Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998



Part 1 General provisions
1   Name of plan
This plan is called Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998.
2   Aims and general objectives of plan
The aims and general objectives of this plan are—
(aa)  to protect and promote the use and development of land for arts and cultural activity, including music and other performance arts, and
(a)  to consolidate and update former planning instruments that applied to the City of Queanbeyan, and
(b)  to recognise and protect Queanbeyan’s cultural and archaeological heritage, including environmentally sensitive areas such as Queanbeyan’s native grasslands, the Queanbeyan fault escarpment, the Queanbeyan River and Jerrabomberra Creek, and
(c)  to ensure that development occurs in locations and at scales that are sensitive to heritage, and to other environmental and planning constraints, and
(d)  to ensure that development is well designed and has minimal adverse impact on adjoining development and natural areas, and
(e)  to provide for a diversity of housing throughout the City, and
(f)  to recognise the main shopping centres of the City as the Queanbeyan City central business district and the proposed Jerrabomberra shopping centre as well as the importance of the Karabar shopping centre, and
(g)  to encourage additional employment opportunities for the City, and
(h)  to encourage functional and economically viable industrial development which does not pollute or adversely affect the adjoining land or water or the amenity of nearby residents, and
(i)  to enable provision of a range of community and social facilities to serve the population, and
(j)  to provide natural areas, open space and a range of recreational facilities to meet the needs of current and future generations, and
(k)  to encourage and promote ecologically sustainable development strategies in the development and redevelopment of the City, and
(l)  to recognise the proximity of the City of Queanbeyan to the Australian Capital Territory and Yarralumla local government area and the relationships between them, and
(m)  to provide specific objectives for each zone created by this plan.
cl 2: Am 6.6.2003; 2007 (332), Sch 1 [1]; 2020 (724), Sch 2[2].
3   Application of plan
(1)  This plan applies to the land in the local government area of City of Queanbeyan.
(2)  However, this plan does not apply to any land shown edged heavy black and marked “excluded land” on the map, which has been deferred under section 68 (5) of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
4   Relationship to other environmental planning instruments
(1)  All local environmental plans that applied to the land to which this plan applies and that were in force immediately before the appointed day are repealed.
(2)  However, this plan does not affect the application of Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1991 (and of any other environmental planning instrument amending that plan) to any land shown edged heavy black and marked “excluded land” on the map.
(3)  Clause 6 of State Environmental Planning Policy No 22—Shops and Commercial Premises does not apply to allow brothels or restricted premises on land within Zone 3 (a), 3 (b) or 3 (c).
(4)  Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1991 is amended by omitting clause 3 and by inserting instead the following clause—
  
3   Land to which this plan applies
This plan applies to any land within the local government area of City of Queanbeyan that is shown edged heavy black and marked “excluded land” on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998” and that is not land to which that plan applies.
5   Dictionary
(1)  In this plan, terms defined in the Dictionary in Schedule 1 have the same meaning as set out in the Dictionary.
(2)  A reference in this plan—
(a)  to a building or place used for a purpose includes a reference to a building or place intended to be used for that purpose, and
(b)  to a map is a reference to a map deposited in the office of the Council or set out in a Schedule to this plan.
(3)  Notes included in this plan do not form part of this plan.
(4)  Clause 29 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment (Savings and Transitional) Regulation 1998 applies to this plan as if this plan had commenced before 1 July 1998, despite any other provision of this plan.
cl 5: Am 2007 (332), Sch 1 [2].
6   Model Provisions
This plan adopts clauses 5 (4), 7, 8, 10 (2), 11, 12, 13, 22, 23, 24, 29, 31 and 35 (paragraph (c) excepted) of, and Schedule 1 to, the Environmental Planning and Assessment Model Provisions 1980.
6A   Development that does not require development consent
(1)  A person may carry out the following development on any land to which this plan applies without development consent—
(a)  exempt development,
(b)  development of any description specified in Schedule 1 to the Environmental Planning and Assessment Model Provisions 1980,
(c)  use of existing buildings of the Crown by the Crown.
(2)  Nothing in this plan affects the requirement for determining authorities to consider the impact on the environment of an activity in accordance with Part 5 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
cl 6A: Ins 28.3.2002.
7   Consent authority
Unless otherwise specified, the Council is the consent authority for development applications relating to land to which this plan applies.
7A   Exempt development and complying development
(1)  Development of minimal environmental impact listed as exempt development in Development Control Plan No 49—Exempt and Complying Development as adopted by the Council on 28 February 2007 is exempt development, despite any other provision of this plan.
(2)  Development listed as complying development in Development Control Plan No 49—Exempt and Complying Development as adopted by the Council on 28 February 2007 is complying development if—
(a)  it is local development of a kind that can be carried out with consent on the land on which it is proposed, and
(b)  it is not an existing use, as defined in section 106 of the Act, and
(c)  it complies with the current deemed-to-satisfy provisions of the Building Code of Australia relevant to the development, and
(d)  it does not involve a change of classification under the Building Code of Australia of any building or part of any building on the land, and
(e)  it does not contravene any condition of a development consent applying to the land, and
(f)  it is not integrated development, as defined in section 91 of the Act, and
(g)  it complies with any applicable manufacturer’s instructions and any applicable Australian standard published by Standards Australia.
(3)  Development is exempt or complying development only if it complies with the development standards and other requirements applied to the development by Development Control Plan No 49—Exempt and Complying Development as adopted by the Council on 28 February 2007.
(4)  A complying development certificate issued for any complying development is to be subject to the conditions for the development specified in Development Control Plan No 49—Exempt and Complying Development adopted by the Council, as in force when the certificate is issued.
cl 7A: Ins 24.12.1999. Am 28.3.2002. Subst 2006 (552), Sch 2 [1]. Am 2007 (328), Sch 1.2 [1] [2].
7B   (Repealed)
cl 7B: Ins 24.12.1999. Am 28.3.2002. Rep 2006 (552), Sch 2 [1].
8   Tree preservation order
Any tree preservation order applying to land to which this plan applied at the time of gazettal of this plan is taken to be a tree preservation order made pursuant to this plan.
9   (Repealed)
cl 9: Rep 28.3.2002.
10   Availability of services
The Council must not grant development consent to any development likely to result in human habitation of land or the erection of a habitable building unless arrangements satisfactory to the relevant authority have been made for the provision of water, sewerage, drainage and electricity services to the land and for the disposal of sewage and stormwater from it.
