Development Applications in Oak Flats, NSW

7 DAs lodged in Oak Flats in the last 30 days. 7 total on record. Data sourced from Australian government planning portals, updated daily.

7

Total applications

7

Last 30 days

4

Project types

Project types in Oak Flats

New Dwelling (3)Pool (1)Duplex (1)Commercial (1)

DA types being lodged in Oak Flats

3

New Dwelling

1

Pool

1

Duplex

1

Commercial

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

Development activity in Oak Flats

Look, if you’ve been swinging a hammer around the Illawarra as long as I have, you know Oak Flats is a different beast to Shellharbour City or Albion Park. It’s got its own rhythm. The housing stock here tells a story. You’ve got your solid 1960s and 70s brick veneers – the ones with the terracotta roof tiles and the big front yards – sitting cheek-by-jowl with newer estates that went in during the last boom. The older part of Oak Flats, around the Central Avenue strip and back towards the lake, is mostly those mid-century homes. They’re well-built, but they’re tired. That’s where the action is. Homeowners aren’t knocking down everything they see, but they’re certainly not leaving them alone. The real money is in the rear-yard excavation for a pool and a covered alfresco, or the side-access battle for a dual-occupancy.

Most of the work I’m seeing on the ground right now falls into three piles. New home construction is steady, but it’s not the wild west it was a couple of years ago. The big push is swimming pools and outdoor living. Oak Flats families love their backyards, and with the lake and the beach so close, they want the house to feel like a holiday house. I’ve done three jobs this year alone where the client said, ‘Just give me a concrete pool, a decent shade structure, and a slab for the barbecue.’ That’s it. No fuss. The other big ticket is the duplex and dual-occupancy game. The local council is getting more comfortable with them, but you need to have your paperwork squared away. The block needs to be wide enough – think 15 metres plus – and you have to nail the side setbacks. If you’re thinking of a knockdown-rebuild for a duplex, bring your patience.

The council themselves are a straight-shooting bunch, but they’re not fast. A standard development application for a new home in Oak Flats is taking about four to six months from lodgement to determination, assuming you’ve got a clean file. If you’re doing a dual-occupancy or anything with a variation to the minimum lot size, add another two months. They’re big on stormwater detention and tree preservation. Oak Flats has some decent native canopy, especially on the older streets, and the council will slap a condition on your DA to protect a gum tree before you can say ‘excavation’. Common conditions I see: a 1.5 metre deep footing for any new structure within three metres of a tree, a requirement for a sediment fence that actually holds, and a strict no-go on parking materials on the nature strip during construction. They do site inspections, and they’ll ping you for a dirty site.

The clients here are a mixed bag, but they’re not speculators. You don’t get the fly-in, fly-out investor crowd like you do in Sydney’s western suburbs. The typical Oak Flats homeowner is a local upsizer. They’re in their 40s or 50s, they bought their first house in the area twenty years ago for a song, and now they’ve got equity. They want to stay in the suburb because their kids are at Oak Flats Public or the high school, and they don’t want to move to a retirement village in Nowra. They’ll spend $80,000 on a pool and landscaping before they’ll spend $200,000 on a kitchen renovation. The knockdown-rebuild crowd are usually the ones who inherited the old family home on a big block near the lake. They know the land is worth more than the house, and they’re not sentimental about the asbestos roof.

If you’re a tradie or a builder looking to get work in Oak Flats, you need to know the local supply yards and the local soil. The ground here is mostly sandy loam over clay, and you’ll hit rock if you dig deep enough near the lake foreshore. That means your excavation costs can blow out fast if you’re not careful. Don’t quote a job without a soil test. And don’t assume the client knows what they want. They’ll say ‘modern farmhouse’ but they

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