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Development Applications in Fairlight, NSW

10 DAs lodged in Fairlight in the last 30 days. 10 total on record. Data sourced from Australian government planning portals, updated daily.

10

Total applications

10

Last 30 days

3

Project types

DA types being lodged in Fairlight

7

Extension

2

New Dwelling

1

Duplex

Aggregate DA counts from Australian government planning portals. Full application details are available to Roweo subscribers only.

Development activity in Fairlight

Fairlight’s a tight block of suburb squeezed between Manly and the harbour. You don’t get much greenfield land here. What you get is old weatherboard cottages from the 1920s, a few solid brick Federations, and the occasional 1970s walk-up block that’s ripe for the picking. The housing stock is classic lower north shore coastal: small footprint, narrow frontages, and a lot of tired fibro that’s been patched up twice over. That’s where the work is. Right now there are four development applications live in Fairlight, which is quiet by Manly standards, but the jobs that do come through are meaty. The most active project types are home extensions and first-floor additions, alongside new home construction. Nobody’s building spec townhouses here. It’s all owner-occupier driven.

The clients in Fairlight are a specific breed. You get upsizers who bought a three-bedder in the 90s, raised kids, and now want a proper master suite and a second living area without moving to Brookvale. They’re not chasing square metres for the sake of it. They want a north-facing deck that catches the afternoon sea breeze and a bathroom that doesn’t look like a 1985 time capsule. Then there’s the knockdown-rebuild crowd, usually on a battle-axe block or a steep site where the old house is beyond economic repair. These clients are cashed up and time poor. They know the local real estate market, so they’re not interested in cheap finishes. They want blackbutt timber, bifold doors, and a kitchen island you can sit ten around. Investors are thin on the ground here. Rental yields in 2094 are average at best, and the land value is high. Most owners are living in the house they’re renovating.

Dealing with the local council on a Fairlight job requires patience. They’re not hostile, but they are thorough. The average DA turnaround sits around four to five months for a straightforward first-floor addition, longer if you’re touching the building envelope or pushing into the rear setback. Common conditions include stormwater detention tanks on almost every site over 50 square metres of impervious area, and a strict tree preservation order on anything that’s not a weed species. You’ll need an arborist report if there’s a mature gum within five metres of the excavation line. The council also hates overshadowing. If your first-floor addition throws a shadow across a neighbour’s north-facing window after 10am, expect a request for redesign. I’ve seen three sets of plans get knocked back for that exact reason. Builders new to the area should budget for a minimum of six weeks of council back-and-forth on conditions, even if the DA itself gets approved first go.

The construction logistics in Fairlight are what separate the pros from the weekend warriors. Streets like Lauderdale Avenue and Griffiths Street are narrow, often with parked cars on both sides. You cannot get a concrete truck within twenty metres of some rear sites. That means pump trucks, small mixers, and a lot of hand-balling materials through side gates. Noise restrictions are strict. Council allows work from 7am to 5pm Monday to Friday, and 8am to 1pm Saturday. No Sunday work unless it’s emergency structural repairs. Neighbours are generally reasonable, but they’re also retired professionals who will call the council if your tradies are running a circular saw at 7:01am on a Saturday. I’ve had to put up acoustic fencing on two separate jobs just to keep the peace during the framing stage.

What keeps Fairlight humming is the simple fact that people don’t want to leave. It’s a five-minute walk to Manly Beach, the schools are solid, and the ferry to the city runs every half hour. Homeowners here are prepared to pay a premium to stay put rather than trade up to a bigger house in a less convenient spot. That drives a steady stream of first-floor additions and rear extensions. You rarely see a full demolition unless the house is structurally stuffed. The typical job is a two-storey addition to the rear, with a new kitchen and living on the ground floor and three bedrooms and a bathroom up top. Budgets for these sit between $350,000

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