11   Exceptions to the general development control clauses
Regardless of Parts 2–10, development for the purpose of the following is allowed with consent of the Council on the following land—
(a)  Lots 1 and 3, DP 811433 or 57–73 Yass Road
  a motel,
(b)  Lots 1 and 2, DP 835570 and Lot 2, DP 229837 or 2–4 Yass Road
  fast food take-away restaurants and motor showrooms,
(c)  Lot 2, DP 739287 or 50 Canberra Avenue
  commercial premises,
(d)  SP 33253 or 50–54 Yass Road
  a bottle shop,
(e)  Lot 441, DP 623510 or 53 Tharwa Road
  a motel,
(f)  Lot 2, DP 40101 or 34–36 Erin Street
  a scout hall,
(g)  Lots 1 and 2, DP 815925 or 84–88 Macquoid Street
  a service station,
(h)  Lots 1 and 2, DP 810937 or 2–8 Morisset Street
  commercial premises or a medical centre,
(i)  Lot 2, DP 827417 or Bayside Court, Jerrabomberra
  a club,
(j)  Lot 270, DP 550830 or 49–51 Uriarra Road
  a glassworks,
(k)  Pt Lot 2, DP 828793 or 43 Henderson Street
  a scout hall,
(l)  Crown land reserved for Cemetery or 250 Lanyon Drive
  sale of flowers,
(m)  Lot 1, DP 714829 or 34 Queenbar Road
  amusement centre and veterinary hospital, and
  a building with a floor space ratio of no more than 2:1,
(n)  Lot 24, DP 568688 or 3 Young Street
  multi-dwelling housing to a height of no more than 7 storeys,
(o)  Lot 771, DP 838886 or 1 Firethorn Place, Jerrabomberra
  shops and restaurants with maximum floor space areas of 316 square metres, and
  arts and crafts gallery,
(p)  Lot 2, SP 30211 or Unit 2, 5–9 High Street
  recreation facility,
(q)  Lot 118, DP 710557 or 5 Cantle Place
  home printing business in association with the residential use of the land,
(r)  Lot 2, DP 860213 or 30A Queenbar Road
  amusement centre and veterinary hospital, and
  a building with a floor space ratio of no more than 2:1,
(s)  Lot D, DP 154554 or 64 Morisset Street
  office, shop or restaurant,
(t)  Lot 4, DP 8396 or 77 Uriarra Road
  general garden maintenance equipment—sales, hire and repairs,
(u)  Lot 2, DP 828685 or 135 Uriarra Road
  commercial premises/shop,
(v)  Lots 1–6, SP 40615 or 1 Buttle Street
  commercial premises,
(w)  Lot 3, DP 835901 or 80 Morisset Street, Queanbeyan
  restaurant, reception centre, commercial premises and educational establishment (not involving overnight accommodation),
(x)  Part Lots 110 and 124, DP 754881 being 501 Cooma Road, Googong and part Lot 1, DP 808393 being 505 Cooma Road, Googong, as shown edged heavy black on Sheet 2 of the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 43)”—
  extractive industry involving—
  placing of overburden and relocation of the primary crusher and water management works on part Lot 110, DP 754881 and part Lot 1, DP 808393, and
  construction of a workshop and water management works on part Lot 124, DP 754881.
cl 11: Am 7.5.1999; 22.11.2002; 6.6.2003; 12.9.2003; 2005 (435), Sch 1 [1]; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [2].
12   Zones indicated on the map
The following zones apply as shown on the map—
1 (a) Rural A—edged heavy black and lettered 1 (a)
1 (b) Rural B—edged heavy black and lettered 1 (b)
1 (c) Rural C—edged heavy black and lettered 1 (c)
2 (a) Residential A—edged heavy black and lettered 2 (a)
2 (b) Residential B—edged heavy black and lettered 2 (b)
2 (c) Residential C—edged heavy black and lettered 2 (c)
2 (d) Residential D—edged heavy black and lettered 2 (d)
2 (e) Residential E—edged heavy black and lettered 2 (e)
3 (a) Business A—edged heavy black and lettered 3 (a)
3 (b) Business B—edged heavy black and lettered 3 (b)
3 (c) Business C—edged heavy black and lettered 3 (c)
4 (a) Industrial A—edged heavy black and lettered 4 (a)
4 (b) Industrial B—edged heavy black and lettered 4 (b)
5 (a) Special Uses A—edged heavy black and lettered 5 (a)
6 (a) Open Space A—edged heavy black and lettered 6 (a)
6 (b) Open Space B—edged heavy black and lettered 6 (b)
6 (c) Open Space C—edged heavy black and lettered 6 (c)
7 (a) Environmental Protection A—edged heavy black and lettered 7 (a)
7 (b) Environmental Protection B—edged heavy black and lettered 7 (b)
8 (a) National Park A—edged heavy black and lettered 8 (a)
9 (a) Road A—edged heavy black and lettered 9 (a)
9 (b) Road B—edged heavy black and lettered 9 (b)
cl 12: Am 1.2.2002.
13   Zone objectives and general development controls
(1)  The objectives of each zone are set out in Parts 2–10 in the clause headed “General Development Controls” for the zone under the heading “Objectives of the Zone”.
(2)  Except as otherwise provided by this plan, for each zone specified in a general development controls clause, the development that—
(a)  may be carried out without development consent is indicated in that clause by the words “Development allowed without development consent”, or
(b)  may be carried out only with development consent is indicated in that clause by the words “Development allowed only with development consent”, or
(c)  is prohibited is indicated in that clause by the words “Development which is prohibited”.
(3)  Except as otherwise provided by this plan, the Council must not consent to development on land within a zone unless the Council is of the opinion that the development is consistent with the objectives of the zone.
cl 13: Am 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [3].
Part 2 Rural zones
14   General Development Controls—Zone 1 (a) Rural A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 1 (a) (the Rural A zone) are—
(a)  to enable the continuation of restricted forms of agricultural land use and occupancy, and
(b)  to ensure that the type and intensity of development will not prejudice the likely future uses of the land for either environmental protection, open space or urban purposes.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Agriculture
Caravan Parks
Community Facilities
Dams
Dwelling-houses
Home Activities
Helipads
Recreation Facilities
Retail Plant Nurseries
Roads
Roadside Stalls
Rural Industries
Stock and Sale Yards
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Veterinary Hospitals
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 14: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [4].
15   General Development Controls—Zone 1 (b) Rural B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 1 (b) (the Rural B zone) are—
(a)  to protect land which is steeply sloping, in a pristine state and highly visible from the City of Queanbeyan and the Australian Capital Territory, and
(b)  to allow suitably controlled development which allows this land to predominantly retain its natural character.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Dams
Dwelling-houses
Home Activities
Recreation Facilities
Roads
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 15: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [5].
16   General Development Controls—Zone 1 (c) Rural C
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 1 (c) (the Rural C zone) are—
(a)  to recognise that these areas are on higher elevations and act as a transition between fully urbanised areas and bushland and so should be developed in a sensitive and limited manner, and
(b)  to allow development consisting mainly of dwelling-houses or single buildings which as far as possible is designed to recognise the bushland character of these areas and minimise the impact of urban development, and
(c)  to allow suitably controlled subdivision which as far as possible maintains existing bushland and has regard to urban capability, the impact of urban development and microclimatic conditions in the design of allotments and the provision of roads and services, and
(d)  to detail by means of a development control plan provisions relevant to—
  the location of dwelling-houses and ancillary buildings, and
  height, scale, bulk and construction materials, and
  the colours of external surfaces of buildings, and
  appropriate ecologically sustainable development principles.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Attached Dual Occupancy Housing
Boarding Houses
Community Facilities
Dams
Dwelling-houses
Health Consulting Rooms
Home Activities
Roads
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 16: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
17   Dual occupancy housing in rural zones
(1)  On land within Zone 1 (a) that is shown edged heavy black on sheet 1 of the Special Sites Map in Schedule 2 and commonly known as “The Ridgeway”, as well as on land within Zone 1 (c), a person may carry out development for the purpose of dual occupancy housing with the consent of the Council, but only if it consists of two attached dwellings.
(2)  The Council must not consent to development referred to in subclause (1) unless it is satisfied that—
(a)  the minimum area requirements of clause 18 can be met should the site area be subdivided, and
(b)  the floor space ratio will not exceed 0.5:1, and
(c)  arrangements can be made for the provision of water supply and for the disposal of sewage and stormwater.
18   Subdivision of rural land—minimum and average area requirements
The Council may grant development consent for subdivision of land within a rural zone only when each allotment created by the subdivision meets the minimum and average area requirements of the following table—
Table
Zone
Minimum area
Average area
Zone 1 (a)
(within a scenic protection area)
40 hectares
Zone 1 (a)
(not within a scenic protection area)
80 hectares
Zone 1 (c)
(not shown on the subdivision control map in Schedule 3)
0.8 hectare
Zone 1 (c)
(shown edged heavy black on sheet 1 of the subdivision control map in Schedule 3)
2 hectares
cl 18: Am 1.2.2002.
