of persons within the
community,
whether used for the purposes of gain or not, but does not include a
racecourse or showground.Recreation
facility means a building or place used for indoor or outdoor
recreation, and used for the purpose of gain. It may consist of or include a
billiard saloon, a table tennis centre, squash courts, tennis courts, a
swimming pool, a gymnasium, a health studio, a golf driving range, a bowling
alley, a fun parlour or any other building of a like character used for
recreation.
Registered
club means a building or place used by persons associated, or by a
body incorporated, for social, literary, political, sporting, athletic or
other lawful purposes and which is, or is intended to be, registered under the
Registered Clubs Act
1976.
Relic means any
deposit, object or material evidence relating to:
(a) the use or settlement of Sutherland Shire, not being Aboriginal
habitation, which is more than 50 years old, or
(b) Aboriginal habitation of Sutherland Shire either before or after
its occupation by persons of European extraction, including human
remains.
Repair
centre means a building or place used in association with the
operation of a waste recycling and management centre or waste depot and at
which materials and goods can be retrieved, repaired or refurbished for re-use
in the community.
Residential
flat means a dwelling within a building containing three or more
dwellings but does not include a townhouse or villa house.
Residential medical
practice means a room or a number of rooms forming part of, attached
to, or within the curtilage of a dwelling house used by not more than two
health care professionals and where no more than two employees are employed,
but does not include facilities for in-patient care (whether or not there is
residential occupation of the dwelling house).
Restaurant
means a building or place, the principal purpose of which is the provision of
food to people for consumption on the premises, but does not include a food
shop or a nightclub.
Road means a
roadway, whether made or unmade, for general public use, generally designed to
accommodate the movement of vehicles and pedestrians, and may include bridges
forming part of roads.
Road
transport terminal means a building or place used for the principal
purpose of the bulk handling of goods for transport by road, including
facilities for the loading and unloading of vehicles used to transport those
goods and for the parking, servicing and repair of those
vehicles.
Rural
industry means:
(a) handling, treating, processing or packing of primary produce,
or
(b) regular servicing or repairing of plant or equipment used for the
purpose of agriculture, aquaculture or a rural industry in the
locality.
Service
station means a building or place used for the fuelling of motor
vehicles involving the sale by retail of petrol, oils and other petroleum
products, whether or not the building or place is also used for any one or
more of the following purposes:
(a) the sale by retail of spare parts and accessories for motor
vehicles,
(b) washing and greasing of motor vehicles,
(c) installation of accessories,
(d) repairing and servicing of motor vehicles involving the use of
hand tools (other than repairing and servicing which involves top overhaul of
motors, body building, panel beating, spray painting, or suspension,
transmission or chassis restoration),
(e) convenience store.
Sex shop means
a building primarily used for the purposes of business premises in
which:
(a) publications classified Category 1 restricted, Category 2
restricted or RC under the Classification
(Publications, Films and Computer Games) Act 1995 of the
Commonwealth are shown, exhibited, displayed, sold or otherwise rendered
accessible or available to the public, or
(b) a business to which section 578E of the Crimes Act 1900 applies is
conducted.
Shop means a
building or place used for the purpose of display, sale, hire, auction,
processing of goods or materials, or like or ancillary activities, but (in a
development control table) does not include a building or place elsewhere
defined in this plan.
Site area is
the area of an allotment zoned so as to allow proposed development and
includes any area of a right-of-carriageway burdening the allotment, but does
not include the area of any access corridor.
Standard
allotment means an allotment within a residential zone where
practical lawful vehicular access to any existing or proposed building on the
allotment is not reliant on an access corridor (a hatchet shaped allotment) or
a right-of-carriageway over another residential allotment.
Storey
means:
(a) the space between two floors, or
(b) the space between any floor and its ceiling or roof above,
or
(c) foundation areas, garages, workshops, storerooms and the like,
where the height between ground level and the top of the floor above is 1.5
metres or more.
A storey which exceeds 4.5 metres is considered as two
storeys.Subdivision has the same
meaning as in the Environmental Planning
and Assessment Act 1979.
Swimming
enclosure means a place within a body of water which is enclosed by
a fence or netting to provide a safe bathing area for public purposes only and
does not include a swimming pool as defined under the Swimming Pools Act
1992.
Tennis court
(private) means a tennis court used solely for the purpose of
private recreational enjoyment and not used for competition or
coaching.
The
Council means the Council of Sutherland Shire.
The maps means
the series of maps marked “Sutherland Shire
Local Environmental Plan 2000” which are kept in the
office of the Council of Sutherland Shire as amended from time to time by the
maps so kept and listed in Schedule 7.
Tourist
Information Centre means a building or place owned or controlled by
the Council at which tourist-related services, facilities and information to
the community are provided, but does not include a restaurant. It may
include:
(a) literature and booking services for tourist destinations and
accommodation, and
(b) retail sales of souvenirs, gifts and the like,
and
(c) ancillary administration space, and
(d) public toilets or change facilities.
Townhouse
means a two storey dwelling on a site containing three or more dwellings,
where each dwelling has an individual entrance and there is open space for the
exclusive use of the occupants of the dwelling.
Utility
installation means a building or work used for a public utility
undertaking, but does not include a building used wholly or principally for
administration or as business premises, a showroom, workshop or
depot.
Vehicle and
mechanical repair premises means a building or place used for the
purpose of carrying out repairs to motor vehicles or machinery, including
watercraft, and engines.
Veterinary
hospital means a building or place used for surgically or medically
treating animals, whether or not animals are kept on the premises for the
purpose of treatment or rehabilitation.
Villa
house means a single storey dwelling on a site containing three or
more dwellings, where each dwelling has an individual entrance and there is
open space at ground level for the exclusive use of the occupants of the
dwelling.
Warehouse
means a building or place used for the storage of goods, merchandise or
materials pending distribution.
Waste recycling and
management centre means a building or place used for the recycling
or recovery of resource materials, excluding sludge-like material, from waste
materials that would otherwise be acceptable as landfill, and involves
separating and sorting, processing (such as baling, crushing, shredding and
composting) and sorting, transferring and the sale of recycled or recovered
material, but does not involve re-manufacture, chemical manufacturing or
incineration of the material.
Waterbody
means:
(a) a natural waterbody, including:(i) a lake or lagoon either naturally formed or artificially modified,
or
(ii) a river or stream, whether perennial or intermittent, flowing in a
natural channel with an established bed or in a natural channel artificially
modifying the course of the stream, or
(iii) tidal waters including any bay, estuary or inlet,
or
(b) an artificial waterbody, including any constructed
waterway, canal, inlet, bay, channel, dam, pond or lake, but does not include
a dry detention basin or other construction that is only intended to hold
water intermittently.
Watercraft
facility means a pontoon, suspended ramp or walkway, jetty, mooring,
wharf, slipway, watercraft landing and launching facility or the like, but
does not include a marina.
(2) References to maps in this plan are to maps as in force at the
commencement of this plan, unless otherwise
described.
(3) Any notes in this plan are intended to help a reader to understand
this plan but are not part of this plan.
6 What savings provisions apply?
(1) Nothing in this Plan shall be construed as restricting or
prohibiting or enabling the consent authority to restrict or prohibit:(a) the carrying out of development of any description specified in
Schedule 3 (Schedule of savings provisions), or
(b) the use of existing buildings of the Crown by the
Crown.
(2) Despite clause 4 (1), local environmental plans (including Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
1993) and deemed environmental planning instruments, as in
force immediately before the commencement of this plan, apply to a development
application that was made but had not been finally determined before that
commencement as if this plan had been exhibited but had not been
made.
7 Who is the consent authority for this plan?
For the purposes of this plan the Council is the consent authority
for all development, subject to the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
8 How does this plan affect covenants etc?
(1) This clause does not apply to the 2 (a1), 2 (a2), 2 (b), 2 (c), 2
(e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones.
(2) If any agreement, covenant or other similar instrument prohibits
development allowed by this plan, then it shall not apply to that development,
to the extent necessary to allow that development.
(3) In accordance with section 28 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979, the Governor approved of subclauses (1) and (2) before
this plan was made.
9 What special provisions apply to the temporary use of
land?
Regardless of any other provision of this plan, consent may be
granted to the temporary use of land, other than for designated development,
being carried out for a maximum period of 28 days, whether consecutive or
non-consecutive, in any 12 month period.
10 What services are to be provided?
Consent must not be granted unless the consent authority is
satisfied that any requirement made by Sydney Water Corporation Limited for
the provision of water and sewerage services to the site of the proposed
development will be met.
11 What general provisions apply to advertising?
Nothing in this plan prevents consent from being granted to
advertising:(a) on any premises within any zone:(i) if the advertising only indicates the purpose for which the
premises are or the site is used, and
(ii) the Council is satisfied that the advertising will not interfere
with the amenity of the area, or
(b) on land in the 1 (a) Rural zone, if the advertising is directing
the travelling public to tourist areas or tourist facilities,
or
(c) on any land to which this plan applies:(i) if the advertising forms part of a shelter or seat, or if the
advertising is in accordance with any agreement entered into with the Council
before the commencement of this plan, and
(ii) if the Council is satisfied that the advertising will not
interfere with the amenity of the locality.
12 Is development publicly exhibited?
(1) The objective of this clause is to provide for public
participation in the decision-making process related to development
applications that potentially may affect other properties as well as the
property proposed to be developed or are of general public
interest.
(2) Certain development applications will be publicly exhibited by the
Council in accordance with any relevant development control
plan.
(3) This clause does not apply to an application for development
consent to designated development.
13 How are trees and bushland vegetation
preserved?
(1) The objective of this clause is the preservation of valuable trees
and bushland vegetation in Sutherland Shire.
(2) Where it appears to the Council that it is expedient for the
purpose of preserving or securing trees and bushland vegetation in order to
ensure the integrity of the natural environment for both residents of and
visitors to Sutherland Shire, it may make a tree and bushland vegetation
preservation order.
(3) A tree and bushland vegetation preservation order may prohibit the
ringbarking, cutting down, topping, lopping, pruning, removing, injuring or
wilful destruction of any bushland vegetation, tree or trees specified in the
order except with development consent or the permission of the
Council.
(4) A tree and bushland vegetation preservation order made in
accordance with this clause may apply to any tree or trees, or to any
specified class, type or description of trees or to bushland vegetation
described in the order.
(5) A tree and bushland vegetation preservation order may exempt any
tree or any specified class, type or description of trees or bushland
vegetation upon land described in that order.
(6) A tree and bushland vegetation preservation order, and an
amendment or repeal of any such order, has effect only when it has been
published in the Gazette and in a local newspaper.
(7) A person must not contravene, or cause or permit the contravention
of, a tree and bushland vegetation preservation order that is in
force.
(8) It is a sufficient defence to a prosecution for an offence under
this clause if the accused establishes:(a) that the tree or bushland vegetation concerned was dying or dead
or had become dangerous, or
(b) that taking the action alleged to comprise the offence was
reasonably necessary to protect human life, buildings or other property from
imminent danger from a bush fire burning in the vicinity of the land on which
the tree or bushland vegetation was situated, or
(c) that written notice about proposed action to remove trees or
bushland vegetation that pose or poses a fire hazard was given to the Council,
and the Council, before the action alleged to comprise the offence was taken,
confirmed in writing:(i) that the tree or bushland vegetation concerned was in a fuel free
zone within the meaning of the document entitled “Planning for Bush Fire
Protection” published by the Department of Bush Fire
Services, or
(ii) that the tree or bushland vegetation concerned was of a species
classified by the Council as being likely to present a significant fire
hazard, or
(d) that written notice about the proposed action alleged to comprise
the offence was given to the Council, a period of not less than 14 days
occurred after the notice was given (and before the action was taken) and the
Council did not advise the person during that period that it opposed the
action being taken.
In this subclause, notice means a notice that includes
the name and address of the person who gives it and that explains that a tree
of a named species or bushland vegetation situated in a specified position on
land described in the notice is intended to be ringbarked, cut down, topped,
lopped, removed, injured or wilfully destroyed for the purpose of bush fire
hazard reduction.
(9) The provisions of a tree and bushland vegetation preservation
order shall not apply to activities lawfully conducted in accordance with the
Telecommunications Act 1992 of the
Commonwealth, the Roads Act
1993, the Rural Fires Act
1997, the Local Government
Act 1993 or the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
14 How are heritage items and relics protected?
(1) The following development may be carried out only with development
consent:(a) demolishing or damaging a heritage item,
(b) altering a heritage item by making structural changes to its
exterior,
(c) altering a heritage item by making non-structural changes to the
detail, fabric, finish or appearance of its exterior,
(d) moving a relic, or excavating land for the purpose of discovering,
exposing or moving a relic,
(e) erecting a building on, or subdividing, land on which a heritage
item is located,
(f) development, other than exempt development, on land abutting land
that is listed as, or contains an item listed as, a heritage item in Schedule
2 that is not:(i) an item of landscape significance (being an item listed in
Schedule 2 with an identifier containing the letter “L”
corresponding to the item), or
(ii) an item of archaeological significance (being an item listed in
Schedule 2 with an identifier containing the letter “A”
corresponding to the item).
(2) When determining a development application required by this
clause, the consent authority:(a) must consider the effect of the development on the heritage
significance of the heritage item and its setting, and
(b) is to consider any conservation plan that assesses the impact of
the proposal on the heritage significance of the item and its
setting.
(3) The consent authority must notify the Heritage Council if it
intends to consent to the demolition of a heritage item that is of State
significance (as indicated in Schedule 1 or 2) and consider any comments
received from the Heritage Council within 28 days after the notice is
sent.
(4) This clause does not require consent for:(a) maintenance necessary for ongoing protective care, including
bushfire hazard reduction,
(b) internal alterations to residential buildings,
(c) installation of skylights which would not be visible from the
street or other public places,
(d) demolition and erection of rear or side
fences,
(e) lopping or removal of any structures or trees for safety
reasons,
(f) removal of dead or dying trees, or
(g) any other development if the Council considers the proposed
development would not adversely affect the heritage significance of the
heritage item concerned.
15 What incentives apply to heritage items?
Consent may be granted to development of a site of a heritage item
which is a building, except a boatshed or other structure ancillary to a
dwelling, regardless of any other provision of this plan, provided the consent
authority is satisfied that:(a) the proposed development would not adversely affect the heritage
significance of the heritage item, and
(b) the proposed development would have little or no adverse effect on
the amenity of the area, and
(c) conservation of the item will be carried out to the consent
authority’s satisfaction.
16 Development of known or potential archaeological
sites
(1) Consent may be granted to the carrying out of development on an
archaeological site or potential archaeological site that has Aboriginal
cultural heritage significance only if the consent authority:(a) has considered a heritage impact statement of how the proposed
development would affect the conservation of the site and any relic known or
reasonably likely to be located at the site, and
(b) except where the development is integrated development, has
notified the Director-General of National Parks and Wildlife of its intention
to do so and taken into consideration any comments received from that
Director-General within 28 days after the notice was
sent.
(2) Consent may be granted to the carrying out of development on any
other archaeological site or potential archaeological site only if the consent
authority:(a) has considered a heritage impact statement of how the proposed
development would affect the conservation of the site and any relic known or
reasonably likely to be located at the site, and
(b) has notified the Heritage Council of its intention to do so and
taken into consideration any comments received from the Heritage Council
within 28 days after the notice was sent.
17 What is exempt development?
(1) Development of minimal environmental impact listed in Schedule 4
is exempt development, subject to subclauses (2) and
(3).
(2) Development is exempt development only if:(a) the development is in accordance with the specified predetermined
development standards and other requirements identified for that development
in Schedule 4, and
(b) the development is ancillary to an existing legal use of a
property and will be contained wholly within the property,
and
(c) the development complies with the deemed-to-satisfy provisions of
the Building Code of Australia
(“BCA”) and the standards currently prescribed in the Environmental Planning and
Assessment Regulation 2000, and
(d) the development does not contravene any condition of a development
consent applying to the land, and
(e) the development does not result in removal, pruning or lopping of
trees or bushland vegetation which would otherwise require consent or the
permission of the Council to remove, prune or lop under the Council’s
tree and bushland vegetation preservation order, and
(f) the development does not result in a lesser landscape area or
greater floorspace ratio than allowed by this plan, and
(g) the development does not cause interference with the amenity of
the neighbourhood because of the emission of noise, vibration, smell, fumes,
smoke, vapour, steam, soot, ash, dust, waste water, waste products, grit or
oil or otherwise, and
(h) the development is not carried out within the zone of influence of
or over an existing or proposed easement or public sewer main or, if over a
sewer main, the proposal complies with the “building over sewer”
requirements of Sydney Water Corporation Limited applying to the land,
and
(i) if appropriate, any installation involved is carried out to the
manufacturer’s specifications and requirements, and
(j) the development does not restrict any vehicular or pedestrian
access to or from the site or reduce the number of car spaces on the site
below the minimum required by the Council, and
(k) the development does not result in the redirection of surface
storm water or run off onto adjoining private property,
and
(l) (Repealed)
(m) the development does not involve excavation beyond 600 millimetres
below natural ground level, and
(n) it does not involve handling, storing, or using hazardous
chemicals or materials otherwise than on a domestic scale (except on farms and
at a distance of more than 25 metres from any habitable building), and does
not release any hazardous chemicals or materials or any pollutants into the
environment, and
(o) it is located within a bushfire interface area or bushfire prone
area and complies with the Council’s construction standards for
buildings in these areas.
(3) Development is not exempt development if it is carried out on land
that:(a) is listed as, or contains an item listed as, a heritage item in
this plan, or
(b) is an Aboriginal place under the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974, or
(c) is reserved or dedicated under the Crown Lands Act 1989 for the
preservation of flora, fauna or geological formations or for other
environmental protection purposes, or
(d) is a location of an endangered ecological community or critical
habitat as identified in the Threatened
Species Conservation Act 1995, or
(e) is within the 7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways) zone,
or
(f) is within the 7 (b) Environmental Protection (Bushland) zone,
or
(g) is within the 7 (c) Environmental Protection (Water Catchment)
zone, or
(h) is within the 8 (a) National Parks, Nature Reserves and State
Recreation Areas zone, or
(i) is within 40m of a waterbody, as defined in this plan, where the
development requires any excavation, or
(j) is affected by a foreshore building
line.
18 What is complying development?
(1) Development listed in Schedule 5 is complying development, subject
to subclauses (2) and (3).
(2) Development is complying development only if:(a) the development is in accordance with the specified predetermined
development standards and other requirements identified for that development
in Schedule 5, and
(b) the proposed development does not involve a building or a site in
or on which an existing use, as defined in section 106 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979, is being carried out, and
(c) it is consistent with any plan of management approved under
State Environmental Planning
Policy No 44—Koala Habitat Protection, and with any
recovery plan or threat abatement plan in force under the Threatened Species Conservation Act
1995 that may apply to the land, and
(d) it does not contravene any condition of a development consent
applying to the land, and
(e) the development complies with the deemed-to-satisfy provisions of
the Building Code of Australia
(“BCA”) and the standards currently prescribed in the Environmental Planning and
Assessment Regulation 2000, and
(f) the development does not result in a landscape area less than or
floorspace ratio greater than permitted by this plan, and
(g) the development does not restrict any vehicular or pedestrian
access to or from the site or reduce the number of car spaces on the site
below the minimum required by the Council, and
(h) the development will not result in removal, pruning or lopping of
trees or bushland vegetation which would require the consent or permission of
the Council to remove, prune or lop under the Council’s tree and
bushland vegetation preservation order, and
(i) the development is not carried out within the zone of influence of
or over an existing or proposed easement or public sewer main or, if over a
sewer main, the proposal complies with the “building over sewer”
requirements of Sydney Water Corporation Limited applying to the land,
and
(j) the development will not result in the redirection of surface
storm water or run off onto adjoining private property.
