Skip to main content

Construction Leads in North Sydney, NSW

23 development applications lodged in North Sydney in the last 30 days. Each one is a homeowner planning a project who hasn't chosen a builder yet.

23

DAs last 30 days

27

Total applications

Commercial

Most common project

Project types being planned in North Sydney

7

Commercial

1

Other

1

Extension

1

New Dwelling

Based on DA data from Australian government planning portals. Full lead details are available to Roweo subscribers only.

Residential construction in North Sydney

I’ve been running a crew in North Sydney for over a decade now, and I can tell you the 2060 postcode is a different beast to the rest of the lower north shore. The residential building scene here is tight, expensive, and driven by people who know exactly what they want. We’re not talking sprawling McMansions on acre blocks. This is a dense, mixed suburb where you’ve got Federation weatherboard cottages sitting next to 1970s walk-up flats and brand new duplexes squeezed onto a 400 square metre lot. Right now there are nine development applications lodged with the local council, and that number climbs every spring. The work is steady, but it’s not flashy. Most of the action falls into four buckets: light commercial fitouts, new home construction, home extensions, and first-floor additions. The fitouts are usually for the cafes and offices along the main strips, but the real bread and butter is the residential stuff.

Homeowners here aren’t your typical first-home buyers. They’re upsizers who sold a two-bedder in Neutral Bay and now want a four-bedroom family home with a proper kitchen and a study. They’re renovators who bought a rundown 1920s semi on a quiet street like Shirley Road and are ready to gut it. And they’re knockdown-rebuilders who look at a 1950s brick veneer and see a chance to put in a three-storey contemporary house with a basement garage. The common thread is space. North Sydney families are sick of the pokey rooms and dodgy layouts from the old days. They want open-plan living that flows onto a north-facing deck, and they’re willing to pay for it. That’s why first-floor additions are so popular here. You can’t build out sideways on these narrow blocks, so you go up. We’ve done four of those in the last year alone, and every one involved jacking up the roof, adding a master suite, and reconfiguring the lower floor.

Dealing with the local council is a skill in itself. They’re not the worst in Sydney, but they’re thorough. Turnaround on a standard DA for a home extension is usually eight to ten weeks, but if you’ve got heritage issues or a tree preservation order, double that. The council’s big on setbacks, overshadowing, and neighbour privacy. If your design blocks sunlight to the neighbour’s backyard by 3pm in winter, you’ll get knocked back. The conditions they slap on are predictable: stormwater detention tanks, landscaping plans, and sometimes a requirement for a construction management plan if you’re on a narrow lane. Builders need to have their BASIX and Section 94 contributions sorted before they even lodge. The best advice I can give is to front-load your documentation. Get a good town planner who knows the 2060 area code. The council officers see the same mistakes over and over, and they don’t have time to hold your hand.

The housing stock in North Sydney is a patchwork. You’ve got pockets of late-Victorian terraces around the St Leonards end, solid Californian bungalows up near the golf course, and then the post-war fibro houses that are getting snapped up for knockdowns. The new builds are almost all contemporary – flat roofs, large glass panels, timber cladding. There’s a push for better thermal performance too, because the summers are getting hotter and the old houses are basically ovens. Clients are asking for double glazing, cross-ventilation, and solar-ready roofs as standard. They’re not tree-changers. They’re professionals who work in the city or at the hospital, and they want a low-maintenance home that performs. Investors are still active, but they’re more cautious. They’re looking at duplex sites or granny flat potential, not spec houses.

The market right now is solid but not crazy. Trades are still hard to book, especially good carpenters and tilers. Material costs have stabilised after the post-COVID spike, but lead times for things like aluminium windows and structural steel are still longer than they should be. Clients in North Sydney are educated consumers. They’ve watched Grand Designs, they know what a structural engineer does, and they’ll question your

Get matched to North Sydney construction leads

Set North Sydney as your service area and every new DA that comes in gets a letter posted to the homeowner in your name. Setup takes 20 minutes. First letter goes out within 2 business days.

Start from $149/month

No contracts. Cancel any time.

Construction leads in North Sydney — common questions

How many construction leads are available in North Sydney?

There are 27 development applications on record in North Sydney, with 23 lodged in the last 30 days. This includes extensions, renovations, new dwellings, granny flats, and other residential projects.

What types of projects are being lodged in North Sydney?

The most common project types in North Sydney are Commercial, Other, Extension, New Dwelling. Roweo lets you filter by project type so you only see the work you want.

How does Roweo get construction leads in North Sydney?

Roweo ingests development application data from government planning portals across Australia. When a homeowner in North Sydney lodges a DA, we classify the project type, match it to your suburb and trade preferences, and post a letter to their property within 2 business days of you approving it.

Do I need a builder's licence to use Roweo?

Yes. Every letter includes your builder's licence number as required under Australian Consumer Law. You enter your licence number during the 20-minute setup — no letter goes out without it.

What is a development application (DA)?

A DA is a formal application submitted to local council for permission to build, extend, or renovate a property. Once lodged, the application is publicly available on the relevant state planning portal. Most homeowners who lodge a DA are actively looking for a builder within 3–6 months.

Nearby suburbs