Part 3 Residential zones
19   General Development Controls—Zone 2 (a) Residential A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 2 (a) (the Residential A zone) are—
(a)  to encourage small scale residential development, and
(b)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which maintains or improves the amenity of existing residents and which provides good amenity for future residents, and
(c)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment within the heritage conservation areas in this zone which have regard to and complement the scale, fabric and character of the older and traditional housing of such areas, and
(d)  to allow subdivision within a heritage conservation area in this zone which is consistent with the subdivision patterns of adjoining land, and
(e)  to provide opportunities for small scale non-residential uses usually within a dwelling-house or building ancillary to a dwelling-house and which operate so that they do not adversely affect adjoining neighbours, and
(f)  to provide opportunities for community and educational facilities.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Bed and Breakfast
Boarding Houses
Buildings on sites in the vicinity of a Heritage Item
Buildings within Heritage Conservation Areas
Caravan Parks
Child Care Centres
Community Facilities
Dual Occupancy Housing
Dwelling-houses
Educational Establishments
Exhibition Homes
Group Homes
Health Consulting Rooms
Heritage Items
Home Activities
Hostels
Housing for Aged or Disabled Persons
Manufactured Home Estates outside floodways and heritage conservation areas
Parking Spaces
Roads
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 19: Am 24.12.1999; 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [6].
20   General Development Controls—Zone 2 (b) Residential B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 2 (b) (the Residential B zone) are—
(a)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment that results in well designed dual occupancy housing and multi-dwelling housing, and
(b)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which maintains or improves the amenity of existing residents and which provides good amenity for future residents, and
(c)  to provide opportunities for small scale non-residential uses usually within a dwelling-house or building ancillary to a dwelling-house and which operate so that they do not adversely affect adjoining neighbours, and
(d)  to provide opportunities for community and educational facilities.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Any development not included in subclause (2) or (4).
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Agriculture
Amusement Centres
Animal Establishments
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Automotive Uses
Brothels
Bulky Goods Salesrooms or Showrooms
Bus Depots
Bus Stations
Car Parks
Cemeteries
Commercial Premises
Depots
Entertainment Facilities
Extractive Industries
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants
Hazardous Industries
Helipads
High Technology Industries
Hospitals
Hotels
Industries
Institutions
Light Industries
Materials Recycling Yards
Medical Centres
Mines
Mixed Use Buildings
Motor Showrooms
Offensive Industries
Offensive Storage Establishments
Paintball Establishments
Panel Beating Workshops
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Potentially Hazardous Industries
Potentially Offensive Industries
Public Buildings
Reception Centres
Recycling Yards
Residential Flat Buildings
Restaurants
Restricted Premises
Retail Plant Industries
Roadside Stalls
Rural Industries
Service Stations
Stock and Sale Yards
Taverns
Transport Depots
Veterinary Hospitals
Warehouse or Distribution Centres
cl 20: Am 24.12.1999; 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [7] [8].
21   General Development Controls—Zone 2 (c) Residential C
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 2 (c) (the Residential C zone) are—
(a)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment that results in well designed dual occupancy housing, multi-dwelling housing and residential flat buildings, and
(b)  to encourage development or redevelopment which maintains or improves the amenity of existing residents and which provides good amenity for future residents, and
(c)  to provide opportunities for restricted and small scale non-residential uses usually within a dwelling-house or ancillary to a dwelling-house and which operate so that they do not adversely affect adjoining neighbours, and
(d)  to provide opportunities for community and educational facilities.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Any development not included in subclause (2) or (4).
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Agriculture
Amusement Centres
Animal Establishments
Automotive Uses
Brothels
Bulky Goods Salesrooms or Showrooms
Bus Depots
Bus Stations
Car Parks
Cemeteries
Clubs
Commercial Premises
Depots
Entertainment Facilities
Extractive Industries
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants
Hazardous Industries
Hazardous Storage Establishments
Helipads
High Technology Industries
Hospitals
Hotels
Industries
Institutions
Light Industries
Manufactured Home Estates in a floodway
Materials Recycling Yards
Medical Centres
Mines
Mixed Use Buildings
Motor Showrooms
Offensive Industries
Offensive Storage Establishments
Paintball Establishments
Panel Beating Workshops
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Potentially Hazardous Industries
Potentially Offensive Industries
Public Buildings
Restaurants
Restricted Premises
Roadside Stalls
Rural Industries
Service Stations
Shops
Stock and Sale Yards
Taverns
Transport Depots
Veterinary Hospitals
Warehouse or Distribution Centres
cl 21: Am 24.12.1999; 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [9].
22   General Development Controls—Zone 2 (d) Residential D
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 2 (d) (the Residential D zone) are—
(a)  to provide a multi-purpose residential zoning with a range of development opportunities, suitable for urban release areas, and
(b)  to encourage the pre-planning of urban release areas in regard to cluster housing, dual occupancy housing, integrated housing, residential flat buildings and compatible non-residential development, and
(c)  to encourage subdivision which as far as possible maintains existing bushland and has regard to urban capability, the impact of urban development and microclimatic conditions in the design of allotments and the provision of roads and services, and
(d)  to guide development in visually more prominent areas by the provisions in a development control plan which address such matters as—
  site coverage, and
  impact of development, and
  retention of vegetation and landscaping, and
  any physical characteristic of the land, and
  appropriate ecologically sustainable development principles.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Any development not included in subclause (2) or (4).
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Agriculture
Amusement Centres
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Automotive Uses
Brothels
Bus Depots
Bus Stations
Cemeteries
Depots
Entertainment Facilities
Extractive Industries
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants
Hazardous Industries
Hazardous Storage Establishments
Helipads
High Technology Industries
Hotels
Industries
Institutions
Light Industries
Manufactured Home Estates
Materials Recycling Yards
Mines
Mixed Use Buildings
Motor Showrooms
Offensive Industries
Offensive Storage Establishments
Panel Beating Workshops
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Potentially Hazardous Industries
Potentially Offensive Industries
Restaurants
Restricted Premises
Roadside Stalls
Road Transport Terminals
Rural Industries
Service Stations
Shops
Stock and Sale Yards
Taverns
Transport Depots
Warehouse or Distribution Centres
cl 22: Am 24.12.1999; 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
22A   General Development Controls—Zone 2 (e) Residential E
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 2 (e) (the Residential E zone) are—
(a)  to allow development consisting only of single dwelling-houses and ancillary buildings that as far as possible are designed to recognise the bushland character of the locality and to minimise the impact of urban development, and
(b)  to allow suitably controlled subdivision that as far as possible maintains existing bushland and has regard to urban capability, the impact of urban development and microclimatic conditions in the design of allotments and the provision of roads and services, and
(c)  to recognise that the land within the zone should act as a transition between fully urbanised areas and bushland and so should be developed in a sensitive and limited manner.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Dwelling-houses
Home Activities
Roads
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (3).
cl 22A: Ins 1.2.2002.
23   Convenience stores in Zones 2 (b), 2 (c) and 2 (d)
The Council may grant development consent for a convenience store within Zone 2 (b), 2 (c) or 2 (d) only where it is satisfied that the site is at least 400 metres from any other convenience store or similar type of building or a site for which the Council has granted development consent for a convenience store or similar type of building, being a development consent that is still valid.
24   Development control plans for multi-dwelling housing
A development control plan relating to development for the purpose of multi-dwelling housing may provide detailed provisions for the following—
(a)  design elements of multi-dwelling housing, and
(b)  areas within a zone for specific types of multi-dwelling housing, and
(c)  localities where only single dwelling-houses and dual occupancy housing are suitable, and
(d)  the most desirable location for dwelling-houses and associated structures, and
(e)  recommended layouts for allotments and building setbacks to ensure the satisfactory retention of trees and other vegetation, and
(f)  localities where specific allotment sizes and shapes should be maintained to minimise adverse environmental impact, and
(g)  specific locations where site coverage should be limited to minimise adverse environmental impact, and
(h)  appropriate bushfire hazard reduction works for open space and remnant bushland areas.