(k) (Repealed)
(3) Development is not complying development if it is carried out on
land that:(a) is identified by the Council as being:(i) within a bushfire interface area, or
(ii) subject to flooding, tidal inundation, subsidence or land slip,
or
(iii) contaminated land, or
(b) is listed as, or contains an item listed as, a heritage item in
this plan or is on land that abuts a heritage item, or
(b1) abuts land that is listed as, or contains an item listed as, a
heritage item in Schedule 2 that is not:(i) an item of landscape significance (being an item listed in
Schedule 2 with an identifier containing the letter “L”
corresponding to the item), or
(ii) an item of archaeological significance (being an item listed in
Schedule 2 with an identifier containing the letter “A”
corresponding to the item),
(c) is an Aboriginal place under the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974, or
(d) is reserved or dedicated under the Crown Lands Act 1989 for the
preservation of flora, fauna or geological formations or for other
environmental protection purposes, or
(e) is identified on any of the maps marked “Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000—Acid
Sulfate Soils Planning Maps” and the Council has not
approved an Acid Sulfate Soils Management Plan for the proposed development,
or
(f) is a location of an endangered ecological community or critical
habitat as identified in the Threatened
Species Conservation Act 1995, or
(g) is within the 1 (a) Rural zone, or
(h) is within the 1 (b) Rural (Future Urban) zone,
or
(i) is within the 6 (a) Public Recreation zone, or
(j) is within the 7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways) zone,
or
(k) is within the 7 (b) Environmental Protection (Bushland) zone,
or
(l) is within the 7 (c) Environmental Protection (Water Catchment)
zone, or
(m) is within the 8 (a) National Parks, Nature Reserves and State
Recreation Areas zone, or
(n) has previously been used as a service station, for intensive
agriculture, mining or extractive industry, for waste storage or waste
treatment, or for the manufacture of chemicals, asbestos or asbestos products
and a notice of completion of remediation work for the proposed use has not
been given to the Council in accordance with State Environmental Planning Policy No
55—Remediation of Land, or
(o) is affected by a foreshore building line, except in Sylvania
Waters, or
(p) is within 40m of a waterbody, as defined in this plan, where the
development requires any excavation, or
(q) is adjacent to an arterial road or arterial road reservation where
the development proposes a new, or alters an existing, vehicular accessway to
that road or reservation.
(4) A complying development certificate issued for any such
development is to be subject to the conditions for the development specified
in any applying development control plan adopted by the Council, as in force
when the certificate is issued.
19 What is a foreshore scenic protection area?
(1) The objective of the foreshore scenic protection area is to limit
the scale of development and protect the landscape and visual character of
foreshore areas of Sutherland Shire.
(2) A foreshore scenic protection area is shown on the maps by
hatching. It applies to land within a number of zones next to Bate Bay, Port
Hacking, the Georges River and Woronora River.
(3) Buildings in a foreshore scenic protection area are required by
the development control tables to have more landscaped area than buildings
outside the area.
20 Foreshore building lines and waterfront
development
(1) The objectives of this clause are:(a) preservation and enhancement of the natural features and
vegetation near where the land meets the water,
(b) restoration of the land below the foreshore building line, so far
as practicable, to a natural state, with a minimum intrusion of man-made
structures,
(c) no buildings below the foreshore building line other than
buildings excepted by this clause,
(d) a significant reduction in the number of structures below the
foreshore building line, particularly on redevelopment of a
site,
(e) conservation and enhancement of waterfront buildings of heritage
value,
(f) avoidance of adverse ecological effects on the waterways,
and
(g) public use of the intertidal areas below the mean high water mark
or high water mark, where appropriate.
(2) In this clause:foreshore
building line for an allotment means:
(a) if the maps indicate by a black line that a foreshore building
line applies to the allotment—the line across the allotment parallel to,
and at the greater of the following distances from, the mean high water mark
at 24 April 1980:(i) the distance specified on the maps, or
(ii) 7.5 metres from the mean high water mark for the time being,
or
(b) if the maps do not indicate by a black line that a foreshore
building line applies to the allotment, and the allotment adjoins or is
adjacent to the mean high water mark for the time being—the line across
the allotment parallel to, and 7.5 metres from, the mean high water mark for
the time being (except in respect of land at Sandy Point, where the line is
taken to be the greater of the following distances from the tidal
water:(i) the 1% Annual Exceedance Probability flood line,
or
(ii) a line across the allotment parallel to and 7.5 metres from the
mean high water mark for the time being), or
(c) regardless of paragraphs (a) and (b), if the allotment adjoins a
waterfront reserve—the line across the allotment parallel to, and 7.5
metres from, the landward boundary of the waterfront
reserve.
For the purposes of this definition, the mean high water mark
at 24 April 1980 on any land is taken to be as shown on the last
Deposited Plan or other plan which defined the mean high water mark and was
registered by the Registrar-General on or before 24 April 1980. It is not
affected by reclamation, works or other changes before or after that date.
Establishing the foreshore building line for an allotment to which paragraph
(a) or (b) applies will require reference to the mean high water mark at 24
April 1980 on adjoining or adjacent land in some
cases.
(3) A person must not erect a building or carry out a work on land
between a foreshore building line and the tidal water in respect of which the
line is fixed.
(4) However, subclause (3) does not apply to:(a) boat sheds,
(b) watercraft facilities,
(c) in-ground swimming pools, no higher than 300 millimetres above
ground level at any point (unless located in the area of Bundeena or
Maianbar),
(d) works, including mechanical works, to enable pedestrian
access,
(e) landscaping and barbecues.
(4A) Additionally, in respect of land at Sandy Point that is located on
the landward side of a line parallel to and 7.5 metres from the mean high
water mark, subclause (3) does not apply in relation to the following:(a) development for the purpose of tennis courts and ancillary
development (but only if any structures resulting from the ancillary
development are non-habitable),
(b) development for the purposes of a dwelling-house to be partially
located on flood liable land, but only if the Council is satisfied
that:(i) the land is categorised as low hazard by a flood study undertaken
in accordance with the Floodplain Management
Manual prepared by the New South Wales Government,
and
(ii) the development will not have a significant effect on the depth,
velocity or distribution of floodwaters, and
(iii) all pedestrian and vehicular access to the dwelling-house will be
provided to the part of the dwelling-house that is located above the 1% Annual
Exceedance Probability flood line, and
(iv) the dwelling-house will be designed and constructed to reduce or
eliminate flood damage, and
(v) the relevant height limit imposed by clause 34 (2) will not be
exceeded, and
(vi) the dwelling-house will not unreasonably restrict views from
buildings on adjoining lots, and
(vii) the appearance of the escarpment defining the limit of the flood
plain will not be adversely affected by the cumulative impact of
dwelling-house construction.
(5) Development consent must not be granted to any development on an
allotment of land affected by a foreshore building line, or to any development
below the mean high water mark from time to time on an allotment or within the
7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways) zone adjoining the allotment,
unless the consent authority is satisfied that the following buildings or
works (if any) will be removed before, or within a reasonable time after, the
development is carried out:(a) any building or work on the allotment between the foreshore
building line and the mean high water mark or high water mark, in each case as
shown on the latest registered Deposited Plan showing the allotment, not being
a building or work specified in subclause (4), or
(b) any building or work below the mean high water mark or high water
mark, in each case as shown on the latest registered Deposited Plan showing
the allotment, being a building or work on the allotment or on land adjacent
to the allotment which is in the same ownership as the allotment or to which
the owner or occupier of the allotment has some form of occupancy rights, but
not being a building or work specified in subclause (4)
(b).
(6) However, subclause (5) does not apply to a building or work if the
consent authority is satisfied that requiring removal of the building or
work:(a) would be inconsistent with any of the objectives of this clause,
or
(b) is not necessary to achieve the objectives of this clause,
or
(c) is unreasonable or unnecessary in the circumstances of the case,
having regard to the provisions of any relevant development control
plan.
(7) This clause does not apply to buildings or works on reclaimed
land, or on land adjacent to reclaimed land, in Sylvania
Waters.
(8) To avoid doubt, State Environmental Planning Policy No
1—Development Standards applies to a requirement made by
subclause (3) in the same way as it applies to a development
standard.
21 What public land has been reclassified?
The public land described in Schedule 6 is reclassified as
operational land for the purposes of the Local Government Act
1993.
22 Development on land identified on acid sulfate soils
planning maps
(1) A person must not, without development consent, carry out works
described in the following table on land of the class specified for those
works, except as provided by subclause (3).
Class of land as shown on acid sulfate soils
planning maps | Works |
1 | Any works |
2 | • Works below the ground surface.
• Works by which the watertable is likely to be
lowered.
|
3 | • Works beyond 1 metre below the ground surface.
• Works by which the watertable is likely to be lowered beyond 1
metre below the ground surface.
|
4 | • Works beyond 2 metres below the ground
surface.
• Works by which the watertable is likely to be lowered beyond 2
metres below the ground surface.
|
5 | • Works within 500 metres of adjacent Class 1, 2, 3 or 4 land which
are likely to lower the watertable below 1 metre AHD on adjacent Class 1, 2, 3
or 4 land.
|
(2) For the purposes of the Table to subclause (1), works includes:(a) any disturbance of more than one tonne of soil (such as occurs in
carrying out agriculture, the construction or maintenance of drains,
extractive industries, dredging, the construction of artificial waterbodies
(including canals, dams and detention basins) or foundations, or flood
mitigation works, or
(b) any other works that are likely to lower the
watertable.
(3) This clause does not require development consent for the carrying
out of works if:(a) a copy of a preliminary assessment of the proposed works
undertaken in accordance with the Acid Sulfate
Soils Assessment Guidelines has been given to the Council,
and
(b) the Council has provided written advice to the person proposing to
carry out the works confirming that results of the preliminary assessment
indicate the proposed works need not be carried out pursuant to an acid
sulfate soils management plan prepared in accordance with the Acid Sulfate Soils Assessment
Guidelines.
(4) Development consent required by this clause must not be granted
unless the consent authority has considered:(a) the adequacy of an acid sulfate soils management plan prepared for
the proposed development in accordance with the Acid Sulfate Soils Assessment Guidelines,
and
(b) the likelihood of the proposed development resulting in the
discharge of acid water, and
(c) any comments received from the Department of Land and Water
Conservation within 21 days of the Council having sent that department a copy
of the development application and of the related acid sulfate soils
management plans.
(5) This clause requires development consent for works to be carried
out by the Council, or other public authorities, despite the provisions of
clause 6.
23 Exceptions to this Plan
(also refer to clause 65 and clause 69)
(1) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, consent
may be granted to development for the purpose of any of the following:(a) a general store and residential flat building (with a maximum of 3
units) at No 50 Pacific Crescent, Maianbar, on land shown edged heavy black on
the map marked “Map 30: No. 50 Pacific
Crescent” in Part 1 of Schedule 7 to this
plan,
(b) a motor showroom and ancillary uses on Nos 28 and 30 Tea Gardens
Avenue and Nos 5 to 21 Waratah Street, Kirrawee,
(c) outdoor markets on the Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club site
provided that they are confined to the area shown on the map marked
“Map 1: Cronulla/Sutherland Leagues Club,
Captain Cook Drive, Woolooware” in Schedule 7 to this
Plan, operate only one day per week and cease to operate no later than on 31
December 2004,
(d) a motor showroom on land shown on the map marked “Map 2: 101–119 Princes Highway,
Sylvania” in Schedule 7 to this
Plan,
(e) car parking ancillary to the use of a motor showroom on land shown
on the map marked “Map 4: Rear 101–107
Princes Highway, Sylvania” in Schedule 7 to this
Plan,
(f) a community facility or tourist information centre on land shown
on the map marked “Map 6: RTA Depot—Old
Princes Highway, Engadine” in Schedule 7 to this
Plan,
(g) a recreation facility, being a sailing club, shown on the map
marked “Map 7: Burraneer Bay Sailing Club,
Burraneer Bay” in Schedule 7 to this
Plan,
(h) a watercraft facility, beach or foreshore protection work, marina
or swimming enclosure on any land within 10 metres of any adjoining land
within the 7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways)
zone,
(i) light rail or public transport infrastructure on any land to which
this plan applies.
(j) a motor showroom with an area set aside exclusively for customer
parking, no pedestrian or vehicular access or egress to Kumbardang Avenue and
incorporating acceleration and deceleration lanes to and from all egress and
access to The Boulevarde, on land shown on map “Map 9: 220–234 The Boulevarde, Nos 1–3 Kiora Road
and Nos 1–5 Kumbardang Avenue, Miranda” in
Schedule 7 to this Plan.
(2) Regardless of the development control table in this plan, the
following land may be used for helicopter landings and take-offs associated
with emergency situations or, only with development consent, on not more than
ten other occasions per year:(a) Sutherland Oval, The Grand Parade, Sutherland,
(b) Waratah Park, Sutherland,
(c) Heathcote Oval, East Heathcote,
(d) “Old Tip site” Illawarra Road,
Menai.
24 What zones apply to land?
The following zones apply as identified on the maps:1 (a) Rural
1 (b) Rural (Future Urban)
2 (a1) Residential
2 (a2) Residential
2 (b) Residential
2 (c) Residential
2 (e1) Residential
2 (e2) Residential
3 (a) General Business
3 (b) Neighbourhood Business
4 (a) General Industrial
5 (a) Special Uses
5 (b) Special Uses (Railways)
5 (c) Special Uses (Arterial Road)
5 (d) Special Uses (Future Arterial Road)
5 (e) Special Uses (Proposed Road)
5 (f) Special Uses (Waste Recycling)
5 (g) Special Uses (General Road)
6 (a) Public Recreation
6 (b) Private Recreation
6 (c) Regional Recreation
6 (d) Future Recreation
7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways)
7 (b) Environmental Protection (Bushland)
7 (c) Environmental Protection (Water Catchment)
8 (a) National Parks, Nature Reserves and State Recreation
Areas
9 (a) Mixed Residential/Business
Part 2 Rural zones
25 What rural zones apply?
This Part applies to land within the following rural zones
identified on the maps:1 (a) Rural
1 (b) Rural (Future Urban)
26 What controls apply to dwelling houses in the 1 (a) Rural
zone?
(1) A dwelling house may be erected in the 1 (a) Rural zone only with
development consent, and only if the dwelling house is:(a) on 2 hectares or more of land, and
(b) used in conjunction with agriculture, an animal establishment or
rural industry.
(2) Existing dwelling houses in the Rural 1 (a) zone may be enlarged
or altered with development consent.
(3) Any dwelling house erected or enlarged in the Rural 1 (a) zone
must comply with the following:(a) height must not exceed 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost
ceiling and 9 metres to the highest point on the roof, and
(b) gross floor area must not increase by more than 30m2 or
10% of the existing gross floor area, whichever is the lesser, or exceed a
maximum floorspace of 300m2 (inclusive of any ancillary
buildings).
27 Acquisition of land zoned 1 (a) Rural
The owner of any allotment in the 1 (a) Rural zone, which has a
frontage to Woronora River (as identified on the maps), may request the
Minister administering the Environmental
Planning and Assessment Act 1979 to acquire the land. On
receipt of the request, the Corporation under the Act shall acquire the
land.
28 What development is allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
the rural zones and what development is allowed or is prohibited in each
zone.Development control table
Zone 1 (a) Rural
1 Objective of the zone
The provision of land suitable for a range of rural-oriented
activities or uses less suited to an urban
environment.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
agriculture (involving land clearing, earthworks or the erection
of buildings or structures),
animal establishments,
drainage,
dwelling houses,
recreation areas,
roads,
rural industries,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 1 (b) Rural (Future Urban)
1 Objective of the zone
The maintenance of land in an undeveloped state until appropriate
assessments are made of the sustainability of the land for urban
development.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
drainage,
recreation areas,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 3 Residential zones
29 What residential zones apply?
This Part applies to land within the following residential zones
identified on the maps:2 (a1) Residential
2 (a2) Residential
2 (b) Residential
2 (c) Residential
2 (e1) Residential
2 (e2) Residential
30 Special considerations in the residential zones
When assessing the impact of residential land uses proposed in the
residential zones by development applications and whether those uses satisfy
the objectives of the zone concerned, the consent authority must take into
consideration the following matters and must not grant consent unless it is
satisfied that those matters have been adequately addressed by relevant
documentation submitted to it:(a) the impact that the proposed development may have on adjoining
development, buildings and open space from loss of sunlight, views and
privacy,
(b) the effect of the proposed development on the quality of the
streetscape,
(c) the cumulative impact of successive development on the general
character of the neighbourhood,
(d) the impact of the proposed development on adjoining properties in
terms of size, bulk, height and amount of landscaped area,
(e) the retention and enhancement of existing
vegetation,
(f) any adverse impact on the natural and built
environment,
(g) the location of the proposed development in relation to potential
risks, including flooding, bush fire and other hazards,
(h) the impact that the proposed development may have on any public
area or waterbody from loss of sunlight, views and visual
amenity.
31 Special considerations for non-residential uses in
residential zones
When assessing the impact of non-residential land uses proposed in
the residential zones by development applications, the consent authority must
consider whether the proposal adequately addresses the following:(a) the amount of traffic that will be generated by the proposed
development and whether or not there will be a significant change to the
traffic volumes currently experienced within the locality as a result of the
development that would affect the amenity of the area, and
(b) the potential of the proposed development to cause a level and
kind of noise above and different from the normal background noise of the
area, particularly noise resulting from any night time activities generated by
the development, and
(c) the necessity that the proposed use does not detract from the
economic viability of any existing neighbourhood or commercial
centre.
32 Bushland vegetation considerations
Consent must not be granted to residential development unless the
consent authority is satisfied that the proposed development will not have a
significant adverse effect on:(a) the protection of rare and endangered flora and fauna species and
the protection of habitats for native flora and fauna, or
(b) the protection of wildlife corridors and vegetation links with
other nearby bushland vegetation, or
(c) the protection of bushland vegetation as a natural stabiliser of
the soil surface and the protection of existing landforms such as natural
drainage lines, water courses and foreshores, or
(d) the protection of bushland vegetation of scenic value and the
retention of the unique visual identity of the
landscape.
