Development Applications in Berkeley, NSW
4 DAs lodged in Berkeley in the last 30 days. 4 total on record. Data sourced from Australian government planning portals, updated daily.
4
Total applications
4
Last 30 days
3
Project types
DA types being lodged in Berkeley
2
Extension
1
Commercial
1
Other
Aggregate DA counts from Australian government planning portals. Full application details are available to Roweo subscribers only.
Development activity in Berkeley
Berkeley’s a funny mix. You’ve got the older fibro and weatherboard homes from the 50s and 60s sitting cheek by jowl with newer brick veneer estates that went in during the boom. The old housing stock is solid but tired. Most of those original three-bedroom, one-bathroom jobs were built for steelworkers and miners. Now they’re being bought up by young families and investors who can still get a block under 600 square metres without selling a kidney. That’s where the work comes from. Right now there are four development applications lodged with the local council, and they’re all variations on the same theme: home extensions and first-floor additions. Nobody’s doing knockdown-rebuilds at scale here. The economics don’t stack up yet.
The typical Berkeley client is an upsizer. They bought in when prices were lower, raised a couple of kids, and now the house feels like a can of sardines. They don’t want to leave because the street’s quiet and the neighbours have been there twenty years. So they come to us wanting a second storey or a big rear extension. The most common job is adding two bedrooms and a rumpus room up top, with a new bathroom and a walk-in robe for the master. It’s practical stuff. No architect-designed glass boxes. Just honest trade work. The other crowd is the renovator. They’ll strip a 60s kitchen back to studs, open up the living area, and throw in a new alfresco. They’re not chasing resale value; they’re chasing liveability.
The local council is a mixed bag. They’re not the worst in the Illawarra, but they’re not the quickest either. Expect a ten to twelve week turnaround on a straightforward DA, longer if you’ve got a granny flat or anything that touches a setback. They’re hot on stormwater management and site coverage. A lot of Berkeley blocks are on clay, so you’ll be writing a geotechnical report into your quote whether you like it or not. Common conditions include a landscaping plan, a BASIX certificate, and a condition that the driveway is sealed. Nothing wild. But if you’re doing a first-floor addition, be ready for a height plane restriction. Some of these older lots have a steep fall to the rear, and the council’s planners are trigger-happy with overshadowing assessments. Do your site survey early.
Housing stock here tells a story. The original homes are mostly double-brick or fibro on concrete stumps. That means you’re dealing with termite history, dodgy electrical, and asbestos in the eaves and wall cladding if it’s pre-1985. I’ve pulled more bonded asbestos sheeting out of Berkeley roofs than I care to remember. The newer estates around the southern end of the suburb are brick veneer on slab, built between 2000 and 2015. They’re not as characterful, but they’re easier to work with. No surprises. The real money is in the old stock, though. You can buy a tired three-bedder for around 750 to 850, spend 200 to 300 on an extension, and end up with a home that’s worth 1.2. That’s the math that keeps us busy.
The clientele are mostly owner-occupiers. Investors are thin on the ground because rental yields in Berkeley aren’t flash. You’ll get a handful of knockdown-rebuilds on the wider blocks, but that’s usually a developer who’s split the lot into two. The typical builder working here is a small crew of three or four blokes. No one’s running a twenty-man operation in Berkeley. It’s too tight. You need to know your local suppliers. Berkeley’s close to the Wollongong hardware yards, but the concrete plants and timber yards are all up the highway in Unanderra. Factor that into your logistics. And don’t forget the school zones. Berkeley West Public School is a drawcard for families, so extensions near that catchment go faster.
The market’s steady, not hot. Prices aren’t climbing like they did in 2021, but they’re not dropping either. People are holding tight. That
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