25   Multi dwelling housing—matters for consideration
The Council may grant development consent for multi-dwelling housing within a residential zone only when it is satisfied that—
(a)  the minimum area requirements of clause 26 can be met in the case of dual occupancy housing or integrated housing, and
(b)  the floor space ratio will not exceed 0.5:1, in the case of dual occupancy housing or integrated housing, and
(c)  the number of storeys will not exceed two if the proposed development will be carried out within Zone 2 (a) or 2 (b), and, and
(ca)  in the case of dual occupancy housing and despite paragraph (c), the number of storeys does not exceed one, or if the existing dwelling on the same allotment and any existing dwellings on adjoining allotments are each two storeys or greater, the number of storeys of the proposed development does not exceed two,
(d)  adequate provision is made in respect of—
(i)  the privacy of each dwelling included in the proposed development and of any dwelling on adjoining land, and its curtilage, and
(ii)  access to natural light for each such dwelling and its curtilage, and
(iii)  the servicing of each proposed dwelling, including the supply of water and the disposal of sewage and stormwater, and
(iv)  landscaping and landscaped areas, and
(v)  parking spaces and associated access and manoeuvring, and
(e)  an adequate assessment has been made of the relationship of the proposed building to the scale and character of the streetscape and of buildings on adjoining land and that the design of the development reflects this assessment, and
(f)  access from the development to the road giving access to the site is designed to minimise conflicts between vehicles and pedestrians, and
(g)  the development is designed to minimise any impact on the traffic flows along the road giving access to the site.
cl 25: Am 12.9.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [10].
26   Subdivision of residential land—minimum area requirements
(1)  The Council may grant development consent for the subdivision of land within a residential zone only if each allotment on which a dwelling-house, dual occupancy housing or integrated housing will be situated after the subdivision meets the following minimum area requirements—
Minimum Area for each Allotment (in square metres)—
600 square metres for each dwelling-house on land within Zone 2 (a), 2 (b), 2 (c) or 2 (d)
1000 square metres for each dwelling-house on land within Zone 2 (e)
450 square metres for each dwelling in integrated housing
600 square metres for each dwelling in dual occupancy housing on land within Zone 2 (a)
300 square metres for each dwelling in dual occupancy housing on land within Zone 2 (b), 2 (c) or 2 (d).
(2)  Regardless of subclause (1), the Council must not grant development consent for the subdivision of land edged in heavy black on sheet 2 of the special sites map in Schedule 2 unless it is satisfied that the minimum area of each allotment created pursuant to this clause will be 4000 square metres for each dwelling-house or for each dwelling in the case of multi-dwelling housing.
(3)  Where dual occupancy housing has been created or erected, or is proposed to be created or erected, on land within Zone 2 (a), the creation of separate lots illustrated by a proposed strata plan relating to the building is prohibited.
(4)  Regardless of subclause (1), the Council must not grant development consent for the subdivision of land within Zone 2 (e) that is shown cross hatched on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 23)” unless the Council is satisfied that the minimum area of each allotment will be 3000 square metres for each dwelling-house.
cl 26: Am 1.2.2002.
Part 4 Business zones
27   General Development Controls—Zone 3 (a) Business A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 3 (a) (the Business A zone) are—
(a)  to recognise the Queanbeyan City central business district as the main commercial/retail centre of the City, and
(b)  to recognise the Jerrabomberra shopping centre as a future important commercial/retail centre, and
(c)  to provide for a wide range of retail, commercial and tourist uses as well as residential development opportunities in the zone, and
(d)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment within the central business district which acknowledges the scale, form and character of existing development, and
(e)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which provides sufficient on-site carparking and loading/unloading facilities and meets the Council’s urban design requirements as outlined in a development control plan.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Advertisements
Advertising Structures
Amusement Centres
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Automotive Uses
Buildings which adjoin Heritage Items
Bulky Goods Salesrooms or Showrooms
Bus Stations
Car Parks
Child Care Centres
Clubs
Commercial Premises
Community Facilities
Convenience Stores
Educational Establishments
Entertainment Facilities
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants
Hospitals
Hotels
Laundromats
Light Industries
Medical Centres
Mixed Use Buildings
Motels
Motor Showrooms
Places of Worship
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Public Buildings
Reception Centres
Recreation Facilities
Restaurants
Retail Plant Nurseries
Roads
Service Stations
Shops
Taverns
Tourist Facilities
Utility Undertakings
Veterinary Hospitals
Demolition
Subdivision
Any other development not included in subclause (2) or (4), subject to clause 13 (3)
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Brothels
Restricted premises
cll 27: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
28   General Development Controls—Zone 3 (b) Business B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 3 (b) (the Business B zone) are—
(a)  to identify land suitable for small scale retail, commercial, mixed retail/commercial and residential development which does not adversely affect neighbours, particularly when they are residents, and
(b)  to encourage the provision of a wide range of retail and commercial activities which serve the surrounding neighbourhood, and
(c)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which acknowledges the scale, form and character of existing development, and
(d)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which meets the Council’s carparking, car loading and unloading, landscaping and urban design requirements as outlined in a development control plan, and
(e)  to recognise the importance of the Karabar shopping centre.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Advertisements
Advertising Structures
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Buildings which adjoin Heritage Items
Car Parks
Child Care Centres
Commercial Premises
Community Facilities
Convenience Stores
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants
Laundromats
Light Industries
Medical Centres
Mixed Use Buildings
Public Buildings
Reception Centres
Restaurants
Retail Plant Nurseries
Roads
Service Stations
Shops
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
Any other development not included in subclause (2) or (4), subject to clause 13 (3)
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Brothels
Restricted premises
cll 28: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
29   General Development Controls—Zone 3 (c) Business C
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 3 (c) (the Business C zone) are—
(a)  to identify land suitable for restricted forms of small scale retail and commercial development which does not adversely affect adjoining neighbours, particularly when they are residents, and
(b)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which acknowledges the scale, form and character of existing development, and
(c)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which maintains or improves the amenity of adjoining neighbours, particularly when they are residents, and
(d)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment which meets the Council’s carparking, car loading and unloading, landscaping and urban design requirements as outlined in a development control plan.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Advertisements
Advertising Structures
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Bed and Breakfast
Buildings which adjoin Heritage Items
Child Care Centres
Commercial Premises
Community Facilities
Convenience Stores
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants (other than drive-in)
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants (with vehicular access from a road other than Bungendore Road or Crawford Street)
Group Homes
Health Consulting Rooms
High Technology Industries
Home Activities
Hostels
Housing for Aged or Disabled Persons
Laundromats
Light Industries
Medical Centres
Mixed Use Buildings
Motels
Motor Showrooms
Parking Spaces
Public Buildings
Residential Flat Buildings
Restaurants
Roads
Serviced Apartments
Tourist Facilities
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
Any other development not included in subclause (2) or (4), subject to clause 13 (3)
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Brothels
Restricted premises
cl 29: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [11].
30   Amusement centres—special requirements in Zone 3 (a)
The Council may grant development consent for an amusement centre in Zone 3 (a), but only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  an area has been set aside by the applicant for the parking of bicycles by those using the centre and this is sufficient and adequate to reduce the likelihood of bicycles being left on any footpath to interfere with the use of the footpath by the general public, and
(b)  the proposed development meets the requirements of any relevant development control plan.
31   Design criteria for alterations, extensions and new buildings in Monaro and Crawford Streets in Zone 3 (a) and bounded by Rutledge and Morisset Streets and Collett and Lowe Streets
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of a building, or for the alteration or extension of an existing building, on land within Zone 3 (a) in Monaro or Crawford Streets and bounded by Rutledge and Morisset Streets and Collett and Lowe Streets only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the proposed development is designed to complement the scale and impact of existing development on the site which is the subject of the application as well as that on adjoining land, when viewed at the pedestrian level from the relevant street, and
(b)  the proposed development meets the requirements of any relevant development control plan.
32   Maximum floor space ratios in Zone 3 (a), 3 (b) or 3 (c)
(1)  Buildings must not exceed a floor space ratio of—
(a)  3:1 in Zone 3 (a),
(b)  1:1 in Zone 3 (b),
(c)  1.5:1 in Zone 3 (c).
(2)  The Council must consider floor space ratios specified in any development control plan applying to the land.
(3)  So much of the floor space ratio of buildings within Zone 3 (c) as is attributable to floor space used for commercial purposes must not be greater than 0.75:1.