33 What development is allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
the residential zones and what development is allowed or is prohibited in each
zone.Development control table
Zone 2 (a1) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A residential environment:(a) where the scale, amenity and general character of the area is
preserved, and
(b) where the streetscape is characterised by detached 1 and 2 storey
residential buildings, and
(c) where the predominantly single dwelling house character of a
neighbourhood is not diminished by the cumulative impact of successive dual
occupancy, town house or villa house developments, and
(d) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential
amenity.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
child care centres,
community facilities,
dual occupancy housing, except on internal
allotments,
dwelling houses,
educational establishments,
housing for older people or people with a
disability,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
townhouses, except on internal allotments,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
villa houses, except on internal
allotments.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 2 (a2) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A lower density residential environment than the 2 (a1)
Residential zone, in an environmentally and visually sensitive
location:(a) where the scale, amenity and sensitive environmental character of
the area is preserved, and
(b) where the streetscape is characterised by detached 1 and 2 storey
residential buildings within a landscape setting, and
(c) where the predominantly single dwelling house character of a
neighbourhood is not diminished by the cumulative impact of successive dual
occupancy, townhouse or villa house developments, and
(d) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential
amenity.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
child care centres,
community facilities,
dual occupancy housing, except on internal
allotments,
dwelling houses,
educational establishments,
housing for older people or people with a
disability,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
townhouses, except on internal allotments,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
villa houses, except on internal
allotments.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 2 (b) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A medium density residential environment:(a) that provides a graduation between high and low density
residential areas, and
(b) with co-ordinated, efficient and economical development of villas
and townhouses to ensure high quality design outcomes, and
(c) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential
amenity.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
backpackers accommodation,
boarding houses,
child care centres,
community facilities,
dual occupancy housing, except on internal
allotments,
dwelling houses,
educational establishments,
housing for older people or people with a
disability,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
townhouses, except on internal allotments,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
villa houses, except on internal
allotments.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 2 (c) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A high density residential environment:(a) in close proximity to the major shopping centres and railway
stations, and
(b) with co-ordinated, efficient and economical development of
residential flat buildings of high quality design, and
(c) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential
amenity.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
backpackers accommodation,
boarding houses,
child care centres,
community facilities,
educational establishments,
housing for older people or people with a
disability,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential flats,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
townhouses,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
villa houses.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 2 (e1) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A residential environment in an environmentally and visually
sensitive locality:(a) where the scale, amenity and general character of the area is
preserved, and
(b) where the streetscape and views to the land from the waterways are
characterised by 1 and 2 storey detached residential buildings,
and
(c) which is protected from visually intrusive development, especially
where buildings or works may be viewed from the waterway or on sites which
contain significant vegetation or natural features which should be preserved,
and
(d) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential amenity,
and
(e) where the natural environment is protected from development that
would harm the foreshore, escarpment and habitats in the vicinity of
waterways.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
child care centres,
cluster housing,
community facilities,
dual occupancy housing, except on internal allotments and on land
at Sandy Point,
dwelling houses,
educational establishments,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 2 (e2) Residential
1 Objective of the zone
A residential environment at a lower density than the Residential
2 (e1) zone in an environmentally and visually sensitive locality:(a) where the scale, amenity and sensitive environmental character of
the area is preserved, and
(b) where the streetscape and views to the land from the waterways are
characterised by 1 and 2 storey detached residential buildings within a
landscape setting, and
(c) which is protected from visually intrusive development, especially
where buildings or works are within view of any waterway or on sites which
contain significant vegetation or natural features that should be preserved,
and
(d) where non-residential uses provide necessary services to the local
neighbourhood without adversely affecting the residential amenity,
and
(e) where the natural environment is protected from development that
would harm the foreshore, escarpment and habitats in the vicinity of
waterways.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
child care centres,
cluster housing,
community facilities,
dual occupancy housing, except on internal
allotments,
dwelling houses,
educational establishments,
medical facilities,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
residential medical practice,
roads,
tennis courts (private),
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Development below the foreshore building line allowed by clause
20.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
34 What height limits apply in residential zones?
(1) The objectives of the height limits are to:(a) achieve consistency in the scale of buildings within each zone,
and
(b) minimise adverse impacts from development on adjoining or nearby
properties due to loss of privacy and views, and overshadowing,
and
(c) relate the building form to the topography of the site,
and
(d) ensure all buildings in a residential zone, other than the 2 (c)
Residential zone, maintain a maximum 2 storey
appearance.
(2) The height limits are:(a) Except for buildings in the 2 (c) Residential zone, buildings in
the area of Bundeena or Maianbar, villa houses and housing for older people or
people with a disability, a building must not exceed a height of:(i) 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost ceiling,
and
(ii) 9 metres to the highest point of the
roof.
(b) Before granting consent for development within the 2 (c)
Residential zone, the consent authority must consider any height limit
specified in any development control plan applying to
land.
(c) Villa houses must be 1 storey only and must not exceed 5.4 metres
to the highest point of the roof.
(d) The height limits for housing for older people or people with a
disability are as specified in State Environmental Planning Policy No
5—Housing for Older People or People with a
Disability.
(e) Basement carparking must not exceed 1.5 metres above ground level
to the top of the slab.
(3) For land located in the area of Bundeena or Maianbar, the Council
must consider any height limit recommended in a development control plan
applying to the land.
35 What floorspace ratios apply in residential
zones?
(1) The objectives of the floorspace ratio requirements are:(a) to provide a degree of consistency for existing residents as to
the size and bulk of potential buildings in their neighbourhood,
and
(b) to allow buildings of sufficient scale to satisfy the needs of
residents while preventing development of sites beyond community expectations
and the environmental capacity of the zone.
(2) The maximum floorspace ratio for buildings in a residential zone
is as indicated in the following Table:
Table
Residential Zone | Maximum floorspace ratio or gross floor
area |
2 (a1) Residential | 0.45:1 |
2 (a2) Residential | 0.4:1 |
2 (b) Residential | 0.45:1 for dwelling houses and dual occupancy housing 0.7:1 for other buildings |
2 (c) Residential | Except where a floorspace ratio is specified in a
development control plan, the maximum floorspace ratio is 1:1. The consent
authority must consider floor space ratios specified in any development
control plan applying to the land. |
2 (e1) Residential | 0.4:1, except as provided below: If the area of an existing allotment is less than the minimum
allotment size that clause 37 requires for new allotments in this zone, then
the maximum gross floor area for a dwelling house on the allotment is the
lesser of:(a) the maximum gross floor area that a floorspace ratio of 0.4:1
would allow on a minimum sized allotment, and
(b) the maximum gross floor area allowed on the actual allotment by a
floorspace ratio of 0.45:1.
|
2 (e2) Residential | 0.4:1, except as provided below: If the area of an existing allotment is less than the minimum
allotment size that clause 37 requires for new allotments in this zone, then
the maximum gross floor area for a dwelling house on the allotment is the
lesser of:(a) the maximum gross floor area that a floorspace ratio of 0.4:1
would allow on a minimum sized allotment, and
(b) the maximum gross floor area allowed on the actual allotment by a
floorspace ratio of 0.45:1.
|
(3) Despite the other provisions of this plan, for the purpose of
calculating the floorspace ratio for land at Sandy Point the following are to
be excluded from the area of the site on any allotment created in accordance
with a development consent for which application was made on or after 1
January 2002:(a) the area of any land between the 1% Annual Exceedance Probability
flood line and a line parallel to and 30 metres above the mean high water mark
for the time being, but only if the 1% Annual Exceedance Probability flood
line is more than 30 metres from that mean high water
mark,
(b) any area of right of carriageway that affects the
allotment.
36 What minimum landscaped area requirements apply in
residential zones?
(1) The objectives of the landscaped area requirements are:(a) to ensure opportunities for tree retention and tree planting to
preserve and enhance the tree canopy of Sutherland Shire,
and
(b) to ensure that unbuilt upon areas balance the built form,
and
(c) to contain urban runoff flows by minimising the impervious areas
on residential development sites.
(2) The minimum landscaped area for an allotment in a residential
zone, other than an allotment in the area of Bundeena or Maianbar, is as
indicated in the following Table:
Table
Zone | Minimum landscaped area required as percentage of
allotment (FSPA means foreshore scenic protection area) |
2 (a1) Residential | 45% (or 50% when in FSPA) |
2 (a2) Residential | 50% (or 55% when in FSPA) |
2 (b) Residential | 45% (or 50% when in FSPA) for dwelling houses and
dual occupancy housing, and 40% (or 45% when in FSPA) for other
development |
2 (c) Residential | 65% |
2 (e1) Residential | 50% (for allotments burdened by a
right-of-carriageway, 25% of the area of the right-of-carriageway may be
included as landscaped area) |
2 (e2) Residential | 55% (for allotments burdened by a
right-of-carriageway, 25% of the area of the right-of-carriageway may be
included as landscaped area) |
(3) If development is carried out on an allotment for the purpose of
villa houses only, the minimum landscaped area required is reduced by 5% where
all other relevant development standards in this plan are complied with on the
allotment.
(4) The minimum landscaped area for an allotment in a residential zone
in the area of Bundeena or Maianbar is as indicated in the following
table:
Zone | Minimum landscaped area required as percentage of
allotment (FSPA means Foreshore Scenic Protection Area) |
2 (a1) Residential | 55% when in FSPA |
2 (e1) Residential | 60% when in FSPA |
2 (e2) Residential | 60% when in FSPA |
37 What minimum allotment sizes apply in residential
zones?
(1) The objectives of the minimum allotment size requirements
are:(a) to achieve efficient use of residential land, having regard to the
existing allotment sizes across each zone, the expectations of the community
and the environmental capacity of the various zones, and
(b) within the 2 (b) Residential and 2 (c) Residential zones, to
reduce the instances of isolated parcels being left with reduced development
potential, and
(c) to complement the floorspace ratio requirements to ensure an
appropriate number of dwellings per site having regard to the characteristics
of the zone.
(2) The minimum size for an allotment in a residential zone is
indicated in the following Table:
Table
Residential zone | Minimum allotment sizes |
2 (a1) Residential | For creation of new allotments: Standard allotment—550sqm, Internal allotment—700sqm, except as provided below:600sqm for the site of 2 dwellings, 1200sqm for the site of 3 or more
dwellings. |
2 (a2) Residential | For creation of new allotments: Standard allotment—850sqm, Internal allotment—1000sqm, except as provided below:850sqm for the site of 2 dwellings, 1200sqm for the site of 3 or more
dwellings. |
2 (b) Residential | For creation of new allotments: Standard allotment—550sqm, Internal allotment—700sqm, except as provided below:600 sqm for the site of 2 dwellings, For townhouse or villa house development, except where a development
control plan specifies a minimum amalgamation of parcels or minimum allotment
size for townhouse or villa development, the minimum allotment size is 1200
sqm. The consent authority must consider any minimum amalgamation of parcels
or minimum allotment size specified in any development control plan applying
to the land. |
2 (c) Residential | For residential flat building development, except where a
development control plan specifies a minimum amalgamation of parcels or
minimum allotment size for residential flat development, the minimum allotment
size is 1800 sqm. The consent authority must consider any minimum amalgamation of parcels
or minimum allotment size specified in any development control plan applying
to the land. |
2 (e1) Residential | For creation of new allotments: Standard allotment—550sqm, Internal allotment—700sqm, except as provided below:600sqm for the site of 2 dwellings, 2100sqm for the site of 3 or more dwellings, with the overall
density not to exceed 1 dwelling per 550sqm of site area for a standard
allotment and the overall density not to exceed 1 dwelling per 700sqm of site
area for an internal allotment. |
2 (e2) Residential | For creation of new allotments: Standard allotment—850sqm, Internal allotment—1000sqm, except as provided below:900sqm for the site of 2 dwellings, 3000sqm for the site of 3 or more dwellings, with the overall
density not to exceed 1 dwelling per 850sqm of site area for a standard
allotment and the overall density not to exceed 1 dwelling per 1000sqm of site
area for an internal allotment. |
(3) The area of an access corridor is not to be included when the size
of an internal allotment is calculated.
(4) No minimum allotment size requirement applies in the case of the
erection of a single dwelling house on an existing allotment or to the strata
subdivision of land.
(5) Despite the other provisions of this plan, for the purpose of
calculating the minimum allotment size for land at Sandy Point the following
are to be excluded from the area of the site:(a) the area of any land between the 1% Annual Exceedance Probability
flood line and a line parallel to and 7.5 metres above the mean high water
mark for the time being, and
(b) any area of any right of carriageway that affects the
allotment.
38 What minimum allotment dimensions apply in residential
zones?
(1) The objectives of the allotment dimension requirements are:(a) to require sufficient allotment widths and depth to enable some
variations in design for development, and
(b) to ensure sites have adequate widths and depth for the arrangement
of sufficient side boundary setbacks, efficient driveways, sufficient
landscaped areas and satisfactory building form that takes into account the
uses made of adjoining properties.
(2) The minimum allotment width dimensions are as indicated in the
following Table:
Table
Zone | Minimum allotment width |
2 (a1) Residential | 15m for creation of a new allotment, except as provided
below: 25m for the site of 3 or more dwellings |
2 (a2) Residential | 18m for creation of a new allotment, except as provided
below: 25m for the site of 3 or more dwellings |
2 (b) Residential | For townhouse or villa house development, except
where a development control plan specifies an amalgamation of parcels, the
minimum allotment width is 25m. |
2 (c) Residential | For residential flat building development, except
where a development control plan specifies an amalgamation of parcels, the
minimum allotment width is 30m. |
2 (e1) Residential | 15m for creation of a new allotment, except as provided
below: 25m for the site of 3 or more dwellings |
2 (e2) Residential | 18m for creation of a new allotment, except as provided
below: 25m for the site of 3 or more dwellings |
(3) A minimum allotment depth of 27m applies for the creation of a new
allotment in all residential zones, except for the creation of an allotment by
strata subdivision of land.
(4) No minimum allotment width or depth requirement applies for the
site of a single dwelling house or dual occupancy development if it is an
existing allotment.
(5) For townhouse, villa house or residential flat development, the
consent authority must consider any provisions relating to the amalgamation of
parcels specified in any development control plan applying to the
land.
39 Residential flat buildings not complying with minimum
allotment size requirements
If development for the purpose of a residential flat building is
proposed in the 2 (c) Residential zone on a site that is less than the minimum
allotment size required by this plan, development consent must not be granted
for the development unless the development complies with the following:(a) the maximum floorspace ratio is (site area in square metres
× 0.0005) + 0.1:1 (but is not greater than 1:1 and not less than
0.7:1), and
(b) the site has a minimum landscaped area of
65%.
40 Subdivision of dual occupancy housing
(1) Development consent must not be granted for a subdivision which
creates separate allotments for each of the two dwellings comprising dual
occupancy housing.
(2) This clause does not apply to dual occupancy housing created in
accordance with a consent granted before, on or after 1 September 1995
if:(a) the application for consent was made before 19 May 1995 and each
allotment in the subdivision has an area of at least the minimum area applying
at the date of the application for consent, or
(b) the application for consent was made on or after 19 May 1995 but
before 1 September 1995 and each allotment in the subdivision has an area of
at least 450sqm.
(3) This clause does not apply to the strata subdivision of dual
occupancy housing created in accordance with a granted development consent
where the application for that consent was made on or before 28 February
2000.
(4) An allotment of land created by a subdivision in accordance with
this clause or a building erected on such an allotment may not be further
subdivided.
41 Can development within a residential zone be
limited?
Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, a
development control plan relating to land within a residential zone may
recommend restrictions on specific types of development otherwise permitted on
the land.
Part 4 Business zones
42 What business zones apply in this plan?
This Part applies to land within the following business zones
identified on the maps:3 (a) General Business
3 (b) Neighbourhood Business
43 What height limits apply in business zones?
(1) Except where a maximum height is specified in a development
control plan, the maximum height for a building in a business zone is:(a) 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost ceiling,
and
(b) 9 metres to the highest point on the
roof.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum height specified
in any development control plan applying to the
land.
44 What floorspace ratios apply in business zones?
(1) Except where a maximum floorspace ratio is specified in a
development control plan, the maximum floorspace ratio for buildings in a
business zone is:(a) 2:1 in the 3 (a) General Business zone, and
(b) 1:1 in the 3 (b) Neighbourhood Business
zone.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum floorspace ratio
specified in any development control plan applying to the
land.
45 What controls apply to residential development in the
business zones?
(1) Except where a development control plan specifies a maximum amount
of residential floor space for a site area, the residential floorspace of any
buildings on a site area must not exceed 50% of the total gross floor area of
the buildings on that site area.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum amount of
residential floor space specified in any development control plan applying to
the land.
46 Can development within a business zone be
limited?
Regardless of the development control tables in this plan a
development control plan relating to land within a business zone may recommend
restrictions on specific types of development otherwise permitted on the
land.
47 What development may be allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
the business zones and what development is allowed or prohibited in each
zone.Development control table
Zone 3 (a) General Business
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) Appropriately located land for the provision of a wide range of
retail, business and professional activities.
(b) Business centres with integrated public transport and pedestrian
networks.
(c) Viable business centres supported by appropriate forms of
residential development.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
backpackers accommodation,
boarding houses,
bulky goods retailing,
business premises,
car parking,
child care centres,
community facilities,
convenience stores,
dwellings only in buildings subject to another permitted
use,
educational establishments,
food shops,
hotels,
housing for older people or people with a disability, only in
buildings subject to another permitted use
medical facilities,
motels,
motor showrooms,
nightclubs,
passenger transport terminals,
places of assembly,
places of public worship,
public transport interchanges or associated
structures,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
registered clubs,
residential flats, only in buildings subject to another permitted
use,
restaurants,
roads,
service stations,
sex shops,
shops,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
veterinary hospitals.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 3 (b) Neighbourhood Business
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) Appropriately located land for the provision of small scale retail
and business activities that principally aim to serve the day to day needs of
the surrounding local community.
(b) Business centres with integrated public transport and pedestrian
networks.
(c) Viable neighbourhood centres supported by appropriate forms of
residential development.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
backpackers accommodation,
boarding houses,
business premises,
child care centres,
community facilities,
convenience stores,
dwellings only in buildings subject to another permitted
use,
food shops,
housing for older people or people with a disability, only in
buildings subject to another permitted use,
places of assembly,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
residential flats, only in buildings subject to another permitted
use,
restaurants,
roads,
service stations,
shops,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
veterinary hospitals.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 5 Industrial zones
48 What industrial zone applies in this plan?
This Part applies to land within the following industrial zone
identified on the maps:4 (a) General Industrial
49 What height limits apply in the industrial
zone?
(1) Except where a maximum height is specified in a development
control plan, the maximum height for a building in the industrial zone is 12
metres from ground level to the highest point of the
roof.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum height specified
in any development control plan applying to the
land.
50 What floorspace ratios apply in the industrial
zone?
(1) Except where a maximum floorspace ratio is specified in a
development control plan, the maximum floorspace ratio for buildings in the
industrial zone is 1:1.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum floorspace ratio
specified in any development control plan applying to the
land.
51 Do any special provisions apply to bulky goods retailing
and food shops in the industrial zone?
(1) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, bulky
goods retailing and food shops are prohibited on land in the 4 (a) General
Industrial zone which adjoins land zoned 5 (c) Special Uses (Arterial Road)
where direct vehicular access to the land in the 4 (a) zone is gained from the
land zoned 5 (c).
(2) Each individual bulky goods retailer must have a minimum gross
floorspace of 1000 square metres.
52 Can development within an industrial zone be
limited?
Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, a
development control plan relating to land within the 4 (a) General Industrial
zone may recommend restrictions on specific types of development otherwise
permitted on the land.
53 What development may be allowed in the zone?
The following development control table gives the objectives of
the industrial zone and what development is allowed or is prohibited in the
zone.Development control table
Zone 4 (a) General Industrial
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) Appropriate forms of industrial development which will contribute
to employment generation and the economic growth of the
area.
(b) A range of non-industrial land uses which provide direct services
to those industrial activities and their work force.
(c) To provide for shop and business uses ancillary to a permitted
industrial use and also provide for bulky goods retailing and food shops on
appropriate sites.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
brothels,
bulky goods retailing,
bus depots,
business premises ancillary to another permissible use or to serve
the needs of local industries,
car parking,
child care centres,
convenience stores,
community facilities,
dwelling houses ancillary to another permissible
use,
educational establishment,
food shops,
generating works,
industry,
junk yards,
liquid fuel depots,
motor showrooms,
passenger transport terminals,
places of public worship,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
repair centres,
roads,
road transport terminals,
sawmills,
service stations,
shops ancillary to another permissible use or to serve the needs
of local industries,
utility installations,
vehicle and mechanical repair premises,
veterinary hospitals,
warehouses,
waste recycling and management centres.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 6 Special use zones
54 What special use zones apply in this plan?
This Part applies to land within the following special use zones
identified on the maps:5 (a) Special Uses
5 (b) Special Uses (Railways)
5 (c) Special Uses (Arterial Road)
5 (d) Special Uses (Future Arterial Road)
5 (e) Special Uses (Proposed Road)
5 (f) Special Uses (Waste Recycling)
5 (g) Special Uses (General Road)
55 What height limits apply in special use zones?
(1) Except where a maximum height is specified in a development
control plan, the maximum height for a building in a special use zone
is:(a) 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost ceiling,
and
(b) 9 metres to the highest point of the
roof.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum height specified
in any development control plan applying to the
land.
56 Do any special provisions apply to land zoned 5 (a)
Special Uses—Medical Purposes?
Direct vehicular access to or from The Kingsway from land zoned 5
(a) Special Uses—Medical Purposes is prohibited.
