A total of 900,000 new dwellings will be needed in south-east Queensland to accommodate an extra 2.2 million people by 2046.Credit:Dan Peled
Of those new dwellings,the Brisbane City Council area is expected to provide 209,000 – or 23 per cent overall – even though its population growth rate is one of the lowest in the region.
As Australia grapples with the ongoing housing crisis,the plan for the first time sets a target for affordable and social housing.
The government wants 20 per cent of the new dwellings to be made available to low-income earners. It has also stipulated that about 100,000 of the 900,000 new dwellings should be close to public transport and retail,schools and service centres. That is likely to be delivered through increased density.
Overall,the government expects 32 per cent of the new dwellings to be in greenfield sites – an “expansion” of the urban footprint – and 68 per cent to come through higher density “consolidation”. It will be up to councils to deliver on the plan.
However,it is being released as the building industry grapples with significant cost pressures,which have already delayed and disrupted several major projects around Brisbane. Government infrastructure projects will also add to supply-side issues.
Brisbane’s population is predicted to be 1.72 million by 2046,by which time south-east Queensland will have more than 6 million residents.