33   Fast food take-away restaurants with drive-in take-away facilities—minimum site area and landscaping requirements
The Council may grant development consent for fast food take-away restaurants with drive-in take-away facilities only when it is satisfied that—
(a)  the site area is not less than 1000 square metres, and
(b)  the site has sufficient width and depth to enable safe access and egress to and from it by motor vehicles as well as to accommodate any carparking required by the Council, and
(c)  the building and ancillary carparking is set back sufficiently from boundaries adjoining a road or any adjoining site used for residential purposes to allow for any landscaping required by the Council.
cl 33: Am 6.6.2003.
Part 5 Industrial zones
34   General Development Controls—Zone 4 (a) Industrial A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 4 (a) (the Industrial A zone) are—
(a)  to encourage industrial development which will generate employment opportunities, and
(b)  to provide opportunities for non-industrial development that may reasonably be located in an industrial zone, and
(c)  to ensure that industrial and other permitted buildings which adjoin or are adjacent to residential buildings are designed and used so as to minimise any adverse impact on the use of the residential buildings, and
(d)  to ensure adequate access to all properties and that proper provision is made for landscaping, off-street loading and unloading and carparking, and
(e)  to encourage alterations, additions or redevelopment that improves the existing appearance of a site within the zone, particularly when it is located on or is visible from an arterial road or visible from any adjoining or adjacent residential properties.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Advertisements
Advertising Structures
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Automotive Uses
Brothels
Bulky Goods Salesrooms or Showrooms
Bus Depots
Bus Stations
Car Parks
Clubs
Convenience Stores
Depots
Dwelling-houses used in connection with other development permitted in this zone
Helipads
High Technology Industries
Industries
Laundromats
Materials Recycling Yards (not adjoining or adjacent to land in a residential zone)
Medical Centres
Motor Showrooms
Offices used in connection with other development permitted in this zone
Panel Beating Workshops (not adjoining or adjacent to land in a residential area)
Parking Spaces
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Public Buildings
Reception Centres
Recreation Facilities
Restricted Premises
Retail Plant Nurseries
Roads
Road Transport Terminals
Service Stations
Stock and Sale Yards
Taverns
Transport Depots
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Veterinary Hospitals
Warehouse or Distribution Centres
Demolition
Subdivision
Any other development not included in subclause (2), subject to clause 13 (3)
cll 34: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
35   General Development Controls—Zone 4 (b) Industrial B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 4 (b) (the Industrial B zone) are—
(a)  to enable the development of a business park consisting of high technology industrial premises, bulky goods retailing premises and associated facilities, and
(b)  to encourage well designed, low-scale industrial development which provides large areas of landscaping and meets the Council’s carparking, loading and unloading requirements on site.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Advertisements
Advertising Structures
Arts and Crafts Galleries
Automotive Uses
Bulky Goods Salesrooms and Showrooms
Bus Stations
Car Parks
Child Care Centres
Community Facilities
Convenience Stores
Depots
Dwelling-houses used in connection with other development permitted in this zone
Educational Establishments
Helipads
High Technology Industries
Laundromats
Light Industries
Medical Centres
Motor Showrooms
Offices used in connection with other development permitted in this zone
Plant and Equipment Hire Establishments
Reception Centres
Recreation Facilities
Roads
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Warehouse or Distribution Centres
Demolition
Subdivision
Any other development not included in subclause (2) or (4), subject to clause 13 (3)
(4) Development which is prohibited Development for the purpose of—
Brothels
Restricted premises
cll 35: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
36   Industrial development—matters for consideration
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of a building or the use of a building in an industrial zone only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  any adverse visual impact that may arise from the proposed use of the land can be screened from public view by the use of landscaping, particularly when the site is opposite land in a residential zone, and
(b)  access to the site, loading and unloading facilities as well as on-site carparking can be provided to meet the Council’s requirements, and
(c)  any waste arising from the use of the building can be disposed of to meet the Council’s requirements, and
(d)  the use of the building will have a minimal impact on any residential development which the Council anticipates will be affected, and
(e)  the building is set back from its front boundary a sufficient distance to allow for the implementation of any landscaping or carparking requirements of the Council, and
(f)  the size of the building and the scale of the proposed use of the building are unlikely to result in any associated operations being conducted on land other than that to which the development application relates.
37   Bulky goods salesrooms or showrooms—matters for consideration
The Council may grant development consent for a bulky goods salesroom or showroom within Zone 4 (a) or 4 (b) only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  suitable land for the proposed development is not available in Zone 3 (a), and
(b)  the proposed development would not, by reason of the number of retail outlets which exist or are proposed on nearby land within Zone 4 (a) or 4 (b), defeat the predominantly industrial nature of that zone, and
(c)  the proposed development will not detrimentally affect the economic viability of uses of land within Zone 3 (a), and
(d)  the proposed bulky goods salesroom or showroom is to have a gross floor area of not less than 1,000 square metres.
cl 37: Am 6.6.2003.
38   Location of brothels and restricted premises
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of a building to be used as, or for the use of a building as, a brothel or restricted premises on land within an industrial zone, but only if it is satisfied that the site is not less than 200 metres from the nearest boundary of any allotment developed or proposed to be developed for a place of worship, school, dwelling or a place frequented by children or from the nearest boundary of Yass Road or Canberra Avenue.
39   Subdivision of industrial land—minimum area requirements
The Council may grant development consent for the subdivision of land within an industrial zone only if each allotment to be created has an area of not less than 1500 square metres.
Part 6 Special use zone
40   General Development Controls—Zone 5 (a) Special Uses A
(1) Objective of the zone The objective of Zone 5 (a) (the Special Uses A zone) is to make provision for the nominated use of this land as shown on the map.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Buildings adjoining Heritage Items
Car Parks
Roads
The particular use indicated on the map
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 40: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
40A   Development of car parks
(1)  In addition to development that is allowed under clause 40, development for the purpose of the following is allowed, with the consent of the Council, on land within Zone 5 (a) where the nominated use of the land, as indicated on the map, is parking—
(a)  bus stations,
(b)  clubs,
(c)  commercial premises,
(d)  community facilities,
(e)  convenience stores,
(f)  drive-in take-away food shops,
(g)  entertainment facilities,
(h)  laundromats,
(i)  medical centres,
(j)  public buildings,
(k)  recreation facilities,
(l)  restaurants,
(m)  shops,
(n)  take-away food shops.
(2)  The Council may grant development consent to the carrying out of development referred to in subclause (1) only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  there will be no reduction in the number of existing parking spaces provided on the land, and
(b)  a traffic study has been prepared to assess the impact of the proposed development on the local road network, and
(c)  any additional car parking as required by the development is to be provided on the land, and
(d)  the development complies with any design criteria or floor space ratio contained in this plan, and
(e)  the development complies with any urban design guidelines, car parking strategy or development control plan adopted by the Council, and
(f)  the development will maintain any existing easements and rights of way for vehicular and pedestrian access, and
(g)  the use of the site does not prevent or inhibit the site from being used for the special use identified for the land on the map.
cl 40A: Ins 12.10.2001.
41   (Repealed)
cl 41: Rep 28.3.2002.