57 Who acquires land?
(1) If you own land in a special use zone you may request the
responsible authority (as shown below) to acquire your land. The request must
be in writing.
(2) On receipt of the request, the responsible authority shall acquire
the land.
Table
Zone | Responsible authority |
5 (a) School | Minister administering the Education Act
1990 |
5 (a) W.S.&D. | Sydney Water Corporation
Limited |
5 (a) Technical College | Technical and Further Education
Commission |
5 (a) Community Facility | Sutherland Shire Council |
5 (a) Parking | Sutherland Shire Council |
5 (b) Railways | State Rail Authority |
5 (d) Future Arterial Road | |
• vacant land and on the 5 year RTA
program
| Roads and Traffic Authority |
• vacant land and NOT on the 5 year RTA
program
| The corporation under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 |
• Not vacant
| Roads and Traffic Authority |
5 (e) Proposed Road | Sutherland Shire Council |
(3) For the purposes of subclause (2), vacant land means land which,
immediately before the day of the written request, had no buildings except for
fences, greenhouses, conservatories, garages, summer houses, private boat
houses, fuel sheds, tool houses, cycle sheds, aviaries, milking bails, hay
sheds, stables, fowl houses, pig sties, barns or the
like.
58 Is interim development allowed?
(1) With the concurrence of the responsible authority, development
consent may be granted to interim development of land in a special use zone,
being development that is or is compatible with development permissible on
land within an adjoining zone:(a) if the land has not been acquired by the responsible authority,
or
(b) after the land has been acquired by the responsible authority,
until the land is needed for the purpose for which it is
zoned,
but only if the use of the land does not interfere with the amenity of
adjoining properties and use of the land for such a purpose is not likely to
impact adversely on the future use of the land.
(2) In determining whether to grant concurrence required by this
clause, the responsible authority must take the following into
consideration:(a) the likely effect of the proposed development on the costs of
acquisition,
(b) the imminence of acquisition,
(c) the costs of reinstatement of the land for the use for which it is
to be acquired.
59 Exceptions to the land use table in the 5 (c), 5 (d) and 5
(g) zones
(1) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan,
development consent may be granted to outdoor eating areas on land zoned 5 (c)
Special Uses (Arterial Road), 5 (d) Special Uses (Future Arterial Road) and 5
(g) Special Uses (General Road) within the constructed footpath area of the
road reserve only where in conjunction with a permitted restaurant on
adjoining land.
(2) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan,
development consent may be granted to advertising or fixed awnings on land
zoned 5 (c) Special Uses (Arterial Road), 5 (d) Special Uses (Future Arterial
Road) and 5 (g) Special Uses (General Road) within the constructed footpath
area of the road reserve where the advertising is or fixed awnings are
associated with a permitted use on adjoining land.
60 What development may be allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
the zone and what development is allowed or is prohibited in each
zone.Development control table
Zone 5 (a) Special Uses
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) The provision of community services and facilities to provide
necessary services to the community.
(b) To provide for development by public
authorities.
(c) To provide for educational, religious or similar land
uses.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
The particular use indicated by lettering on the
maps.Ancillary development not included in item 2.
Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
child care centres,
community facilities,
education establishments,
recreation areas,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (b) Special Uses (Railways)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide land for railway purposes to meet public transport
needs.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
child care centres,
community facilities,
railway purposes,
recreation areas,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (c) Special Uses (Arterial Road)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide for an arterial road network to serve Sutherland Shire
and the metropolitan area of Sydney.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage,
roads.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
car parking,
recreation areas,
utility installations.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (d) Special Uses (Future Arterial
Road)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide for an arterial road link to serve the future needs of
Sutherland Shire and the metropolitan area of Sydney.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage,
roads.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
recreation areas,
utility installations.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (e) Special Uses (Proposed Road)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide for road links to serve the future local needs of
Sutherland Shire.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Nil.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:roads.
4 Development that is prohibited
Development other than development included in item
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (f) Special Uses (Waste Recycling)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide for a mix of recycling and resource recovery activities
that:(a) assist in reducing the volume of waste going to landfill,
and
(b) are compatible with adjoining land uses through minimal
environmental impact, and
(c) assist in the conservation of resources and
energy.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Nil.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:advertising,
business premises ancillary to another permissible
use,
drainage,
generating works,
repair centres,
roads,
utility installations,
waste recycling and management centres.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item
3.
Development control table
Zone 5 (g) Special Uses (General Road)
1 Objective of the zone
To provide a road network to serve the local needs of Sutherland
Shire and the metropolitan area of Sydney.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage,
roads.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
car parking,
recreation areas,
utility installations.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 7 Open space zones
61 What open space zones apply in this plan?
This Part applies to land within the following open space zones
identified on the maps:6 (a) Public Recreation
6 (b) Private Recreation
6 (c) Regional Recreation
6 (d) Future Recreation
62 What height limits apply in open space zones?
(1) Except where a maximum height is specified in a development
control plan, the maximum height for a building in an open space zone
is:(a) 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost ceiling,
and
(b) 9 metres to the highest point of the
roof.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum height specified
in any development control plan applying to the
land.
63 Who acquires land?
(1) The owner of land in the 6 (a) Public Recreation zone may request
the Council to acquire the land. The request must be in writing. On receipt of
the request, the Council shall acquire the land.
(2) The owner of land in the 6 (c) Regional Recreation zone may
request the Minister administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979 to acquire the land. The request must be in writing. On
receipt of the request, the corporation under the Act shall acquire the
land.
64 Is interim development allowed on land zoned 6 (c)
Regional Recreation?
(1) With the concurrence of the Minister administering the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979, consent may be granted to development of land in the 6
(c) Regional Recreational zone, being development that is or is compatible
with development permissible on land within an adjoining zone:(a) if the land has not been acquired by the corporation under the
Act, but only so as to allow the development until the land is needed for the
purpose for which it is zoned, or
(b) where consent to interim development of the land will not
interfere with the amenity of adjoining properties and the development is not
likely to adversely impact on the future use of the
land.
(2) In determining whether to grant concurrence required by this
clause, the Minister must take the following into consideration:(a) the likely effect of the proposed development on the costs of
acquisition,
(b) the imminence of acquisition,
(c) the costs of reinstatement of the land for the use for which it is
to be acquired.
65 Exceptions to the land use table in the 6 (a) Public
Recreation, 6 (b) Private Recreation and 6 (d) Future Recreation
zones
(1) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, consent
may be granted to development for the purpose of an arts and craft centre on
land shown on the map marked “Map 3: Hazelhurst
Retreat, The Kingsway, Gymea” in Schedule
7.
(2) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, consent
may be granted to development on land known as the Lucas Heights Waste
Management Centre, being the land within the 6 (d) Future Recreation zone
shown on the map marked “Map 5: Tip—Lucas
Heights Waste Depot” in Schedule 7, for the purpose of a
solid waste disposal and associated waste recycling and management
centre.
(3) Regardless of the development control table, but subject to any
plan of management adopted under the Local
Government Act 1993, consent may be granted to development for
the purpose of a restaurant, not involving the sale of takeaway food, within
the footprint of each of the following buildings shown on Sheets 1–11 of
Map 8 in Schedule 7:Sheet 1: Sutherland Oval Football Club,
Sutherland
Sheet 2: Waratah Park Leisure Club, Sutherland
Sheet 3: Anzac Oval Youth Club, Engadine
Sheet 4: Café de Como, Como Pleasure Grounds,
Como
Sheet 5: E G Waterhouse Gardens Teahouse,
Caringbah
Sheet 6: Bates Drive Soccer Centre, Kirrawee
Sheet 7: Wanda Surf Life Saving Club, Cronulla
Sheet 8: North Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club,
Cronulla
Sheet 9: Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club, Sport Complex,
restaurant, Cronulla
Sheet 10: Gunnamatta Park Pavilion, Cronulla
Sheet 11: Elouera Surf Life Saving Club,
Cronulla
For the purposes of this subclause, the footprint of a
building does not include structures used for providing access for
pedestrians and disabled people to the building.
(4) Regardless of the development control table, consent may be
granted for advertising and the use of outdoor eating areas in conjunction
with a restaurant for which consent is granted pursuant to subclause (3), but
only if:(a) the sign on which the advertising is displayed is attached flush
with the building, neither exceeds 1.5 metres in height nor 0.6 metre in
width, and only displays the name of the restaurant, and
(b) the outdoor eating area immediately adjoins the part of the
building in which the restaurant is located.
(5) Regardless of the development control tables in this plan, consent
may be granted to the carrying out of development on land known as Part Lot
11, DP 526492, Captain Cook Drive, Woolooware, being the land shown with heavy
edging on the map marked “Map 32 Cronulla
Sutherland Leagues Club, Captain Cook Drive” in Schedule
7, if:(a) the proposed development is for the purpose of a
conference/convention centre, seniors housing, hotel, motel, residential flats
or ancillary shops, and
(b) the proposed development is consistent with, and does not
adversely impact on, the ongoing use of the Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club
as a club, and
(c) the proposed development complies with any development standards
specified in Part 1 of Schedule 8 applicable to development of the kind
concerned, and
(d) the consent authority is satisfied of the matters that Part 1 of
Schedule 8 requires the consent authority to be satisfied of before granting
consent.
For the purposes of this subclause and Part 1 of Schedule 8,
seniors housing
has the same meaning as it has in State Environmental Planning Policy (Seniors
Living) 2004.
65A Subdivision of Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club
site
Despite any other provision of this plan, subdivision of the land
shown with heavy edging on the map marked “Map
32 Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club, Captain Cook
Drive” in Schedule 7 is prohibited except for the
purpose of creating an allotment comprising the whole of, or land within, the
environmental buffer (as referred to in clause 10 of Part 1 of Schedule 8),
being an allotment that is to be used as public open space and that will be
owned and managed by a public authority.
66 What special considerations apply to development in open
space zones?
Before granting consent for development of land in open space
zones, the consent authority must be satisfied that the proposal adequately
addresses:(a) the need for the proposed development, and
(b) the impact of the proposed development on the existing or likely
future use of the land, and
(c) the need to retain the land for its existing or likely future use,
and
(d) the impact of the proposed development on surrounding residential
areas and business centres, and
(e) the impact of the proposed development on traffic movements and
parking requirements, and
(f) the impact of the proposed development on existing pedestrian
movements within the recreation area concerned, and
(g) the visual impact of the proposed development on that recreation
area, and
(h) the visual impact of any proposed advertising on that recreation
area.
67 What development may be allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
the open space zones and what development is allowed or is prohibited in each
zone.Development control table
Zone 6 (a) Public Recreation
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) Provision for both active and passive open space activities and a
range of recreational facilities to meet the needs of all age groups in the
community.
(b) Preservation of land of high scenic, environmental or landscape
character.
(c) To identify and protect land to be acquired for local public open
space.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
beach and foreshore protection works not included in item
2,
buildings associated with landscaping, gardening or bushfire
hazard reduction and vehicular access to these buildings,
community facilities,
places of assembly,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 6 (b) Private Recreation
1 Objective of the zone
To identify areas of privately owned land for recreational
purposes to meet local and regional community needs, such as bowling clubs,
golf courses, tennis courts and the like.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
buildings associated with landscaping, gardening or bushfire
hazard reduction and vehicular access to those buildings,
drainage,
dredging,
marinas,
places of assembly,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
registered clubs,
restaurants,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
watercraft facilities.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 6 (c) Regional Recreation
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) To identify areas of regional recreational significance for the
provision of open space to meet the community needs of the Sydney
Region.
(b) Preservation of land of high scenic, landscape or environmental
character.
(c) To identify regional recreation land for acquisition by the
Minister administering the Environmental
Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:works (other than buildings) associated with landscaping,
gardening or bushfire hazard reduction.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:beach and foreshore protection works,
buildings associated with landscaping, gardening or bushfire
hazard reduction and vehicular access to these buildings,
drainage,
recreation areas,
roads,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 6 (d) Future Recreation
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) To allow for the future provision of open space and a range of
recreational facilities to meet local and regional community
needs.
(b) To provide facilities which ensure the ongoing management of
impacts from waste disposal activities.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:works (other than buildings) associated with landscaping, bushfire
hazard reduction and landfill gas and leachate collection if in accordance
with an appropriate plan of management approved by the
Council.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:buildings associated with landscaping, bushfire hazard reduction
and landfill gas and leachate collection,
child care centres,
drainage,
generating works,
places of assembly,
recreation areas,
recreation facilities,
registered clubs,
roads,
utility installations.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 8 Environmental protection zones
68 What environmental protection zones apply in this
plan?
This Part applies to land within the following environmental
protection zones identified on the maps:7 (a) Environmental Protection (Waterways)
7 (b) Environmental Protection (Bushland)
7 (c) Environmental Protection (Water
Catchment)
69 Exceptions to the land use table in the 7 (a) and 7 (b)
zones
(1) Regardless of the development control table, development may be
carried out without development consent in the 7 (a) Environmental Protection
(Waterways) zone for the purpose of a bridge to carry State Road No 663 over
the Woronora River and for the purpose of associated
roadworks.
(2) Regardless of the development control table, consent may be
granted to development for the purpose of remedial dredging in the 7 (a)
Environmental Protection (Waterways) zone, where the need for such dredging is
identified in a plan of management or development control plan approved by the
Council.
(3) Regardless of the development control table, consent may be
granted to a dwelling house on an allotment of 20 hectares or more in the 7
(b) Environmental Protection (Bushland) zone, but only if the allotment was in
existence and was in private ownership on 12 November
1993.
(4) Any dwelling house erected in accordance with subclause (3) must
comply with the following controls:(a) the height must not exceed 7.2 metres to any point on the
uppermost ceiling nor 9 metres to the highest point on the roof,
and
(b) the gross floor area must not exceed a maximum of
300m2 (inclusive of any ancillary
buildings).
(5) Regardless of the development control table in this plan, consent
may be granted to development on land to the north of the Lucas Heights Waste
Management Centre, being the land within the 7 (b) Environmental Protection
(Bushland) zone shown on the map marked “Map 5:
Tip—Lucas Heights Waste Depot” in Schedule 7, for
the purpose of an information centre and water quality control
structures.
(6) Regardless of the development control table, the existing fire
trail between Bundanoon Road, Woronora Heights and The Crescent, Woronora,
being the land in the 7 (b) Environmental Protection (Bushland) zone shown
edged heavy black on the map marked “Map 26:
Woronora Emergency Access Road, between Bundanoon Road, and the
Crescent” in Part 1 of Schedule 7, may be used for the
purpose of vehicular access by emergency services vehicles and vehicles
requiring emergency access.
70 What development may be allowed in each zone?
The following development control tables give the objectives of
each of the environmental protection zones and what development is allowed or
is prohibited in each zone.Development control table
Zone 7 (a) Environmental Protection
(Waterways)
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) To recognise the importance of the waterways of Sutherland Shire,
as an environmental and recreational asset for residents of the area and the
Sydney region.
(b) To ensure development does not adversely affect the ecology,
scenic value or navigability of the waterways.
(c) To ensure aquatic environments are not adversely affected by the
recreational use of the waterways.
(d) To provide for viable aquaculture in waterway
areas.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:aids to navigation required by the Maritime Authority of
NSW,
beach and foreshore protection works if in accordance with a plan
of management approved by the Council and undertaken by or on behalf of the
Council,
maintenance dredging of Maritime Authority of NSW navigation
channels.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:aquaculture,
beach and foreshore protection works not included in item
2,
business activities associated with the provision of recreational
activities within the waterways,
marinas,
swimming enclosures,
watercraft facilities,
works to enable public pedestrian access to facilitate
recreational use of the waterway.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 7 (b) Environmental Protection
(Bushland)
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) To preserve natural bushland areas, particularly steep valley
areas of Sutherland Shire, not suitable for urban
development.
(b) To ensure development does not adversely affect natural bushland
and wildlife corridors.
(c) Flora and fauna habitats which are protected and preserved for the
aesthetic, recreational, educational and scientific resource value to the
community as part of the natural heritage.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:works (other than buildings) associated with bushland regeneration
or bushfire hazard reduction.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:works to enable pedestrian access to facilitate recreational use
of the bushland.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Development control table
Zone 7 (c) Environmental Protection (Water
Catchment)
1 Objective of the zone
To ensure development in the Woronora Water Catchment area is
restricted to prevent contamination of the water supply from within the
catchment area.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:any land use authorised by or under the Sydney Water Act 1994, or any land
use ancillary or incidental to such a use,
roads, including bridges forming parts of
roads.
3 Development that requires development consent
Development for the purpose of:utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Part 9 National parks, nature reserves and State recreation
areas zone
71 What national parks, nature reserves and State recreation
areas zone applies in this plan?
This Part applies to land within the following national parks,
nature reserves and State recreation areas zone identified on the maps:8 (a) National Parks, Nature Reserves and State Recreation
Areas
72 What development may be allowed in the zone?
The following development control table gives the objectives of
the national parks, nature reserves and State recreation areas zone and what
development is allowed or is prohibited in the zone.Development control table
Zone 8 (a) National Parks, Nature Reserves and State
Recreation Areas
1 Objectives of the zone
(a) The conservation of areas of natural, ecological, scenic,
educational, scientific, cultural or historical
importance.
(b) To identify land under the control of the Director-General of
National Parks and Wildlife within Sutherland
Shire.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Any development authorised by or under the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974 or any development ancillary or incidental to such
development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Nil.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item
2.
Part 10 Mixed residential/business zone
73 What mixed residential/business zone applies in this
plan?
This Part applies to land within the following mixed
residential/business zone identified on the maps:9 (a) Mixed Residential/Business
74 What height limits apply in the 9 (a) zone?
(1) Except where a maximum height is specified in a development
control plan, the maximum height for a building in the mixed
residential/business zone is:(a) 7.2 metres to any point on the uppermost ceiling,
and
(b) 9 metres to the highest point on the
roof.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum height specified
in any development control plan applying to the
land.
75 What floorspace ratios apply in the 9 (a) zone?
(1) Except where a maximum floorspace ratio is specified in a
development control plan, the maximum floorspace ratio for buildings in the
mixed residential/business zone is 2:1.
(2) The consent authority must consider any maximum floorspace ratio
specified in any development control plan applying to the
land.
76 What controls apply to residential development within the
9 (a) Mixed Residential/Business zone?
A development control plan may recommend the residential
floorspace component of any building within the 9 (a) Mixed
Residential/Business zone.
77 Can development within the 9 (a) Mixed
Residential/Business zone be limited?
Regardless of the development control table in this plan, a
development control plan relating to land within the 9 (a) Mixed
Residential/Business zone may recommend restrictions on specific types of
development otherwise permitted on the land.
78 What development may be allowed in each zone?
The following development control table gives the objectives of
the mixed residential/business zone and what development is allowed or is
prohibited in the zone.Development control
table
Zone 9 (a) Mixed Residential/Business
1 Objective of the zone
(a) To provide flexibility in the type, location and intensity of land
uses surrounding major business centres and public transport nodes which will
be detailed in development control plans.
(b) To promote the vitality of business centres by permitting
appropriate forms of residential development and development incorporating a
mix of appropriate permitted uses, as detailed in development control
plans.
(c) To achieve and maintain a compatible mix of residential and
business uses.
2 Development allowed without development consent
Development for the purpose of:drainage.
Exempt development.
3 Development that requires development consent
Ancillary development not included in item 2.Development for the purpose of:
advertising not included in item 2,
backpackers accommodation,
boarding houses,
bulky goods retailing,
business premises,
car parking,
child care centres,
community facilities,
convenience stores,
dwellings only in buildings subject to another permitted
use,
educational establishments,
food shops,
hotels,
housing for older people or people with a
disability,
medical facilities,
motels,
motor showrooms,
nightclubs,
passenger transport terminals,
places of assembly,
places of public worship,
public transport interchanges or associated
infrastructure,
railways,
recreation areas,
registered clubs,
recreation facilities,
residential flats,
restaurants,
roads,
service stations,
sex shops,
shops,
utility installations, other than gas holders or generating
works,
veterinary hospitals.