Part 7 Open space zones
42   General Development Controls—Zone 6 (a) Open Space A
(1) Objective of the zone The objective of Zone 6 (a) (the Open Space A zone) is to identify land predominantly in public ownership which is capable of offering a range of recreational opportunities for all members of the community.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Caravan Parks
Car Parks
Clubs
Community Facilities
Entertainment Facilities
Fast Food Take-away Restaurants (other than drive-in)
Recreation Facilities
Roads
Tourist Facilities
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 42–45: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
43   General Development Controls—Zone 6 (b) Open Space B
(1) Objective of the zone The objective of Zone 6 (b) (the Open Space B zone) is to identify land in private ownership which is capable of offering a range of future recreational opportunities for all members of the community once it is acquired by the Council.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Caravan Parks
Car Parks
Community Facilities
Entertainment Facilities
Maintenance work associated with any other lawful use of the land
Recreation Facilities
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 42–45: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
44   General Development Controls—Zone 6 (c) Open Space C
(1) Objective of the zone The objective of Zone 6 (c) (the Open Space C zone) is to recognise and to enable the continuation of recreational activities conducted on privately owned land.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Caravan Parks
Car Parks
Clubs
Entertainment Facilities
Recreation Facilities
Roads
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 42–45: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
Part 8 Environmental protection zones
45   General Development Controls—Zone 7 (a) Environmental Protection A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 7 (a) (the Environmental Protection A zone) are—
(a)  to identify and provide for the protection of publicly owned land which is environmentally sensitive and of visual significance, and
(b)  to maintain the intrinsic scientific, scenic, habitat and educational values of natural and semi-natural environments, and
(c)  to protect rivers, creeks and gully ecosystems, and
(d)  to protect threatened species.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Recreation Facilities
Roads
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 42–45: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
46   General Development Controls—Zone 7 (b) Environmental Protection B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 7 (b) (the Environmental Protection B zone) are—
(a)  to identify and provide for the protection of privately owned land which is environmentally sensitive and of visual significance, and
(b)  to maintain the intrinsic scientific, scenic, habitat and educational values of natural and semi-natural environments, and
(c)  to protect river, creek and gully ecosystems, and
(d)  to protect threatened species.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Development for the purpose of—
Bushfire Hazard Reduction
Maintenance associated with the protection of known endangered flora and fauna and their habitat.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Recreation Facilities
Utility Installations
Utility Undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cl 46: Am 6.6.2003.
Part 9 National park zone
47   General Development Controls—Zone 8 (a) National Park A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 8 (a) (the National Parks A zone) are—
(a)  to identify land which is reserved or dedicated under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974, and
(b)  to allow for the management and appropriate use of that land as provided for in the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Any development authorised by the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 and any development ordinarily incidental or ancillary to such development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Nil.
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2).
Part 10 Road zones
48   General Development Controls—Zone 9 (a) Road A
(1) Objectives of the zone The objectives of Zone 9 (a) (the Road A zone) are—
(a)  to enable a future arterial or major local road which provides an alternative road for traffic not wanting to go through the central business district, and
(b)  to enable a future arterial or major local road which links the Monaro Highway to the Kings Highway, and
(c)  to enable the widening of Lanyon Drive.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Road Works not included in subclause (2)
Utility undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 48: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
49   General Development Controls—Zone 9 (b) Road B
(1) Objectives of the zone The objective of Zone 9 (b) (the Road B zone) is to enable the establishment of local roads or laneways identified on the map.
(2) Development allowed without development consent Exempt development.
(3) Development allowed only with development consent Development for the purpose of—
Road Works
Utility undertakings
Demolition
Subdivision
(4) Development which is prohibited Any development not included in subclause (2) or (3).
cll 49: Am 28.3.2002; 6.6.2003.
Part 11 Advertising structures and displays
pt 11: Subst 24.12.1999.
50   (Repealed)
cl 50: Subst 24.12.1999. Am 1.2.2002. Rep 28.3.2002.
51   Advertising structures and displays requiring development consent
(1)  Regardless of any other clause in this plan, development consent is required for the erection of any advertising structure and the display of an advertisement on it, and for the display of an advertisement that is not on an advertising structure, which—
(a)  covers any mechanical ventilation inlet or outlet, or
(b)  is less than 600 millimetres from the kerb or edge of the carriageway of any road.
(2)  Nothing in this plan affects State Environmental Planning Policy (Industry and Employment) 2021, Chapter 3.
cl 51: Subst 24.12.1999; 28.3.2002. Am 2022 (72), Sch 1.43[1].
52   General restrictions on granting development consent for advertising structures and displays
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of an advertising structure and display of an advertisement on it, or the display of an advertisement that is not an advertising structure, only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the structure and the advertisement or the advertisement will not detract from any scenic quality of the locality, and
(b)  the advertisement does not significantly add or contribute to any signage clutter in the locality, and
(c)  where the advertisement or the structure is to be attached to a building, the advertisement or the structure has been designed to be an integral part of the building, both structurally and aesthetically, and
(d)  the provisions of clause 53, where applicable, have been met, and
(e)  the advertisement will not distract motorists using an intersection or interfere with the efficient operation of any traffic control device.
cll 52–55: Subst 24.12.1999.
53   Advertising structures and displays for restricted premises
The Council may grant development consent for an advertising structure and display of an advertisement on it, or for the display of an advertisement that is not on an advertising structure, advertising restricted premises, only if—
(a)  it is satisfied that the advertisement is not likely to interfere with the amenity of the locality, and
(b)  the advertisement and structure has an area of not more than 3 square metres and includes—
(i)  the words “RESTRICTED PREMISES” in capital letters being not less than 100 millimetres and not more than 150 millimetres in height, and
(ii)  the name of the person who conducts the business at those restricted premises or the registered name of the business carried out on those restricted premises, and
(c)  not more than one such advertisement and structure is erected, displayed or exhibited to public view in a window or an entrance of the restricted premises or on, outside or directly above the door to the premises, and
(d)  the advertisement or structure will not be illuminated by flashing lights and does not include changing images or similar effect.
cll 52–55: Subst 24.12.1999.
54   Advertising structures and displays for tourist facilities and places of scientific, historic or scenic interest
Regardless of any other clause in this plan, the Council may grant development consent for the erection of an advertising structure and display of an advertisement on it, or the display of an advertisement that is not an advertising structure, on any land for the specific purpose of directing the travelling public to tourist facilities or places of scientific, historic or scenic interest, where it is satisfied that—
(a)  the advertisement relates to a specific building or place, and
(b)  the principal purpose of the advertisement is to direct the travelling public to that building or place, and
(c)  the dimensions and overall size of the advertisement and or structure are not larger than would reasonably be required to so direct the travelling public.
cll 52–55: Subst 24.12.1999.
55   Restrictions applying to advertising structures and displays in Zone 3 (a)
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of an advertising structure and display of an advertisement on it, or for the display of an advertisement that is not on an advertising structure, in Zone 3 (a) only if the advertisements or structures are—
(a)  painted signs on fascias, or
(b)  wall signs on upper facades, whether or not illuminated, that project less than 1 metre from the building face and, in the opinion of the Council, are well designed.
cll 52–55: Subst 24.12.1999.
Part 12 Heritage conservation
pt 12: Subst 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
56   Heritage conservation
(1) Objectives The objectives of this clause are—
(a)  to conserve the environmental heritage of the City of Queanbeyan, and
(b)  to conserve the heritage significance of heritage items and heritage conservation areas including associated fabric, settings and views, and
(c)  to conserve archaeological sites, and
(d)  to conserve places of Aboriginal heritage significance.
(2) Requirement for consent Development consent is required for any of the following—
(a)  demolishing or moving a heritage item or a building, work, relic or tree within a heritage conservation area,
(b)  altering a heritage item or a building, work, relic, tree or place within a heritage conservation area, including (in the case of a building) making changes to the detail, fabric, finish or appearance of its exterior,
(c)  altering a heritage item that is a building, by making structural changes to its interior,
(d)  disturbing or excavating an archaeological site while knowing, or having reasonable cause to suspect, that the disturbance or excavation will or is likely to result in a relic being discovered, exposed, moved, damaged or destroyed,
(e)  disturbing or excavating a heritage conservation area that is a place of Aboriginal heritage significance,
(f)  erecting a building on land on which a heritage item is located or that is within a heritage conservation area,
(g)  subdividing land on which a heritage item is located or that is within a heritage conservation area.
(3) When consent not required However, consent under this clause is not required if—
(a)  the applicant has notified the consent authority of the proposed development and the consent authority has advised the applicant in writing before any work is carried out that it is satisfied that the proposed development—
(i)  is of a minor nature, or is for the maintenance of the heritage item, archaeological site, or a building, work, relic, tree or place within a heritage conservation area, and
(ii)  would not adversely affect the significance of the heritage item, archaeological site or heritage conservation area, or
(b)  the development is in a cemetery or burial ground and the proposed development—
(i)  is the creation of a new grave or monument, or excavation or disturbance of land for the purpose of conserving or repairing monuments or grave markers, and
(ii)  would not cause disturbance to human remains, relics, Aboriginal objects in the form of grave goods, or to a place of Aboriginal heritage significance, or
(c)  the development is limited to the removal of a tree or other vegetation that the Council is satisfied is a risk to human life or property, or
(d)  the development is exempt development.