Demolition not included in item 2.
Subdivision.
4 Development that is prohibited
Any development other than development included in item 2 or
3.
Schedule 1 Heritage items—archaeological
sites
(Clause 5)
Note. The number corresponding to a site indicates the number given to
the site in the Council’s Heritage Study.
Alfords Point
Alfords Point RoadA008—Alfords Point Bridge
Audley (Royal National Park)
Artillery HillA109—Stone work on road (near Visitors’ Centre)
Audley Road/Sir Bertram Stevens DriveA057—Audley group (Audley Conservation Plan area)
Lady Carrington DriveA058—Lady Carrington Drive group
Bundeena (Royal National Park)
Brighton StreetA030—Site of 1920 Bundeena Wharf
Simpsons RoadA060—Bonnie Vale cabins group
A061—Simpsons Hotel site
Como
A020—Como railway bridge
A009—Former Como railway bridge (now cycleway)
Cremona RoadA039—Como Reserve, including:
A040—Pavilion
A041—Boatshed
A042—Sea walls
A043—Tidal baths
A044—Scylla Bay
Cronulla
A051—Brick kerbing (Gerrale Street, Parramatta Street
and others)
Cecil Monro AvenueA050—Rock pool
Cronulla StreetA026—Cronulla Railway Station
Elouera Road/KingswayA049—Sea wall (south of Dunningham Park)
Ewos ParadeA048—Shelly Park rock pool
A047—Oak Park rock pool
Gowrie StreetA055—Bass and Flinders memorial
A027—Salmon Haul ocean wharf (on Salmon Haul Reserve)
Nicholson ParadeA046—Gunnamatta Park, including dressing pavilion
A036—Fisheries Research Institute (Hungry
Point)
Engadine
Waratah RoadA112—“Bakery Trade Industry” building
“Meat Trade Industry” building
Gundamaian (Royal National Park)
Deer Park Road (Deer Park)A065—Access stairs to jetty and boatshed,
“Chaldercot”
Point DangerA062—Site of landscaping and jetty remains
A063—Remains of landscape and jetty
Wants PointA064—Remains of jetty
Warumbul Road (Gogerlys Point)Ar Gogerlys Point group, including:
A068—“Gogerlys Cottage”
A069—“Hilltop” and landscaping
A067—“Rathane” and landscaping
A067—Rotunda
A066—“Telford” and landscaping
A070—Lamont house site
Warumbul Road (Warumbul)A071—Warumbul
Heathcote
Bottle Forest RoadA033—Heathcote Brickworks
Illawong
Old Ferry RoadA007—Old Punt crossing (Lugarno ferry)
A004—Old Illawarra Road
Jannali
Jannali Avenue/Railway ParadeA025—Jannali Railway Station and immediate
surrounds
Kirrawee
Princes Highway/Oak Road/Flora StreetA034—Site of former brickworks
Lilli Pilli
Lilli Pilli Point RoadA045—Site of Lilli Pilli wharf
Loftus
Farnell AvenueA076—Military Parade site
Loftus AvenueA107—Old Illawarra Highway
Lucas Heights
Old Illawarra RoadA003—Old Illawarra Road
Royal National Park
(Miscellaneous items and sites not listed elsewhere)Cabbage Tree BasinA075—Bundeena/Maianbar water supply
Costens PointA072—House sites and associated remains
A073—Old Coast Road
Florence ParadeA080—Florence Parade
Jibbon HeadA110—Plaque
A111—Shell grit beach mine
McKell AvenueA059—Fosters Flat saw pit
A077—Wilson Parade fire trail
Rawson DriveAr—Rawson Drive group, including:
A078—Site of bridge
A108—Road
Red Jacks PointA074—Red Jacks Point group of
sites
Sutherland
Linden StreetA052—Woronora Cemetery
A053—Site of mortuary line, Woronora Cemetery
Old Princes HighwayA024—Sutherland Railway Station
A018—Site foundations for steam tramway (west side)
A019—Former steam tramway office (No 753)
A035—Electrical substation
Toronto ParadeA032—No 100 (cnr Clio Street), “Brinsley’s
Joinery Works”
Sylvania
Belgrave StreetA010—Tom Ugly’s ferry site No 1
A011—Tom Ugly’s ferry site No 2
A012—Stone setting at 1929 Tom Ugly’s Bridge
Princes HighwayA013—Tom Ugly’s Bridge (1929)
A014—Tom Ugly’s Bridge
(1987)
Sylvania Waters
Belgrave EsplanadeA001—Gwawley Bay claires
Taren Point
Old Taren Point RoadA015—Disused ramp for punt
Taren Point RoadA016—Captain Cook Bridge (1965)
Waterfall
A022—Rail turntable
A023—Watertank
Woolooware
KingswayA054—No 141 “Woolooware House”
Woolooware Road NorthA005—Woolooware Road North
Woolooware Road SouthA006—Woolooware Road South
Woronora
Menai RoadA017—Woronora Bridge
Miscellaneous items
(Not listed by location elsewhere)A056—Royal National Park
A098—Heathcote National Park
A099—Woronora Dam
A037—Woronora—Penshurst pipeline
A100—Kolora Weir (on Woronora River, south of Heathcote Road
Bridge)
A101—Lake Toolooma Dam
A102—Lake Toolooma Dam pumping station
Botany BayA083—Buoy marking position of Captain Cook’s
Endeavour
A031—Pells Island Oyster Farm
Port HackingA002—Ballast heap, Yennibilli
Point
Schedule 2 Heritage items—built and
landscape
(Clause 5)
Note. “A” in the identifier corresponding to the item
indicates the item is of archaeological significance.
“L” in the identifier corresponding to the item indicates the
item is of landscape significance.
“R” indicates item is of Regional significance.
“S” indicates item is of State significance.
The number in the identifier corresponding to an item indicates the
number given to the item in the Council’s Heritage
Study.
Alfords Point
L194–R—Georges River State Recreation
Area
Alfords Point RoadL193—Alfords Point Bridge
Audley (Royal National Park)
Audley RoadB001—House (east side of road, on western approach to
weir)
Sir Bertram Stevens DriveB002—Rangers’ cottage (cnr Lady Carrington
Drive)
B003—Shelter pavilion (cnr Lady Carrington
Drive)
Bundeena (Royal National Park)
L114–R—Horderns Beach (between Crammond Avenue
and Brighton Street)
Brighton StreetL113—Bundeena Wharf (eastern end of Horderns Beach)
Bundeena DriveB004—Nos 25–31, “Bundeena House”
Loftus StreetB276—Nos 96–98, “Bundeena Park Store”
(corner of Brighton and Loftus Streets)
Scarborough StreetL115—Bundeena Caravan Park
Simpson Road (off Crammond Avenue)B277—No 8, house
Caringbah
Fernleigh RoadB005–S—Nos 44–46, “Fernleigh”
Frangipani PlaceB264—No 2 (cnr Willarong Road), “Rellum”
KingswayL186–R—Park (southwest cnr Port Hacking Road)
Mirral RoadB235—No 41, boatshed
Turriel Bay RoadB236—No 33, waterfront cottage
Wallami StreetB287—No 27, house
Water StreetB010—Nos 28 and 32, including “The Terraces” and
former stables
Willarong Road SouthB279—No 359, boatshed
B280—No 432, boatshed and stone walls
B342—No 541, boatshed/dwelling and swimming enclosure
B239—No 509, cottage, boatshed and jetty
B234—No 527, waterfront cottage
Como
L197–R—Como Railway Bridge
Bonnett AvenueB281—No 39, house
Como ParadeB013—No 105, (cnr Warraba Street), house
Cremona RoadL048–R—Former Como Pleasure Grounds
B016—No 2, “Café de Como”
Wolger StreetB019—No 41, (cnr Burunda Street),
house
Cronulla
Burraneer Bay RoadB021—Cronulla Public School, main building and
grounds
Connels RoadB022—No 15, house
Cronulla StreetB025—No 41, Cronulla Post Office
B026—Cronulla Railway Station
B027—Nos 2–6, (cnr Kingsway), “Cronulla
Theatre”
B028—Nos 8–12, commercial building
B029—Nos 66–70, Commonwealth Bank
B030—No 118, State Bank
L008–R—Monro Park
Darook Park RoadB282—No 9, boatshed, garage and walling
B248—No 29, house
Ewos ParadeL003—Shelly Beach and Park
L058—Oak Park
L055—Street trees (opposite Oak Street)
B032—No 157, (cnr Rose Street), house
Excelsior RoadL070, B036—No 6, house and garden trees
B037—No 22, house
Franklin RoadB038—No 54, house
Gerrale StreetL002–R—South Cronulla Beach and Cronulla Park
B041—Nos 97–99, (cnr Nicholson Parade, commercial
pair)
B042—Nos 80–82, house
Giddings AvenueB043—“Thornton Hall” (cnr Nicholson Parade),
part of St Aloysius School
Grosvenor CrescentL032—No 28, garden
Hampshire StreetB044—No 12, (cnr Nicholson Parade), house
John StreetB045—Nos 10–12, “Mimi’s”
kindergarten
KingswayL001—Dunningham Park (also fronts Elouera Road)
L168—Street trees (cnr Wilbar Avenue)
B046—Nos 43–45, “Masonic Temple”
Links AvenueB048—No 17, (cnr Berry Street)
Lucas StreetB049—No 9, (cnr Boronia Street), “Eleanor Mackinnon
House”
L056—No 9, (cnr Boronia Street), gardens
Nicholson ParadeL033—Gunnamatta Park, including dressing pavilion
L061–R—Fisheries Research Institute (Hungry
Point)
Oak StreetB052—No 8, house
Parramatta StreetB055—No 50, house
Prince StreetB056—North Cronulla Surf Club
Richmount StreetB057—No 12, “Moonbow”
B058—No 14, house
St Andrews PlaceB059—No 1A, St Andrews Church of England
Surf RoadB063—Nos 4–8, “School of Arts”
Taloombi StreetB283—No 47, boatshed
A113—Laneway between Nos 51 and 53, sandstone steps from
street to waterfront
B284—No 53, boatshed/dwelling
B064—No 52, “Coombe Grange”
The EsplanadeB065—Cronulla Surf Club
B066—Cronulla Sports Complex
L059—Walking path on eastern foreshore
B067—No 40, house
L060–R—Bass and Flinders Point and Salmon Haul Reserve
(at southern point of Cronulla peninsula)
Tonkin StreetL068—Tonkin Park
Via MareB070—No 8, house
Waratah StreetB071—Sub-station (“Electric Light
Department”)
A114—Cronulla Wharf, stone steps
Wilshire AvenueB073—No 14, Uniting Church
Dolans Bay
Parthenia StreetB285—No 92, house
Port Hacking RoadB280—No 733, house
Port Hacking Road SouthB009—No 698, house
B074—No 742, “Our Lady of Mercy
Convent”
Engadine
Banksia AvenueB075—No 133, house
Railway Parade (Princes Highway)B077—No 43, house
Waratah RoadAr—“The Boys Town” including:
B078—“Bakery Trade Industry”
building
B079—“Meat Trade Industry” building
B080—“Memorial Hospital”
L160—Grounds
Woronora RoadB081—No 277, (cnr Fairview Avenue),
“Homelea”
Grays Point
North West Arm RoadB083—No 152, house
Peninsula RoadB288—No 129, house, boatshed and sea
wall
Gundamaian (Royal National Park)
Deer Park Road (Deer Park)B084–R—“Chaldercot” group
Warumbul Road (Gogerlys Point)Ar—Gogerlys Point Group including:
B085–S—“Gogerlys Cottage”
B086—“Hilltop” and landscaping
B087—Boatsheds
B088—Timber Cottages
B089—“Rathane” and landscaping
B090—Rotunda
B091—“Telford” and landscaping
L036–R—Gardens/grounds
Warumbul Road (Warumbul)L035—Grounds and foreshore
Gymea
KingswayL101—Nos 782–800, (cnr Talara Road),
“Hazelhurst” garden
North West Arm RoadL141—Natural sandstone arch
bridge
Gymea Bay
L039—Gymea Baths (northwest cnr of Gymea Bay)
Bayhaven PlaceB291—No 9, house
Coopernook AvenueB240—No 38, boatshed
Ellesmere RoadB242—No 116, waterfront cottage
B096—No 180, house
Maroopna RoadB344—No 14, “Magnetic” waterfront cottage
Pinaroo PlaceB094—No 24A, house
Heathcote
Bottle Forest Road (and former brickpit embankment)L153—Street trees
Dillwynnia GroveB098—Nos 1–21, (cnr Tecoma Street), “Heathcote
Hall”
L151–S—Nos 1–21, (cnr Tecoma Street),
“Heathcote Hall” grounds
B099—No 40, “Kennet Villa”
Princes HighwayB100—No 1330, former railway cottage
Wilson ParadeB101—No 1, house
B102—No 122, house
Illawong
Bignell StreetA116—At the end of Bignell Street, stone jetty
B293—No 4, foreshore house, boatshed and stone wall
B294—Nos 7–13, stone boatshed, seawall and
basin
B295—Nos 20–22, early waterfront
housing/boatsheds
B296—Nos 60, 64, 66, 68 and 72, houses and boatsheds
(group)
Cranbrook PlaceB343—Nos 9–21, sculptures, pathways and steps, seawall
and swimming enclosure
Fowler RoadB103—Nos 45–53, “Cranbrook”
L022—Nos 45–53, “Cranbrook” gardens
B298—No 69, house and boatshed
B299—Nos 77–79, seawall
B104—No 118, house
B297—Nos 119–121, boatshed, house, wharf and stone
waterfront
Griffin ParadeB301—Nos 9–11, early waterfront house
Old Ferry RoadA117—stone wharf
B302—No 1R, waterfront houses (group of 5)
Sproule RoadA118—Various oyster workings remains (off end of Sproule
Road)
Kangaroo Point
Ilma AvenueB303—No 9, boatshed and house
Kangaroo Point RoadB304—Nos 6–8, boatshed and wall
B109—No 10, house
B108—No 25, house
L080—No 25, garden
B305—Nos 72–74, boatshed
B258—Nos 105–107, house
B111—No 162, (cnr Tara Street),
house
Kirrawee
Acacia AvenueB112—No 94, “Botany View”
President AvenueB114—No 455, (cnr Oak Road),
house
Lilli Pilli
Bareena StreetB118—No 18, “Waratah”
L006—No 18, “Waratah” garden trees
Beckton PlaceB120—Nos 20–24, “Beckton”, house
B237—Nos 20–24, “Beckton”,
boatsheds
Gow AvenueB238—No 24, waterfront cottage
Korokan RoadB262—Nos 16–18, “Nuimburra” and adjoining
house
Moombara CrescentB123–R—Nos 17–19, “Moombara”
Sand Bar PlaceB124—No 1, house
Shiprock RoadB286—No 34, boatshed
Wallendbeen StreetB125—No 10, “Wallendbeen
Lodge”
Loftus
National AvenueB127—No 9, house
B128—No 44, house
Princes Highway (on edge of Royal National Park)L175—Avenue of trees, National Park entry
B129—“Bedford”
B130—Former “Gardeners Garage”
Rawson AvenueL108–R—“National Avenue” street
trees
Menai
David RoadB131—No 1, house
Miranda
Bellingara RoadB134—house (part of Frank Vickery Village No 16)
Central RoadOt, L163—Miranda Centre School War Memorial (north end of
street)
Kiora Road NorthL164—Street trees
Oyster Bay
Caravan Head RoadB308—Nos 141 and 151, waterfront cottages
Carina RoadB307—No 27, boatshed and cottage
Green Point RoadB308—Nos 14–20, 22–28 and 40, waterfront
cottages (group along Green Point Road and Shipwright Place)
Sage AvenueB139—No 2, “Desiree”
Ward CrescentB309—Nos 20, 24, 28, 30 and 32, waterfront houses/boatsheds
(group)
Sutherland
Acacia RoadB140—No 189, house
Adelong StreetAr—Nos 3–7, row of three houses
B143—No 5, house
B144—No 7, house
B145—No 10, house
Auburn StreetB147—No 68, house
Clio StreetB152—No 52, house
East ParadeL174—Street trees
B154—No 15, house
B157—Nos 21–23, former School of Arts
B159—No 77, (cnr Sutherland Street), house
Eton Street NorthOt, L192—Sutherland War Memorial (Peace Park)
B161—Former “Sutherland Intermediate High
School” building (now part of Primary School)
Flora StreetB162—Sutherland Primary School (cnr Eton and Merton
Streets), including original building and grounds
B163—(cnr Merton Street), church
B164—No 116, house
B165—No 122, (cnr Glencoe Street), house
Glencoe Street NorthOt, B172—No 56, house and fence
Jannali AvenueB173—No 123, (rear frontage to Vesta Street), house
B174—No 125, (cnr Moira Street), house
B175—No 133, “Lark Ellen Nursing Home”
Linden StreetL044–R—Sutherland Park
L043–S—“Cooee Tree”, Sutherland
Park
L045–S—Woronora Cemetery
B177—No 148, (cnr Sutherland Street), house
Old Princes HighwayL017—Forby Sutherland Memorial Gardens and Council grounds,
Council chambers
L104—Railway Station precinct, bridge retaining walls and
Hills Figs
B178—No 685, (next to overpass) commercial building
B179—No 810, (cnr Boyle Street) “Boyles Sutherland
Hotel”
B180—No 816, Commonwealth Bank
Toronto ParadeB189—No 90, house
B190—No 94, house
B191—No 100, (cnr Clio Street), “Brinsley’s
Joinery Works”
B192—No 102, house
B193—No 104,
“Walton”
Sylvania
Belgrave StreetL161—Street tree
Canberra RoadB194—No 23, (cnr Pembroke Street), house
Evelyn StreetB197—No 5, house
Harrow StreetB310—No 35, boatshed, jetty and walling
Murralin LaneB198—No 167, “Glen Robin”, house, Fairy House,
boatshed and jetty
Port Hacking RoadL075—Gwawley Creek stormwater canal (east side of road, 200m
south of Box Road)
Princes HighwayL086–R—Tom Uglys Bridge (1987)
L087—Fig tree (on southern approach to Tom Uglys
Bridge)
B200—Former St Marks Church (now part of public
school)
B201—Nos 56–60, (cnr Endeavour Street), old
church
Sylvania Waters
L074–R—Sylvania Waters canal
development
Taren Point
Taren Point RoadL072–R—Captain Cook Bridge (1965) and southern
approach
Waterfall
L158–R—“Camp Coutts”, Heathcote
National Park
Ar—Row of railway cottages including “Community
Cottage”
McKell AvenueB205—Nos 7, 8, 9 and 10, pair of semi-detached
houses
Willarong Point
Woolooware
Bermuda PlaceB313—No 1, boatshed
B265—No 7, house
Caronia Avenue WestB210—No 28, house
Castlewood AvenueB211—No 26, House
Dolans Bay RoadB275—No 93, “Coolangatta”
Dunkeld CloseB266—No 4, house
Eurabalong RoadB212—Nos 1–9, house
Goobarah RoadB267—No 4, house
Gunnamatta RoadB315—Wharf, boardwalk and steps (at end of street)
A119—Remains of bath walls (at end of street)
Hazel PlaceB316—Nos 2, 2C and 11, boatsheds (group)
KingswayB214—No 141, “Woolooware House”
Loch Lomond CrescentB215—Nos 3–3A, “Loch Lomond”
Portview PlaceB269—No 6, house
L030—No 6, grounds
Rutherford AvenueB317—No 18, boatshed
B216—No 22, “Minnamurra”
Shell RoadB217—No 12, house
Smarts CrescentB218—Nos 6–16, “Mount Vincent”
B270—Nos 27–31, house
Swan StreetB219—No 2, “Wyndham Flats”
Woolooware Road SouthL187—Street trees (between Burraneer Bay Road and Wren
Place)
B222—No 79, (cnr Castlewood Avenue), house
B223–R—No 89, “Castlewood”
B318—No 224, boatshed
B319—No 255A, boatshed/house
B320—No 295, boatshed/house
B321—Nos 321–323, “Attwells Boat
Brokerage”, boatshed/house
L—No 346, garden including nearby street
trees
Woronora
Liffey PlaceB323—No 67, house
Prince Edward Park RoadOt, L110—Woronora RSL War Memorial
B325—No 87, house
B324—No 105, stone boatshed and seawall
B326—No 201, stone house, boatshed and carport
River RoadB226—No 1D, house
Woronora RiverB327—Nos 53, 205 and 219, cottages frontages (Woronora River
Precinct “Shackles Estate”)
Yowie Bay
Attunga RoadB227—No 8, house
B334—No 102, boatshed and baths
B328—No 135, boatshed
B329—No 255, boatshed and house
B330—Nos 296–298, boatshed
Baliga AvenueB332—Nos 39–41, boatshed
Bayside PlaceB278—No 21, house and boatshed “Elanora”
Glen Ayr AvenueB333—No 4, boatshed
Kalang LaneL026—Nos 5 and 6, sandstone seawall
B334—No 5, boatshed
Matson CrescentB228—No 13, house
B335—No 32, waterfront house
B336—Nos 42, 46, 50–56, 60 and 62, boatsheds and
boatshed/dwellings
Munella PlaceB337—No 4, two storey stone boatshed
Nottingham PlaceB338—No 1C, boatshed
President AvenueL134–R—EC Waterhouse National Camelia Garden (cnr
Kareena Road South)
Sherwood AvenueB339—No 6, boatshed
B339—No 8, waterfront cottage
Wonga RoadB230—No 1, boatshed
B231—No 7, house
B233—No 16, “Cliff Haven”
Yellambie RoadB340—No 23A, boatshed and
seawall
Miscellaneous items
(not listed by location elsewhere)L037–S—Royal National Park
L143–S—Heathcote National Park
Port HackingL034–R—Ballast shoal (just northeast of
Maianbar)
Schedule 3 Schedule of savings provisions
(Clauses 6 and 22 (5))
(1) The carrying out by persons carrying on railway undertakings on
land comprised in their undertakings of:(a) any development required in connection with the movement of
traffic by rail, including the construction, reconstruction, alteration,
maintenance and repair of ways, works and plant, and
(b) the erection within the limits of a railway station of buildings
for any purpose,
but excluding:(c) the construction of new railways, railway stations and bridges
over roads,
(d) the erection, reconstruction and alteration of buildings for
purposes other than railway undertaking purposes outside the limits of a
railway station and the reconstruction or alteration, so as materially to
affect their design, of railway stations or bridges,
(e) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a road,
and
(f) the erection, reconstruction and alteration of buildings for
purposes other than railway purposes where such buildings have direct access
to a public place.
(2) The carrying out by persons carrying on public utility
undertakings, being water, sewerage, drainage, electricity or gas
undertakings, of any of the following development, being development required
for the purpose of their undertakings, that is to say:(a) development of any description at or below the surface of the
ground,
(b) the installation of any plant inside a building or the
installation or erection within the premises of a generating station or
substation established before this plan commenced of any plant or other
structures or erections required in connection with the station or
substation,
(c) the installation or erection of any plant or other structures or
erections by way of addition to or replacement or extension of plant or
structures or erections already installed or erected, including the
installation in an electrical transmission line of substations, feeder-pillars
or transformer housings, but not including the erection of overhead lines for
the supply of electricity or pipes above the surface of the ground for the
supply of water, or the installation of substations, feeder-pillars or
transformer housings of stone, concrete or brickworks,
(d) the provision of overhead service lines in pursuance of any
statutory power to provide a supply of electricity,
(e) the erection of service reservoirs on land acquired or in process
of being acquired for the purpose before this plan commenced, provided
reasonable notice of the proposed erection is given to the Council,
or
(f) any other development, except:(i) the erection of buildings, the installation or erection of plant
or other structures or erections and the reconstruction or alteration, so as
materially to affect their design or external appearance, of buildings,
or
(ii) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(3) The carrying out by persons carrying on public utility
undertakings, being water transport undertakings, on land comprised in their
undertakings, of any development required in connection with the movement of
traffic by water, including the construction, reconstruction, alteration,
maintenance and repair of ways, buildings, wharves, works and plant required
for that purpose, except:(a) the erection of buildings and the reconstruction or alteration of
buildings so as materially to affect their design or external appearance,
or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(4) The carrying out by persons carrying on public utility
undertakings, being wharf or river undertakings, on land comprised in their
undertakings, of any development required for the purposes of shipping or in
connection with the embarking, loading, discharging or transport by a railway
forming part of the undertaking, including the construction, reconstruction,
alteration, maintenance and repair of ways, buildings, works and plant for
those purposes, except:(a) the construction of bridges, the erection of any other buildings,
and the reconstruction or alteration of bridges or of buildings so as
materially to affect their design or external appearance,
or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(5) The carrying out by persons carrying on public utility
undertakings, being air transport undertakings, on land comprised in their
undertakings within the boundaries of any aerodrome, of any development
required in connection with the movement of traffic by air, including the
construction, reconstruction, alteration, maintenance and repair of ways,
buildings, wharves, works and plant required for that purpose, except:(a) the erection of buildings and the reconstruction or alteration of
buildings so as materially to affect their design or external appearance,
or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(6) The carrying out by persons carrying on public utility
undertakings, being road transport undertakings, on land comprised in their
undertakings, of any development required in connection with the movement of
traffic by road, including the construction, reconstruction, alteration,
maintenance and repair of buildings, except:(a) the erection of buildings and the reconstruction or alteration of
buildings so as materially to affect their design or external appearance,
or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(7) The carrying out by the owner or lessee of a mine (other than a
mineral sands mine), on the mine, of any development required for the purposes
of a mine, except:(a) the erection of buildings (not being plant or other structures or
erections required for the mining, working, treatment or disposal of minerals)
and the reconstruction, alteration or extension of buildings, so as materially
to affect their design or external appearance, or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
(8) The carrying out of any development required in connection with
the construction, reconstruction, improvement, maintenance or repair of any
road, except the widening, realignment or relocation of such road within the
existing road reserve.
(9) The carrying out of any forestry work by the Forestry Commission,
or School Forest Trust empowered under relevant Acts to undertake
afforestation, construction and maintenance of roads, protection, cutting and
marketing of timber, and other forestry purposes under such Acts or on any
Crown land temporarily reserved for sale as a timber reserve under the Forestry Act
1916.
(10) The carrying out by a Rural Lands Protection Board of any
development required for the improvement and maintenance of travelling stock
and water reserves, except:(a) the erection of buildings and the reconstruction or alteration of
buildings so as materially to affect their design or purposes,
or
(b) any development designed to change the use or purpose of any such
reserve.
(11) The carrying out or causing to be carried out by a council engaged
in flood mitigation works or by the Department of Land and Water Conservation
of any work for the purposes of soil conservation, irrigation, afforestation,
reafforestation, flood mitigation, water conservation or river improvement in
pursuance of the provision of the Water Act
1912, the Irrigation Act 1912,
the Farm Water Supplies Act
1946 or the Rivers and
Foreshores Improvement Act 1948, except:(a) the erection of buildings, the installation or erection of plant
or other structures or erections and the reconstruction or alteration of
buildings so as materially to affect their design or external appearance,
or
(b) the formation or alteration of any means of access to a
road.
Schedule 4 Exempt development
(Clause 17)
Type of activity—development consisting of
erection and use or carrying out of the following: | Development standards and other
requirements |
Access ramps for the
disabled | (a) Maximum height 1m above ground level.
(b) Maximum grade 1:14 and otherwise in compliance with Australian
Standards.
(c) Must be located a minimum of 1.5 m from site
boundaries.
|
Advertising
structures | General requirements (a) The erection of the advertising structure must comply with all the
requirements of the Building Code of
Australia, including Part B1 (Structural
Provisions).
(b) Signs must not cover mechanical ventilation inlet or outlet
vents.
(c) Advertising structures within a public road reserve must be at
least 0.6m from kerb/roadway edge.
(d) Flashing signs are not exempt in any zone.
(e) No restrictions on advertising where displayed within a building
and the advertisement is not visible from a public place, although it may be
visible through openings at the ground and first floor levels of business
premises, shops, food shops, restaurants, industrial premises, warehouses or
bulky goods outlets.
|
1 Street and traffic signs (including street name plates, directional signs, advance traffic
warning signs, traffic signs and traffic signal
devices) | (a) Construction must be by or on behalf of the Council or the Roads
and Traffic Authority.
(b) Must be designed, fabricated and installed in accordance with
relevant Standards Australia standards.
|
2 Business
advertising | |
(a) Suspended under awning signs
| (a) One per premises.
(b) Must not exceed 1.5m2 in area and, if over a public
road, must be suspended with a clearance of no less than 2.6m above ground or
pavement level.
(c) Must relate to the use of premises.
|
(b) Awning fascia signs
| (a) Must relate to the use of the premises to which the fascia is
attached.
(b) Where a development control plan for a business centre applies,
the background colour, and all lettering colours and styles on the awning
fascia must comply with the requirements of that
plan.
|
(c) Under awning advertising (on building
facades)
| Must relate to the use of the
building. |
(d) A-frame signs and shopfront displays
| (a) Must comply with the approved development control plan for A-frame
advertising boards and shopfront display.
(b) A lease or licence for the structure must be obtained from the
Council before the sign or shopfront display is
erected.
|
3 Industrial
advertising | (a) One advertising sign of a maximum of 5m2 in area is
permitted and it must be fixed flush to the front elevation of the industrial
building or industrial unit, to a maximum height of 4.5m above ground level
and not project above the parapet of the building or the eaves line where the
building has a pitched roof.
(b) Freestanding directory boards for multiple occupancy complexes are
permitted within the property boundary/premises subject to the total area of
the board or boards not exceeding 5m2 in area and a maximum height
of 4.5m above ground level.
(c) All signage must relate to the activity on the
site.
|
4 Temporary signs | |
(a) Real estate signs
| (a) Must only advertise premises or land for sale or
lease.
(b) One sign per premises and located within property
boundaries.
(c) Sign must not exceed 2.5m2 in area.
(d) Not exempt more than 14 days after completion of the sale or
granting of the lease.
|
(b) Construction signs (signs advertising firms involved in
construction of a building)
| (a) Only during construction of the building.
(b) One composite sign per premises only and the sign must be located
within the property boundaries.
(c) Any signage must not exceed 2.5m2 in
area.
|
(c) Special event sign
| (a) Must be displayed only on the property where the special event is
to be held.
(b) Must be constructed of lightweight, banner type
material.
(c) Not exempt for more than 14 days before the special event or more
than 48 hours after the event is finalised.
|
(d) Inflatable promotional signs
| (a) Must be displayed only on the property where the promotion is to
be held.
(b) Not exempt development if displayed for more than 7 consecutive
days, more than 4 times or for a total of more than 28 days in any year or
later than 48 hours after the relevant promotion is
finalised.
|
5 Home activity identification
signs | (a) One per premises.
(b) Signs must not exceed 0.5m2 in area and be affixed to
the dwelling no higher than 3 metres above ground or pavement level and below
the eaves line of the building.
|
6 Community
advertising | (a) A permanent fixed sign must not exceed 1.5m2 in area
and must not be higher than 3m above the ground or pavement
level.
(b) A temporary sign may not display an advertisement for more than 7
consecutive days or for a total of more than 28 days in any
year.
|
Aerials/Antennae/Microwave antennae/Satellite
dishes | (a) For receiving purposes only.
(b) Must not have substantial adverse impact on views enjoyed by
adjoining and neighbouring premises.
For Satellite dishes only: (a) Maximum diameter 750mm.
(b) Maximum height must not exceed the highest point of a pitched
roof, or 1m above the highest point of a flat roof, of the building it will
serve.
(c) Must not be installed forward of the building line or on roof
areas visible from the road.
(d) Must not be visible from any public place, including roads, public
open space, public recreation areas and waterways.
(e) The dish and supporting structure must be finished in a non-
reflective colour, which blends in with the surrounding
environment.
|
Air conditioning
units | (a) External units must not be attached above the second storey on
residential buildings, unless located on a balcony where the air conditioning
unit is not clearly visible from street level.
(b) Roof mounted air conditioning units are permitted on industrial
premises only.
(c) Must not be located within the street facing elevation or within
the front building setback if ground mounted.
(d) Must be located a minimum of 0.5m from any side or rear
boundaries.
(e) Any air conditioning unit must not include a cooling tower as part
of the system.
(f) Any building work must not reduce the structural integrity of the
building.
(g) Any opening created must be adequately
weatherproofed.
(h) The noise level generated by the air conditioning unit must not
exceed an LAeq of 5 dB(A) above background noise level when measured at the
property boundary. Despite this, domestic air conditioning units must not be
audible within any room of any adjoining premises, from 10pm to 7am on
weekdays or 10pm to 8am on weekends or public holidays.
(i) Any noise emitted must not include any tonal, impulsive or
intermittent characteristics.
(j) Must be maintained and installed in compliance with Australian
Standards AS/NZS
1668.1:1998, AS
1668.2—2002, AS/NZS 3666.1:2002, AS/NZS 3666.2:2002 and AS/NZS
3666.3:2000.
|
Awnings, canopies and security/storm blinds or
shutters | (a) Must be retractable.Note. See “Pergolas, and fixed awnings etc” for fixed
attachments.
(b) Must not be installed above the second storey of any
building.
(c) This exemption is not applicable to security blinds or shutters on
the street front elevation of business buildings or business shopfront
awnings.
|
Barbecues (portable and fixed
structures) | (a) All barbecues are to be located so that they do not cause a
nuisance while being used.
(b) Maximum height of fixed structure 2.7m from ground
level.
(c) Fixed structures must be located behind the building line of the
property or no further forward than the alignment of any existing building on
any adjoining property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) For fixed structures, a minimum 0.5 m setback from side or rear
boundaries, except where a heat shield is incorporated or adjoins
non-combustible fence.
(e) Barbeques must be located so that the risk of the spread of fire
from the barbecue to any other structure is
minimised.
|
Bird aviaries and pet animal
shelters | (a) Maximum area 10m2.
(b) Maximum height 2.7m from ground level.
(c) Must be located in rear or side yard areas
only.
(d) Must be located away from the boundary a minimum of 0.5
m.
(e) Limit of one bird aviary per property.
(f) An aviary for fowls (poultry, including domestic fowl, chickens or
guinea fowls) and small birds must not be located within 4.5m of a dwelling,
public hall, school or premises used for the manufacture, preparation, sale or
storage of food.
(g) An aviary for poultry (other than fowls) must not be located
within 30m of any building referred to in paragraph (f).
(h) All poultry or fowls must be kept in accordance with Part 3 of and
Division 2 of Schedule 5 to the Local Government (Orders) Regulation
1999.
(i) Fowls are limited to a maximum of 20, and other poultry to a
maximum of 5.
(j) The floors of poultry houses within 15.2m of a dwelling, public
hall or school must be paved with concrete or mineral asphalt underneath the
roosts or perches, unless situated on clean sand.
|
Building alterations
(external) | General requirements (a) Does not apply to:(i) residential flat buildings, or
(ii) the principal street frontage of buildings in the 3 (a) General
Business, 3 (b) Neighbourhood Business, 4 (a) General Industrial or 9 (a)
Mixed Residential/Business zone, or
(iii) any development in the 5 (a) Special Uses, 6 (a) Public Recreation
or 6 (b) Private Recreation zone.Note. See Schedule 5 (Complying development) for external building
alterations.
(b) Work must be non-structural.
(c) Applies only to alterations or renovations to previously completed
buildings.
(d) Works are not to include changes to the footprint or increase
floorspace of the buildings or residential use of rooms whether by removal of
existing walls, partitions or by other means. This does not exclude bay
windows up to 0.3m from the existing alignment of the
wall.
(e) Works are not to include repositioning or enlarging of windows
above ground level.
(f) Works are not to cause reduced window arrangements for light and
ventilation needs, reduced doorways for egress purposes or involve enclosure
of open areas.
(g) Any work involving lead paint removal must not cause lead
contamination of the air or ground or water.
|
(a) Recladding of roofs or walls
| (a) Replacement of existing materials must be with similar materials
which do not increase the reflectivity.
(b) Recladding not to involve structural alterations, change to roof
shape or roof pitch, or brick veneering.
|
(b) Skylight roof windows (including solartube or similar type
installations and roof ventilators)
| (a) The building work must not reduce the structural integrity of the
building or involve structural alterations.
(b) Any opening created by the installation must be adequately
weatherproofed.
|
(c) Windows, glassed areas and external
doors
| (a) Replacement materials must comply with:Australian Standard AS
1288—1994 Glass in buildings—Selection and
installation and AS/NZS
2208:1996 Safety glazing materials in
buildings.
(b) Opaque or other obscured glazing must be replaced with similar
opaque glazing so as not to impact on the privacy of neighbouring
properties.
|
Building alterations
(internal) (a) Business/Industrial
| (a) Does not include alterations to premises for the preparation or
storage (or both) of food for sale to the public.
(b) Works must be non-structural, such as shelving, displays, benches
and partitions that do not provide structural support to any part of the
building.
(c) Works must not compromise fire safety or affect accessibility to
fire exits.
(d) Must not increase existing floor area of
premises.
(e) Must be an alteration to an existing
building.
|
(b) Residential
| (a) Works must be non-structural.
(b) Applies only to alterations or renovations to previously completed
buildings.
(c) Works are not to include changes to the footprint of the dwelling
or residential use of rooms whether by removal of existing walls, partitions
or by other means.
(d) Works may include replacement of internal doors, walls, windows,
ceiling or floor linings or deteriorated frame members with equivalent or
improved quality materials.
(e) Works may include renovation of bathrooms, kitchens, and inclusion
of built-in fixtures such as vanities, cupboards and
wardrobes.
(f) Works are not to cause reduced window arrangements for light and
ventilation needs, reduced doorways for egress purposes or involve enclosure
of open areas.
(g) Works must not increase external size and envelope of the existing
building.
(h) Works are not to include installation of oil or solid fuel heating
appliances.
(i) Does not include alterations to premises for the preparation or
storage (or both) of food for sale to the public.
|
Bushfire hazard
reduction | Work must be carried out consistent with a bush
fire management plan made pursuant to section 52 of the Rural Fires Act
1997. |
Cabanas and gazebos | (a) Maximum area 10m2 per structure.
(b) The floor must be located at or near ground
level.
(c) Maximum height of 4.0m from ground level.
(d) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(e) Structures must be sited a minimum of 0.5m from side and rear
boundaries, except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where
the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west
of the Woronora River (excepting Woronora) where the minimum setback is to be
1.5m.
(f) Maximum total floorspace of combined structures in this category
is 40m2.
|
Changes of use (Different use resulting from change of use of: (a) business premises, shop, restaurant, food shop or sex shop to
business premises, or
(b) business premises, shop, restaurant, food shop or sex shop to shop
or different kind of shop, or
(c) food shop to different kind of food shop, or
(d) restaurant to a different kind of restaurant,
or
(e) bulky goods outlet to different kind of bulky goods outlet,
or
(f) industry to different kind of industry, or
(g) warehouse to different kind of
warehouse.)
| (a) The following changes of use of premises within the 9 (a) Mixed
Residential/Business zone are not included:(i) business premises to shop,
(ii) shop to business premises, and
(iii) restaurant, food shop or sex shop to business premises or
shop.
(b) Does not include a change of use to a sex
shop.