(4) Heritage impact assessment The consent authority may, before granting consent to any development on land—
(a)  on which a heritage item is situated, or
(b)  within a heritage conservation area, or
(c)  within the vicinity of land referred to in paragraph (a) or (b),
require a heritage impact statement to be prepared that assesses the extent to which the carrying out of the proposed development would affect the heritage significance of the heritage item or heritage conservation area concerned.
Note—
The website of the Heritage Branch of the Department of Planning has publications that provide guidance on assessing the impact of proposed development on the heritage significance of items (for example, Statements of Heritage Impact).
(5) Heritage conservation management plans The consent authority may require, after considering the significance of a heritage item and the extent of change proposed to it, the submission of a heritage conservation management plan before granting consent under this clause.
(6) Archaeological sites The consent authority must, before granting consent under this clause to the carrying out of development on an archaeological site, be satisfied that any necessary excavation permit required by the Heritage Act 1977 has been granted.
(7) Places of Aboriginal heritage significance The consent authority must, before granting consent under this clause to the carrying out of development in a place of Aboriginal heritage significance—
(a)  consider the effect of the proposed development on the heritage significance of the place and any Aboriginal object known or reasonably likely to be located at the place, and
(b)  notify the local Aboriginal communities (in such way as it thinks appropriate) about the application and take into consideration any response received within 21 days after the notice is sent,
(c)  be satisfied that any necessary consent or permission under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974 has been granted.
(8)    (Repealed)
(9) Conservation incentives The consent authority may grant consent to development for any purpose of a building that is a heritage item, or of the land on which such a building is erected, even though development for that purpose would otherwise not be allowed by this plan if the consent authority is satisfied that—
(a)  the conservation of the heritage item is facilitated by the granting of consent, and
(b)  the proposed development is in accordance with a heritage conservation management plan that has been approved by the consent authority, and
(c)  the consent to the proposed development would require that all necessary conservation work identified in the heritage conservation management plan is carried out, and
(d)  the proposed development would not adversely affect the heritage significance of the heritage item, including its setting, and
(e)  the proposed development would not have any significant adverse effect on the amenity of the surrounding area.
cl 56: Am 6.6.2003. Subst 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3]. Am 2008 (571), Sch 3.149 [1]–[5].
57   Saving of development applications under former Part 12
Part 12, as in force immediately before the commencement of Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 38), continues to apply to any development application made under the former Part if the application was made but not finally determined before that commencement.
cl 57: Am 28.3.2002; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [12]. Subst 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
58–63   (Repealed)
cl 58: Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
cl 59: Rep 28.3.2002.
cll 60: Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
cll 61: Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
cl 62: Subst 24.12.1999. Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
cl 62A: Ins 24.12.1999. Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
cl 63: Rep 2007 (332), Sch 1 [3].
Part 13 Special provisions
64   Acquisition of land in Zone 6 (b), 9 (a) or 9 (b)
(1)  The owner of any land in Zone No 6 (b), 9 (a) or 9 (b) may, by notice in writing, require the Council to acquire the land.
(2)  On the receipt of such a notice the Council must acquire the land.
(3)  This clause does not apply when the land is required to be dedicated to the Council as a condition of development consent.
65   Interim development of land within Zone 6 (b), 9 (a) or 9 (b)
(1)  The Council may grant consent for any development on land in Zone 6 (b), 9 (a) or 9 (b) that—
(a)  may be carried out on land in an adjoining zone, and
(b)  is compatible with development which may be carried out on land in an adjoining zone.
(2)  The Council must not grant development consent referred to in subclause (1) unless it has made an assessment of—
(a)  the effect of the proposed development on the costs of acquisition, and
(b)  the imminence of acquisition, and
(c)  the costs of reinstatement of the land for the development for which the land is to be acquired.
66   Development along arterial and other specified roads—matters for consideration
(1)  The Council may grant development consent for development on land with direct vehicular access to an arterial road or on land which has a vehicular access point within 90 metres of an intersection with an arterial road only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  vehicular access from a road other than an arterial road is not practicable, and
(b)  the nature of the development justifies a location on an arterial road or near one, and
(c)  vehicular access to the development and the road giving access to the site are designed to minimise conflict between vehicles and pedestrians, and
(d)  through traffic on the arterial road will not be impeded by the design of access points from the site of the proposed development or by the internal traffic arrangements for the proposed development, and
(e)  future through traffic on the arterial road following its realignment or widening will not be impeded by the design of those access points or by those internal traffic arrangements.
(2)  The proposed Edwin Land Parkway is taken to be an arterial road for the purposes of subclause (1).
(3)  The Council may grant development consent for development which provides direct vehicular access to Southbar Road between Donald Road and Lanyon Drive, or to Thompsitt Drive, or to the proposed Edwin Land Parkway, only when such vehicular access is gained from a road.
(4)  The Council may grant development consent for a road intersecting with Southbar Road between Donald Road and Lanyon Drive, Thompsitt Drive or the proposed Edwin Land Parkway, only if it is satisfied that the location of the road and design of its intersection is in accordance with any requirements of the Council or the Roads and Traffic Authority of New South Wales, as applicable.
(5)  The Council may grant development consent for the subdivision of the following land, or the erection of a dwelling requiring development consent on that land, only if it is satisfied that the development incorporates noise mitigation measures that are in accordance with the Environment Protection Authority's Environmental Criteria for Road Traffic Noise (published in June 1999)—
(a)  land adjoining Bungendore Road, Crawford Street, Edwin Land Parkway, Ellerton Drive, Lanyon Drive, Monaro Street, Southbar Road, Thompsitt Drive,
(b)  land adjoining land within Zone 9 (a),
(c)  land adjoining the proposed Edwin Land Parkway.
(6)  Subclause (5) does not apply where, in the Council's opinion, the proposed development involves the reasonable repair, renovation, alteration, extension of, or addition to, an existing building.
cl 66: Am 6.6.2003.
67   Development near zone boundaries
(1)  This clause applies to land within 20 metres of a boundary between any two zones except land within Zone 7 (a), 7 (b) or 8 (a) or land proposed to be developed for the purpose of a brothel or restricted premises.
(2)  Regardless of any other clause in this plan, the Council may grant consent for development of land to which this clause applies if the development may be carried out in the adjoining zone, but only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the development is not inconsistent with the aims and objectives of this plan and the objectives of both zones, and
(b)  the carrying out of the development is desirable due to planning, servicing or similar requirements relating to the optimum development of the land.
68   Development of land shown as unzoned on the map
(1)  Development consent is required for development of unzoned land.
(2)  Subclause (1) does not apply to the development of any land by a public authority or its agent for the purpose of roads or utility installations (other than railways, water or air transport, wharf or river undertakings, gas holders or generating works) on which development may be carried out without the development consent of the Council.
68A   (Repealed)
cl 68A: Ins 23.8.2002. Rep 2008 (571), Sch 3.149 [6].
69   Development exceeding the obstacle height limitation or on land within the 20–25 ANEF contour
(1)  Regardless of any other provision of this plan, development consent is required for a building with a height which exceeds the obstacle height limitation surface and for residential development under a flightpath and within the 20–25 ANEF contour.
(2)  The Council may grant development consent for the erection of a building on land with a height which exceeds the obstacle height limitation surface for Canberra (Fairbairn) Airport as determined by the Commonwealth Department of Defence from time to time only if it is satisfied that the building will not constitute an obstruction, hazard or potential hazard to aircraft flying in the vicinity. Before granting such a consent, the Council must notify that Department of its intention to do so and take into consideration any comments made by that Department and received within 28 days after the notice was sent.