(c) Hours of operation are limited generally to between 6am and 9pm
daily for all uses except industrial uses where the hours of operation are
limited to between 6am and 7pm Monday to Saturday with no use on Sundays or
public holidays.
(d) The change of use is not to include any change to existing
floorspace, parking, landscaping or waste facilities approved for the
development.
|
Clothes hoists/lines | (a) Must be installed at ground level.
(b) Must be located behind the building or in the side or rear
yard.
(c) Must not be located on balconies or elevated
decks.
|
Decks and patios | (a) The finished surface level must not be greater than 1m above
ground level.
(b) The structure must not exceed an area of
20m2.
(c) The structure must be located behind the building line of the
property or no further forward than the alignment of any existing building on
any adjoining property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Sufficient step down is to be provided to prevent the entry of
water into any associated dwelling.
(e) Decks and patios 0.5m or less above natural ground level must be
located a minimum 0.9m from side and rear boundaries, except in the 2 (a2), 2
(e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area
applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the Woronora River (excepting
Woronora) where the minimum setback is to be 1.5m.
(f) Decks and patios greater than 0.5m above natural ground level, or
decks to swimming pools, must be located a minimum of 1.5m from side and rear
boundaries.
|
Demolition of a
structure | (a) Demolition of a structure is only exempt development if erection
of that structure would be exempt development, or where an order to demolish
has been issued by the Council under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
(b) Does not apply to demolition of a structural retaining
wall.
(c) Does not apply to the decontamination, rehabilitation or
remediation of contaminated land.
(d) Demolition must be carried out in accordance with Australian
Standard AS 2601—2001
Demolition of structures.
|
Driveways and
pathways | (a) Does not apply to works on public land except for driveways or
pathways constructed by or on behalf of the Council.
(b) Must be structurally sound and of stable
construction.
(c) Must not be elevated or suspended above ground level or involve
excavation greater than 0.6m.
(d) Driveway or access gradients must be designed to align with
footpath crossing levels issued by the Council and must comply with the access
gradient requirements of Australian Standard AS 2890.1—1993 Parking
facilities, Part 1: Off-street car
parking.
(e) Must be graded and drained so as not to cause a drainage nuisance
to adjoining property or footpath area.
|
Fences and gates (including replacement of existing fences or
gates) | General requirements (a) Does not apply to fences required by the Swimming Pools Act
1992.
(b) Does not apply to fencing of street frontages of land occupied by
dual occupancies, townhouses or villas.
(c) Does not apply to fences or gates for residential
flats.
(d) All fences are to be constructed so as not to create a drainage
nuisance.
(e) Does not apply to fencing along the street boundary of land
occupied by dual occupancies, townhouses or villas.
(f) Does not apply to waterfront properties in Sylvania Waters where
fencing between the rear of the dwelling and the waterway is restricted to a
maximum 1.2m high open form fencing.
|
(a) Front fences (including side fences between the building line and
the street or any other public place)
| (a) Does not apply to front fences in Alfords Point, Barden Ridge,
Bangor, Bonnet Bay, Illawong, Lucas Heights, Menai, Woronora Heights or land
at Sylvania Waters where covenants apply to the land that restricts erection
of front fencing.
(b) Does not apply to commercial premises.
(c) A maximum height of 1m.
(d) An open form front fence, to a maximum height of 2.5m, is
permitted on industrial premises but only where set behind existing
landscaping carried out with consent.
|
(b) Side fences and rear fences (fences behind the building
line)
| (a) Maximum height of 1.8m if constructed of timber, metal or
lightweight materials, all other materials maximum height of
1.0m.
(b) Open form fencing to a maximum height of 2.5m is permitted on
industrial premises.
|
Flagpoles | (a) Maximum height 6.0m above ground level.
(b) Must not project beyond property boundaries.
(c) Limit of one flagpole per property.
(d) Not used to display flag larger than
1m2.
(e) Not used to display flags for advertising
purposes.
|
Greenhouses, garden sheds, studios, cubby houses
and playground equipment | (a) Maximum area 10m2 per structure.
(b) The floor must be located at or near ground
level.
(c) Maximum height of 4.0m from ground level.
(d) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(e) Structures must be sited a minimum of 0.5m from side and rear
boundaries, except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where
the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west
of the Woronora River (excepting Woronora) where the minimum setback is to be
1.5m.
(f) Maximum total floorspace of combined structures in this category
is 40m2.
(g) Maximum area and height requirements do not apply where the
structures are located on land zoned 5 (a) Special
Uses.
|
Home activities | (a) The activity must not interfere with the amenity of the area by
reason of such things as vehicular traffic, parking, noise, vibration, smell,
fumes, smoke, water or other waste products.
(b) Any sound producing plant, equipment, machinery or fittings
associated with or forming part of a mechanical ventilation system or
refrigeration system, which is installed as part of a home activity, must be
sound insulated or isolated (or both).
(c) Noise emitted must not exceed an LAeq of 5dB(A) above the
background level in any octave band from 63.0 Hz centre frequencies inclusive
at the boundary of the site. The method of measurement of sound must be
carried out in accordance with Australian Standard AS 1055.1—1997
Acoustics—Description and measurement of environmental
noise—General procedures.
(d) Any noise emitted must not include any tonal, impulsive or
intermittent characteristics.
(e) Hours of operation for the activity are limited to between 8am and
6pm Monday to Saturday.
|
Letter box | Must not exceed a maximum height of 1.2m above
ground level. |
Outdoor eating areas | (a) Must comply with the approved development control plan for outdoor
eating areas.
(b) A licence for the activity must be obtained from the Council
before any outdoor eating activities are
undertaken.
|
Pergolas, and fixed awnings, shade
structures/sunshades at ground floor level or over an existing first floor
deck | (a) Maximum area 20m2 per structure.
(b) Maximum height 2.7m above ground level where proposed at ground
floor level.
(c) Maximum height 2.7m above existing first floor or deck level where
proposed over an existing elevated deck.
(d) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(e) Must be located a minimum of 0.5m from side and rear boundaries,
except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore
Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the
Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the minimum is
1.5m.
(f) Does not apply to business shopfront awnings.
(g) Maximum area and height requirements do not apply where the
structure is located on land zoned 5 (a) Special
Uses.
|
Public facilities and amenities (new
construction and use) (includes such things as playground equipment, public toilet
facilities, staircases, recreational, sporting, entertainment and cultural
activities, works for the purpose of landscaping, gardening, beach and
foreshore protection works, lighting and night-time activities, traffic
management facilities, public transport facilities, street furniture, security
equipment or devices, goal posts, sight screens and similar ancillary sporting
structures) | (a) Approved by the Council and undertaken by or on behalf of the
Council, or if on Crown land where consultation with the Department of Land
and Water Conservation has occurred or, in the case of traffic management
facilities, must be undertaken by or on behalf of the Roads and Traffic
Authority.
(b) Works must be located on land under the control of the Council or
the Roads and Traffic Authority.
(c) Must be designed, fabricated and installed in accordance with any
relevant Australian Standards and the Building Code
of Australia.
(d) Bus shelters and seats with ancillary advertising must comply with
the requirements of the development control plan for bus shelters and
seats.
(e) Park and street furniture (for example, seats, bins, picnic
tables, barbecues etc) must comply with the requirements of any applicable
development control plan or adopted plan of management.
(f) The following works or uses may only be exempt if in accordance
with an adopted plan of management:(i) temporary uses, such as markets, concerts, fetes
etc,
(ii) public toilet facilities,
(iii) installation of lighting to enable the night use of recreational
facilities.
|
Retaining walls | (a) Not if any site filling or raising of site levels greater than
0.3m will occur within 1.5m of side or rear boundaries.
(b) Maximum height 0.6m.
(c) Masonry walls to comply with Australian Standards AS 3700—2001 Masonry
structures, AS
3600—1994 Concrete structures and
AS/NZS 1170.0: 2002,
AS/NZS 1170.1: 2002,
AS/NZS 1170.2: 2002 and
AS 1170.4—1993
Structural design actions and Minimum design loads on
structures.
(d) Timber walls to comply with Australian Standards AS 1720.1—1997, AS 1720.2—1990 and AS 1720.4—1990 Timber
structures and AS/NZS
1170.0: 2002, AS/NZS
1170.1: 2002, AS/NZS
1170.2: 2002 and AS
1170.4—1993 Structural design actions and Minimum
design loads on structures.
(e) All retaining walls are to be constructed so as not to cause a
drainage nuisance.
(f) Maximum length of 20 lineal metres of retaining wall per
property.
(g) Not if there are two or more wall rises or drops in
succession.
|
Water heaters (includes heat pump hot water heaters and solar water
heaters) | (a) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(b) The installation must not reduce the structural integrity of the
building or involve structural alterations.
(c) The development must comply with the provisions of the Building Code of Australia for fire
separation if in multi-unit housing.
(d) The noise level generated must not exceed an LAeq of 5 dB(A) above
background noise level when measured at the property boundary. Despite this,
domestic water heaters must not be audible within any room of any adjoining
premises, from 8pm to 7am on weekdays and 10pm to 8am on weekends or public
holidays.
(e) Maximum height must not exceed the highest point of a pitched
roof, or 1m above the highest point of a flat roof, of the building it will
serve.
(f) Trees must not be lopped in order to achieve solar access for
solar water heaters.
|
Water tanks | (a) Not if a below ground tank or on land that requires
excavation.
(b) Maximum height 2.7m from ground level.
(c) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Tanks must be located a minimum of 0.5m from side and rear
boundaries.
(e) Maximum capacity of 1,600 litres.
(f) Suitable proofing for the prevention of mosquito breeding must be
provided.
(g) Rainwater tank overflows must be connected to an approved
stormwater system.
|
Schedule 5 Complying development—general
provisions
(Clause 18)
Part 1 Complying development in the following
zones:
Zone 2 (a1) Residential
Zone 2 (a2) Residential
Zone 2 (b) Residential
Zone 2 (e1) Residential
Zone 2 (e2) Residential
Development consisting of the erection or carrying
out of the following: | Development standards and other
requirements |
Building alterations
(internal) | (a) Work must not reduce fire safety or accessibility to a fire
exit.
(b) Applies only to alterations or renovations to previously completed
buildings.
(c) Works must not include installation of oil or solid fuel heating
appliances.
(d) Work on that part of residential premises used for the purpose of
preparation or storage (or both) of food for sale to the public as part of a
home activity use, must comply with the Food Regulation 2001 and the
Council’s Code for Food
Premises and Code for Commercial
Home Catering. Work does not include installation of any
commercial mechanical exhaust ventilation system.
|
Cabanas and gazebos | (a) Maximum area of 40m2 per structure.
(b) Maximum height of 4.0m from ground level for all
structures.
(c) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Must be located a minimum of 0.5m off side and rear boundaries,
except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore
Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the
Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the minimum is
1.5m.
(e) The finished floor level must be no more than 1.0m above ground
level at any point.
|
Decks and Patios | (a) The finished surface level must not be greater than 1m above
ground level.
(b) The structure must not exceed an area of
40m2.
(c) The structure must be located behind the building line of the
property or no further forward than the alignment of any existing building on
any adjoining property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Sufficient step down is to be provided to prevent the entry of
water into any associated dwelling.
(e) Must be located a minimum of 0.9m from side and rear boundaries if
situated 0.5m or less above natural ground level, except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1)
and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area
applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the Woronora River (excepting
Woronora) where the minimum setback is to be 1.5m.
(f) Must be located a minimum of 1.5m from side and rear boundaries if
situated more than 0.5m above natural ground level or are decks to swimming
pools.
|
Demolition | (a) Not including decontamination, rehabilitation or remediation of a
contaminated site.
(b) Demolition must be in accordance with any relevant Australian
Standards.
|
Fences, Gates and Retaining
Walls | (a) Not within the front building line setback in areas west of
Woronora River (excluding Woronora), Sylvania Waters, Woronora Heights and
Bonnet Bay.
(b) Front fences within the front building line must not exceed a
maximum height of 1.0m above ground level.
(c) Side or rear fences must not exceed a maximum height of 1.8m above
ground level.
(d) Retaining walls:(i) must be located a minimum of 0.5m from a boundary line,
and
(ii) must not exceed a maximum height of 1.0m above ground level,
and
(iii) maximum length of 20 lineal metres of retaining wall per
property.
(e) Does not apply to fencing along the street boundary of land
occupied by dual occupancies, townhouses or villas.
(f) Does not apply to waterfront properties in Sylvania Waters where
fencing between the rear of the dwelling and the waterway is restricted to a
maximum 1.2m high open form fencing.
|
Garages | (a) Maximum gross floor area of 40m2 per
structure.
(b) Maximum height 4.0m from ground level for all
structures.
(c) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Must be located a minimum of 0.9m off side boundaries or 0.5m if
detached and to the rear of the building, except in 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2)
Residential zones where the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora
Heights and areas west of the Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the
minimum is 1.5m.
(e) The finished floor level must be no more than 1.0m above ground
level at any point.
|
Greenhouses, garden sheds, studios, cubby
houses | (a) Maximum gross floor area of 40m2 per
structure.
(b) Maximum height 4.0m from ground level for all
structures.
(c) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Must be located in rear or side yards.
(e) Must be located a minimum of 0.9m off side boundaries or 0.5m if
detached and to the rear of the building, except in 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2)
Residential zones where the Foreshore Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora
Heights and areas west of the Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the
minimum is 1.5m.
(f) The finished floor level must be no more than 1.0m above ground
level at any point.
|
Pergolas, awnings, shade structures/sunshades,
carports | (a) Maximum area of 40m2 per structure.
(b) Maximum height of 4.0m from ground level for all
structures.
(c) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(d) Must be located a minimum of 0.5m off side and rear boundaries,
except in the 2 (a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore
Scenic Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the
Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the minimum is
1.5m.
(e) The finished floor level must be no more than 1.0m above ground
level at any point.
|
Seawalls | (a) Only applies to seawalls on land zoned 2 (a1) Residential in
Sylvania Waters.
(b) Reconstruction, replacement or maintenance of existing seawalls
only.
|
Single storey single dwelling houses and ground
floor single storey additions or alterations to single dwelling
houses | (a) Maximum height of 5.4m from ground level to the highest point of
the roof.
(b) Must be located a minimum of 0.9m off side boundaries, except in 2
(a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones where the Foreshore Scenic
Protection Area applies, Woronora Heights and areas west of the Woronora River
(excepting Woronora), where the minimum is 1.5m.
(c) Must be located a minimum of 4.5m from rear
boundaries.
(d) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(e) The maximum amount of cut or fill is restricted to 0.6m and the
cut must not extend further than 0.9m beyond the perimeter of the
building.
(f) All fill must be retained within the perimeter of the
buildings.
(g) For new dwellings, two car parking spaces must be provided behind
the building line.
(h) Any car spaces and access provided must comply with the
requirements of Australian Standard AS
2890.1—1993 Parking facilities, Part 1: Off-street car
parking.
(i) Any driveways provided must be designed to align with footpath
crossing levels issued by the Council.
(j) New dwellings must be entitled to at least a 3.5 star rating under
the National House Energy Rating
Scheme (NatHERS).
(k) Alterations or additions must comply with the energy efficiency
standards in the applicable development control plan.
(l) Works are not to include installation of oil or solid fuel heating
appliances.
(m) Must comply with Council’s construction standards for
buildings located in bushfire prone areas or relevant Council building
standards.
(n) Work on that part of residential premises used for the purpose of
preparation or storage (or both) of food for sale to the public as part of a
home activity use, must comply with the Food Regulation 2001 and the
Council’s Code for Food
Premises and Code for Commercial
Home Catering. Work does not include any commercial mechanical
exhaust ventilation system.
|
Subdivision for one or more of the following
purposes only: (a) widening of a public road by a public authority,
or
(b) adjusting a boundary between allotments, but only if the new lots
comply with this plan. The subdivision must not result in an increased number
of lots, the re-orientation of the existing allotments or redefinition of the
Mean High Water Mark, or
(c) correcting an encroachment on an allotment, but only if the new
lots comply with this plan, or
(d) strata subdivision of any building, except dual occupancy housing,
approved and constructed after 1 July 1988, subject to the development
conforming with all conditions of any applicable development consent,
or
(e) consolidation of allotments, if it is development,
or
(f) the creation of an allotment for public reserve purposes but only
where the residue lot or lots comply with the minimum size standards of this
plan.
| |
Swimming pools, spas and safety
fencing | (a) Must be located in the rear or side yard.
(b) Must be located a minimum of 1.0m distance from side or rear
boundaries to the water.
(c) Pools (including in-ground or above-ground) must not exceed 1.0m
above ground level with no attached decking within 1.5m of side and rear
boundaries (refer to Decks and Patios).
(d) Safety fencing must comply with the Swimming Pools Act 1992 and
Australian Standard AS
1926.2—1995 Swimming pool safety, Part 2: Location of
fencing for private swimming pools.
(e) Swimming pool/spa pump and associated equipment must be sound
insulated or isolated (or both) so that the noise emitted does not exceed an
LAeq of 5 dB (A) above background noise level in any octave band from 63.0 Hz
centre frequencies inclusive at the property boundary, measured in accordance
with Australian Standard AS
1055.1—1997 Acoustics—Description and measurement
of environmental noise—General
procedures.
|
Two storey single dwelling houses and two storey
additions or alterations to single dwelling houses (excluding areas where the Australian Noise Exposure Forecast
(ANEF) is between 20 and 25) | (a) Maximum height of 6.5m from ground level to the ceiling and 8m to
the highest point of the roof.
(b) Must be located a minimum of 0.9m off side boundaries, except in 2
(a2), 2 (e1) and 2 (e2) Residential zones, Woronora Heights and areas west of
the Woronora River (excepting Woronora), where the minimum is
1.5m.
(c) The two storey component of any proposed dwelling or addition must
not extend beyond 50% of the depth of an allotment measured from the primary
street frontage.
(d) Must be located behind the building line of the property or no
further forward than the alignment of any existing building on any adjoining
property, whichever is the greater setback.
(e) The maximum amount of cut or fill is restricted to 0.6m and the
cut must not extend further than 0.9m beyond the perimeter of the building.
All fill must be retained within the perimeter of the
buildings.
(f) For new dwelling houses two carparking spaces must be provided
behind the building line.
(g) Any car spaces and access provided must comply with the
requirements of Australian Standard AS
2890.1—1993 Parking facilities, Part 1: Off-street car
parking.
(h) Any driveways provided must be designed to align with footpath
crossing levels issued by the Council.
(i) New dwellings must be entitled to at least a 3.5 star rating under
the House Energy Rating Scheme (NatHERS).
(j) Additions and alterations to existing dwellings must comply with
insulation (roof, wall and floor), hot water system, AAA rated fittings and
clothes dryer requirements as per the existing development control plan
requirements for single dwelling additions.
(k) Works are not to include side or rear first floor
balconies.
(l) Works are not to include kitchen areas on the first
floor.
(m) Works are not to include installation of oil or solid fuel heating
appliances.
(n) Must comply with the Council’s construction standards for
buildings located in bushfire prone areas or relevant Council building
standards.
(o) Work on that part of the residential premises used for the purpose
of preparation or storage of food (or both) for sale to the public as part of
a home activity use, must comply with the Food Regulation 2001, the
Council’s Code for Food
Premises and Code for Commercial
Home Catering.Work does not include any commercial mechanical exhaust
ventilation system.
|
Part 2 Complying development in the following
zones:
2 (c) Residential
3 (a) General Business
3 (b) Neighbourhood Business
4 (a) General Industrial
5 (a) Special Uses
5 (b) Special Uses (Railways)
6 (b) Private Recreation
9 (a) Mixed Residential/Business
Development consisting of the erection or carrying
out of the following: | Development standards and other
requirements |
Building alterations
(external) | (a) Building must be an existing building authorised by a
consent.
(b) Only where there is an applicable development control plan or plan
of management that specifies standards for the external treatment or
appearance of the building and only where the development complies with the
requirements of the applicable development control plan or plan of
management.
(c) Work must not reduce fire safety or accessibility to a fire
exit.
(d) Work must not contravene any conditions of any development consent
applicable to the building or its use.
|
Building alterations
(internal) | (a) Building must be an existing building authorised by a
consent.
(b) Work must not reduce fire safety or accessibility to a fire
exit.
(c) Work must not increase the existing gross floor area of industrial
premises except where it is an internal mezzanine floor, where that area may
be increased by up to a maximum floor area of 50m2 but only for the
purpose of storage or amenities.
(d) Work must not increase existing gross floor area of business
premises, including extensions within pedestrian arcades.
(e) Work on that part of residential premises used for the purpose of
preparation or storage (or both) of food for sale to the public as part of a
home activity use, must comply with the Food Regulation 2001 and the
Council’s Code for Food
Premises and Code for Commercial
Home Catering. Work does not include any commercial mechanical
exhaust ventilation systems.
(f) Work on food shops or restaurants must comply with the Food Regulation
2001, the Council’s Code for
Food Premises, the Clean Air (Plant and Equipment) Regulation
1997, the Protection of the
Environment Operations Act 1997, AS/NZS 1668.1:1998 and AS
1668.2—2002.Alterations to an existing food shop or restaurant do not include
the construction or installation of an externally mounted or located exhaust
duct, fan or refrigeration unit.
(g) Work on hairdressers, beauty salons or skin penetration premises
must comply with the Public Health Act
1991 and Regulations under that Act, the NSW Health
Department’s Skin Penetration
Guidelines, published in July 1999 (if appropriate) and the
Local Government (Orders)
Regulation 1999.
(h) Existing sound producing machinery or fittings associated with or
forming part of the existing mechanical ventilation system or refrigeration
system, must be sound insulated or isolated (or both) so that the noise
emitted does not exceed LAeq of 5 dB(A) above the background level in any
octave band from 63.0 Hz centre frequencies inclusive at the boundary of the
site (in accordance with any relevant Australian Standards). Any noise emitted
must not include any tonal, impulsive or intermittent
characteristics.
|
Demolition | (a) Demolition is only permitted of a building the erection of which
is identified in this Schedule as complying development.
(b) Not including decontamination, rehabilitation or remediation of a
contaminated site.
(c) Demolition must be carried out in accordance with any relevant
Australian Standards.
|
Seawalls | (a) Only applies to seawalls on land in the 6 (b) Private Recreation
zone in Sylvania Waters.
(b) Reconstruction, replacement or maintenance of existing seawalls
only.
|
Subdivision for one or more of the following
purposes only: (a) widening of a public road by a public authority,
or
(b) adjusting a boundary between allotments, but only if the new lots
comply with this plan. The subdivision must not result in an increased number
of lots, the re-orientation of the existing allotments or redefinition of the
Mean High Water Mark, or
(c) correcting an encroachment on an allotment, but only if the new
lots comply with this plan, or
(d) strata subdivision of any building, except dual occupancy housing,
approved and constructed after 1 July 1988 subject to the development
conforming with all conditions of any applicable development consent,
or
(e) consolidating allotments, if it is development,
or
(f) the creation of an allotment for public reserve purposes but only
where the residue lot or lots comply with the minimum size standards of this
plan.
| |
Schedule 6 Reclassification of public land as operational
land
(Clause 21)
Cronulla | |
Masefield Place | Lots 8 and 9, DP 238755 |
Gymea | |
Carter Crescent | Lot 23, DP 28324 |
Heathcote | |
Princes Highway | Lot 3, DP 230603 |
Sutherland | |
Vermont Street | Lot 3, DP 181070 |
Woronora | |
195B Prices Circuit | Lot 3, DP 565899 |
Schedule 7 Maps
(Clauses 5, 23, 65 and 69)
Part 1 Rezoning maps and maps relating to additional
uses
















Map 8: Restaurants in 6 (a) Zones
Sheet 9: Cronulla Surf Life Saving Club, Sports Complex and
Restaurant.
LOCATION CRONULLA

















Editorial
note. This map, as inserted by Gazette No 38 of 8.2.2002, p 788, was
renumbered as “Map 22:1–7 Robertson Street and Part of Harvard
Lane” by Gazette No 57 of 8.3.2002, p 1532.









Part 2 Maps amending the acid sulfate soil planning
maps

Schedule 8 Detailed planning controls for land
(Clause 65 (5))
Part 1 Part Lot 11, DP 526492, Captain Cook Drive,
Woolooware
Division 1 Primary development controls
1 Objectives
The objectives of this Division relating to local context in
relation to the land to which this Part applies (referred to in this Part as
the site) are as
follows:(a) to ensure appropriate height relationship between the existing
clubhouse/sportsground, surrounding land uses, Botany Bay and new
development,
(b) to improve the amenity of the public domain by creating a view
corridor through the site to Woolooware Bay with building heights that enhance
the view corridor,
(c) to protect and enhance the environmental and visual features of
the site,
(d) to achieve compatibility between the scale, density, bulk and
landscape character of buildings and the site,
(e) to provide space between buildings, to maximise daylight and
sunlight access between buildings, to ensure adequate space for landscaping
and to create view corridors,
(f) to regulate the density of the development on the site and the
scale and bulk of development consistently with the capacity and area of the
site,
(g) to ensure that there is sufficient space for car parking and that
these areas are not visually obtrusive,
(h) to achieve an appropriate separation between buildings and site
boundaries,
(i) to establish a consistency of building forms across the
site,
(j) to minimise impact of new development on existing distant views
across the site from Sans Souci, immediate views from Woolooware Bay and from
residential properties to the south-east,
(k) to enhance opportunities for ecological management of the
adjoining Towra Point Aquatic Reserve,
(l) to ensure that the foreshore is adequately re-vegetated and
managed in the long term.
2 Matters for consideration
(1) Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development is
consistent with:(a) any relevant objectives contained in this plan,
and
(b) any relevant State environmental planning
policy.
(2) Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development will comply
with:(a) the relevant development standards and other requirements for the
development set out in this Part, and
(b) the relevant provisions of clause 30 of this plan in relation to
residential development.
(3) Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development is
consistent with, and does not adversely impact on, the ongoing use of the
Cronulla Sutherland Leagues Club as a club.
3 Building height
(1) The provisions of clause 62 of this plan that specify the maximum
height of a building in an open space zone do not apply to development carried
out on the site.
(2) The maximum height of any building above ground level is 15 metres
to the highest point of the roof.
(3) Plant equipment, lift overruns, communication devices, solar
collectors, exhaust stacks, ventilation shafts and other typically roof
mounted items are to be concealed or integrated into the design of the
building. Despite the requirements of subclause (2), roof mounted items may
have a height greater than 15 metres above ground
level.
4 Development standards for seniors housing
Despite any other provision in this Part:(a) the development standards in Parts 4 and 7 of Chapter 3 of State Environmental Planning Policy
(Seniors Living) 2004 apply to any development for the purpose
of seniors housing on land to which this Schedule applies in the same way as
those standards apply to development on land to which that Policy applies
generally, and
(b) any such development standards prevail over any other development
standards set out in this Part to the extent of any
inconsistency.
5 Floorspace ratio
The maximum floorspace ratio for development on the site is
1:1.
6 Minimum landscaped area
The minimum landscaped area for the site is 65% of the site
area.
7 Building design
(1) Buildings must be of a size and bulk that is consistent with the
medium density nature of the development site.
(2) The provisions of State Environmental Planning Policy No
65—Design Quality of Residential Flat Development apply
to the site.
(3) All development must be set back from a public road, property
boundary, public open space, environmental buffer or proposed public open
space by a distance of not less than 5 metres.
(4) Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that all building designs
demonstrate how optimum natural daylight, cross ventilation, building
separation, solar access, landscaping, aural and visual privacy and protection
from mosquitoes are to be achieved.
(5) To reduce the apparent scale of a building in relationship to
adjacent development, the uppermost floor of the development is to be set back
from the lower floors of a building.
Division 2 Site design
8 Objectives
The objectives of this Division relating to site design
(landscaping, fences, safety, access and car parking, building entries, public
domain and public lighting) are as follows:(a) to connect the existing public road network to the site and ensure
internal accessways permit a visual connection between the surrounding areas
to the south and Woolooware Bay,
(b) to protect and conserve environmentally sensitive land,
particularly the foreshore lands to Woolooware Bay,
(c) to accommodate the future needs of the Cronulla Sutherland Leagues
Club in relation to club activities and other development,
(d) to concentrate non-residential uses at street
level,
(e) to promote characteristic landscaping and streetscapes with
substantial plantings, including trees that will grow to a minimum height of
15 metres,
(f) to maximise opportunities for the development to utilise public
transport services and pedestrian and bicycle links,
(g) to create a high quality residential living environment that
contributes to a sense of place and community,
(h) to provide useable private open space for the enjoyment of
residents,
(i) to facilitate re-contouring of the foreshore lands, replicating as
closely as possible, the original landform and vegetative
state,
(j) to allow for re-vegetation with appropriate plant species,
including saltmarsh, taking into consideration the implications of future sea
level rise,
(k) to create a visual screen to the development from the
waterway.
9 Matters for consideration
Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development provides
for the following:(a) well-designed landscaped areas that contribute to the continuity
and amenity of the public domain as well as the buildings,
(b) public areas that are predominantly planted with trees and shrubs
and minimal paving that is limited to access paths, vehicular access points
and cycleways,
(c) appropriate levels of visual privacy for residents using both
internal and external spaces at night and during the day,
(d) buildings and spaces that comply with the principles for
minimising crime risk set out in Part B of the guidelines issued by the
Department of Urban Affairs and Planning (as it was then named) in April 2001
entitled Crime prevention and the assessment of
development applications: Guidelines under section 79C of the Environmental
Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (ISBN 0 7347 0184
5),
(e) minimal light spillage adjacent to the 40 metre wide environmental
buffer.
10 Environmental buffer
(1) A 40 metre wide environmental buffer is required from the mean
high water mark. No development is permitted within the environmental
buffer.
(2) The 40 metre wide environmental buffer must incorporate a 5 metre
wide riparian buffer zone, to the eastern side of the drainage channel that
divides the development site from the western playing
fields.
(3) A visual barrier from Woolooware Bay must be provided
incorporating plantings of trees that form a continuous canopy dense enough to
screen views from the Bay and which will grow to a minimum height of 15
metres.
(4) The environmental buffer must be rehabilitated in accordance with
a rehabilitation plan that has been endorsed by the Council and the NSW
Department of Primary Industries, Fisheries Division. The rehabilitation plan
is to be submitted by the applicant with any development application lodged
for the site.
(5) At the boundary of the environmental buffer a physical barrier is
required that will impede uncontrolled access to Woolooware Bay by people and
domesticated animals.
(6) Any provision for a publicly accessible pedestrian pathway and
cycleway must be outside the 40 metre wide environmental
buffer.
11 Access and parking
(1) Access, parking and servicing is to be provided in accordance with
the requirements set out in the Guide to Traffic
Generating Development, Version 2.2, published by the Roads
and Traffic Authority in 2002.
(2) Car parking must generally be located beneath buildings and away
from public view.
(3) Car parking spaces for the existing registered club are to be
provided in addition to the car parking requirements for the residential and
non-residential uses of the development. These are to be calculated in
accordance with the requirements set out in the Guide to Traffic Generating
Development.
(4) A publicly accessible pedestrian pathway and cycleway must be
provided on the northern side of the building.
(5) The consent authority must not grant consent to the carrying out
of development on the site unless the consent authority is satisfied that the
development adequately addresses the following:(a) pedestrian and vehicular entries should be separated and clearly
demarcated,
(b) pedestrian entries to buildings should be prominently located on
primary streets, as close to property boundaries as
acceptable,
(c) bicycle parking and storage.
Division 3 Building design
12 Objectives
The objectives of this Division relating to building design
(apartment layout, balcony design, ceiling heights, flexibility, ground level
activity, acoustic privacy, visual privacy, natural light, natural ventilation
and building expression and articulation) are as follows:(a) to ensure that all development has been designed to be compatible
with and protect the topography and setting of the site,
(b) to reinforce and enhance the character of the development
site,
(c) to ensure that buildings are designed with adequate provision for
the intended occupants, in terms of amenity and access to private open
space,
(d) to ensure that development provides adequate landscaping and open
space to enhance the quality and appearance of the building while
accommodating the needs of its users and maintaining residential
amenity,
(e) to create a built form that defines and enhances the view corridor
through the site, from Woolooware Road to Woolooware Bay,
(f) to ensure development has adequate utility services and drainage
facilities,
(g) to use materials that improve the energy efficiency of a building
when used in external walls that are properly protected from direct summer sun
by using sun shading devices.
13 Matters for consideration
Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development
provides:(a) noise attenuation to achieve a night time L90 noise level for
bedrooms within residential development of not more than:(i) 45 dBa within noise sensitive spaces, and
(ii) 40 dBa at the southern limit of the environmental buffer,
and
(b) elements within buildings that assist in the modulation of a
facade, such as verandas, awnings, balconies, terraces, sun shading, cornice
lines, roof gardens, eaves overhangs, windows, openings and the like,
and
(c) external finishes that seek to minimise the apparent visual impact
of the buildings.
Division 4 Environmental considerations
14 Objectives
The objectives of this Division relating to environmental
considerations (biodiversity, ecologically sustainable development, water
conservation and solar energy use, waste management and air quality) are as
follows:(a) to minimise the impact of development on the flora, fauna and
water qualities of Woolooware Bay and adjacent mangroves and wetlands by
recognising the international importance of these areas,
(b) to ensure that development is carried out in a manner that
reflects constraints associated with acid sulfate soils, flooding, drainage
and the like,
(c) to reduce stormwater run-off by minimising the area of impervious
surfaces,
(d) to ensure that stormwater discharge has a dispersed pattern of
flow, avoiding newly created centralised or concreted discharge points into
the wetland/riparian buffer,
(e) to ensure that stormwater discharge maintains an appropriate
saline/freshwater interface within the wetland/riparian
buffer,
(f) to maximise retention and absorption of surface drainage water on
site,
(g) to minimise obstruction to the underground flow of
water,
(h) to achieve effective environmental performance of development
generally,
(i) to reduce the consumption of energy used in the habitation of
multi-unit housing by ensuring that solar design principles are followed in
the development,
(j) to minimise the use of reticulated water on site through water
conservation practices including the collection and reuse of rainwater in
gardens, toilets, laundries and car washing areas,
(k) to contribute to water and stormwater efficiency by integrating
landscape design with water and stormwater
management.
15 Matters for consideration
Before granting consent to the carrying out of development on the
site, the consent authority must be satisfied that the development provides
for:(a) adequate remediation measures to be carried out before the
development is commenced if any part of the site is identified as being
contaminated, and
(b) water and stormwater efficiency by integrating landscape design
with water and stormwater management, and
(c) building design that incorporates passive solar design techniques
to optimise heat storage in winter and heat transfer in summer,
and
(d) the emission of gases from the development site that are below the
units specified in the National Environment
Protection (Ambient Air Quality) Measure, as varied up to May
2003, published by the National Environment Protection Council,
and
(e) stormwater that is removed from the development to be disposed of
through suitable detention areas designed to reduce rubbish in, and suspended
solids and nutrients from, the water before its further disposal and the
requirements of the Lower Georges River Stormwater
Management Plan 1999 are satisfied, and
(f) stormwater run-off from the development to be discharged to a
Council drainage system approved by the Council for the purpose and with no
adverse impact on the water quality of any receiving stormwater
infrastructure, watercourse, stream, lagoon, lake, waterway or the like,
and
(g) implementation of an acid sulfate soils management plan that has
been prepared in accordance with the Acid Sulfate
Soils Assessment and Management Guidelines,
and
(h) implementation of an environmental management plan that has been
prepared to provide for the long term health and management of the foreshore
vegetation and that will adequately address the potential mosquito issue for
future residents without degrading the sensitive aquatic reserve
ecosystem.
Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
Subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments
Sutherland Shire
Local Environmental Plan 2000 published in Gazette No 162 of
15.12.2000, p 13236 and amended as follows:
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 2) (GG No 54 of 16.3.2001, p 1394)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 5) (GG No 86 of 18.5.2001, p 2785)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 4) (GG No 103 of 29.6.2001, p 5097)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000—Amendment No 9 (GG No 113 of 20.7.2001, p
5498)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 11) (GG No 196 of 21.12.2001, p 10719)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 8) (GG No 38 of 8.2.2002, p 788)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 6) (GG No 57 of 8.3.2002, p 1532)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 14) (GG No 118 of 15.7.2002, p 5381)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 13) (GG No 122 of 26.7.2002, p 5626)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 19) (GG No 128 of 9.8.2002, p 5904)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 18) (GG No 133 of 23.8.2002, p 6498)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 16) (GG No 178 of 18.10.2002, p 8841)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 7) (GG No 246 of 6.12.2002, p 10488)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 15) (GG No 137 of 5.9.2003, p 9173)
Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 3) (GG No 138 of 12.9.2003, p 9314)
State Environmental Planning Policy (Repeal of
Concurrence and Referral Provisions) 2004 (GG No 201 of
17.12.2004, p 9590)
2005 | (146) | Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000 (Amendment No 29). GG No 42 of 8.4.2005, p 1295. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
| | (738) | Sutherland Local Environmental Plan 2000
(Amendment No 21). GG No 140 of 18.11.2005, p 9567. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
2006 | (85) | Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000 (Amendment No 17). GG No 31 of 3.3.2006, p 1141. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
| | (165) | Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000 (Amendment No 23). GG No 47 of 4.4.2006, p 1999. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
| | No 58 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2006. Assented to 20.6.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 2.62, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | (413) | Sutherland Shire Local Environmental Plan
2000 (Amendment No 33). GG No 93 of 21.7.2006, p 5796. Date of commencement, on gazettal.
|
Table of amendments
Cl 3 | Am 6.12.2002. |
Cl 5 | Am 15.7.2002; 6.12.2002. |
Cl 11 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 14 | Am 26.7.2002; 17.12.2004. |
Cl 17 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 18 | Am 15.7.2002; 26.7.2002. |
Cl 20 | Am 6.12.2002; 12.9.2003. |
Cl 23 | Am 16.3.2001; 5.9.2003. |
Cll 31, 32 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 33, table | Am 15.7.2002; 6.12.2002. |
Cl 34 | Am 12.9.2003. |
Cl 35 | Am 6.12.2002. |
Cl 36 | Am 12.9.2003. |
Cl 37 | Am 6.12.2002. |
Cll 47, 57, tables | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 59 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 60, table | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 65 | Am 9.8.2002; 18.10.2002; 2006 (165), Sch 1
[1]. |
Cl 65A | Ins 2006 (165), Sch 1 [2]. |
Cl 67, table | Am 15.7.2002. |
Cl 69 | Am 2006 (85), Sch 1 [1]. |
Cl 70 table | Am 15.7.2002; 2006 No 58, Sch
2.62. |
Cl 78, table | Am 15.7.2002. |
Sch 2 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Sch 2, note | Subst 15.7.2002. |
Sch 3 | Am 15.7.2002. |
Sch 4 | Subst 15.7.2002. |
Sch 5 | Subst 15.7.2002. Am
18.10.2002. |
Sch 6 | Am 2006 (413), cl 4. |
Sch 7 | Am 16.3.2001; 18.5.2001; 29.6.2001; 20.7.2001;
21.12.2001; 8.2.2002; 8.3.2002; 15.7.2002; 9.8.2002; 23.8.2002; 6.12.2002;
5.9.2003; 12.9.2003; 2005 (146), Sch 1; 2005 (738), Sch 1; 2006 (85), Sch 1
[2]; 2006 (165), Sch 1 [3]. |
Sch 8 | Ins 2006 (165), Sch 1 [4]. |