(3)  Where the proposed development is located under a flight path and is within the 20–25 ANEF contour and is for residential purposes or for the purposes of hospitals, schools, churches and public buildings, the Council may grant development consent only if it is satisfied that any building to be constructed will satisfy the provisions of AS 2021–1994 (Acoustics—Aircraft Noise Intrusion—Building Siting and Construction).
(4)  In granting consent referred to in subclause (1), the Council must consider any noise exposure forecast prepared for the land concerned by the Commonwealth Department of Defence, Federal Airports Corporation, Air Services Australia or a private lessor of the Airport and assess whether the proposed use of the building will be adversely affected by exposure to aircraft noise.
(5)  For the purposes of this clause, the flightpath of aircraft includes such land as is determined by either Air Services Australia or the Department of Defence and communicated to the Council.
70   Development within two kilometres of the Bonshaw Radio Station
The Council may grant development consent for the erection of a building on land within 2 kilometres of the Bonshaw Radio Station only after it has referred the application to the Commonwealth Department of Defence and has considered any comments received from the Department of Defence within 28 days after the notice was sent.
71   Development near Jerrabomberra Creek or Queanbeyan River or within floodprone land
(1)  The Council must not grant development consent for the erection of a building or a work on land within 40 metres of the top of the bank of either Queanbeyan River or Jerrabomberra Creek unless it is satisfied that it will have no adverse impact on the riverine environment.
(2)  The Council must not grant development consent for the erection of a building or the carrying out of a work on land that is, in the opinion of the Council, liable to flooding unless it is satisfied that—
(a)  the impact of the proposed development on water quality or the erosion of banks will be minimal, or appropriate steps can be taken to minimise any adverse impact of the development on water quality or the erosion of the banks, and
(b)  adequate measures can be taken to—
(i)  reduce the impact of flooding on the subject land as well as on adjoining land, and
(ii)  prevent the incidence of structural damage likely to be caused to any buildings to be located on the land, and
(iii)  enable the evacuation of people and limit any cost to the community of evacuation.
72   Land subject to bushfire hazard—matters for consideration
The Council may grant development consent for the subdivision of land or to the erection of a building on land which, in the Council’s opinion, is subject to bushfire hazard only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  adequate provision is made for access for fire fighting vehicles, and
(b)  adequate safeguards will be adopted in the form of fire breaks, reserves and fire radiation zones, and
(c)  adequate water supplies will be available for fire fighting purposes, and
(d)  appropriate measures can be taken to reduce the hazard, after having regard to any guidelines, development control plan or the like adopted from time to time by the Council.
73   Development within scenic protection areas or Residential E Zone—matters for consideration
The Council may grant development consent for a building within a scenic protection area or within Zone 2 (e) only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the height, scale and bulk of the building as well as the construction materials used in, and the colours of external surfaces of, the building will accord with the visual character of the locality, and
(b)  any landscaping, particularly around buildings for screening purposes, will enhance the visual character of the locality, and
(c)  the building will be located so as to be unobtrusive, and
(d)  the part of the site to be used for the building is stable or can be stabilised in accordance with the requirements of the Council, and
(e)  the effect of the proposed development on the erosion of any land or the siltation of any waterway will be minimal, or appropriate measures can be taken to control erosion or siltation during construction, and
(f)  adequate measures can be taken during and after construction to protect endangered flora and fauna where these are known to occur on the subject site or on immediately adjoining land, and
(g)  where required, a tree survey of significant trees showing the likely impact on significant trees of the proposed development has been taken into account and adequate measures are proposed to be taken to retain significant trees.
cl 73: Am 1.2.2002; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [13].
74   Subdivision of land—matters for consideration
(1)  The Council may grant development consent for a subdivision of land within a rural zone only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  access roads are located to minimise the risk of soil erosion, and
(b)  each allotment to be created by the subdivision of land provides potential development sites with minimum risk of damage by bushfires or soil instability, and
(c)  adequate provision is made for soil erosion control measures to be carried out, including measures to be carried out prior to and during the construction phase of the subdivision taking place, and
(d)  adequate provision is made for drainage and stormwater control, and
(e)  each new allotment has sufficient building area on it, being land with a natural slope of less than 20%, and
(f)  the size of allotments to be created meets any minimum or average area requirements of this plan for the land and the ratio of depth to frontage of each new allotment is adequate in terms of its likely intended use, and
(g)  where the land in the opinion of the Council is unstable, a geophysical report on the stability of land has been prepared by consultants acceptable to the Council and the report indicates which part of the land is suitable for development or the appropriate measures that need to be taken to stabilise the area proposed for development, and
(h)  adequate measures will be taken during construction to protect endangered flora and fauna as well as other native vegetation, when these are known to occur on the subject site or adjoining land, and
(i)  adequate measures will be taken to retain heritage items, significant trees and other significant native vegetation or natural features of significance, and
(j)  those parts of a site to be developed for the purpose of a building will not intrude on visibly prominent or significant landscaping qualities when viewed from outside the area being developed.
(2)  The Council may grant development consent for a subdivision of land within a residential zone only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the matters referred to in subclause (1) (a)–(e) and (g)–(j) have been adequately dealt with, and
(b)  the size of allotments to be created meets any minimum area requirements of this plan for the land and the ratio of depth to frontage of each new allotment is adequate in terms of its likely intended use, and
(c)  adequate measures are made to retain significant trees and natural drainageways and significant trees and natural drainageways, where possible, are sited in areas accessible to the general public, and
(d)  allotments are orientated to acknowledge local microclimatic conditions and to enable future buildings to be designed to achieve maximum solar efficiency, and
(e)  greenfield or large residential subdivisions have been designed to encourage the use of alternative forms of transportation to the private motor car.
(3)  The Council may grant development consent for a subdivision of land within a business or industrial zone or for a subdivision of land likely to be used for retail or commercial purposes, only if it is satisfied that—
(a)  the matters referred to in subclause (1) (a)–(e), (g) and (i) have been adequately dealt with, and
(b)  any subdivision of land on a main or proposed main road will not increase the potential for ribbon development along that road, and
(c)  the size of allotments to be created meets any minimum area requirements of this plan for the land.
(4)  The Council may grant development consent for a subdivision of land within Zone 7 (a) or 7 (b) only after it has taken into consideration the environmental impact of the proposed subdivision on the relevant land within Zone 7 (a) or 7 (b).
Note—
The website of the Department of Environment and Climate Change has publications that provide guidance on development that may impact on areas managed by that Department (for example, the Guidelines for developments adjoining Department of Environment and Climate Change land).
cl 74: Am 2008 (571), Sch 3.149 [7].
75   (Repealed)
cl 75: Rep 28.3.2002.
76   Air, water and noise pollution and disposal of stormwater and other liquid discharges
(1)  The Council may grant consent for the development of land that is not exclusively for the purpose of residential use only if—
(a)  it has considered whether conditions should be imposed on the consent for the purpose of—
(i)  reducing, improving the quality of, or controlling, all emissions to air (such as conditions concerning the use of pollution control equipment), or
(ii)  reducing or minimising noise impacts, or
(iii)  reducing or improving the quality of stormwater disposal from the site as well as any pollution arising as a result of stormwater disposal, or
(iv)  reducing, improving the quality of, or controlling, liquid discharges to the sewer, and
(b)  it is satisfied that—
(i)  the development is not likely to give rise to significant air, water or noise pollution, and
(ii)  stormwater and other liquid discharges will be properly discharged.
(2)  Despite subclause (1), the Council may grant consent for the development of land if it has had regard to information that addresses the following matters—
(a)  the composition and quantity of all emissions to air likely to result from the development of the site (including emissions to air from any building, plant, activity or equipment on the site),
(b)  the noise impacts likely to result from the development of the site (including noise emissions arising during construction and from any building, plant, equipment or activity on the site),
(c)  the measures proposed to dispose of stormwater and any liquid discharges from the site,
(d)  the measures proposed to minimise the occurrence of polluting incidents arising from emissions to air or from discharge of stormwater or any liquid discharges to sewer as well as the measures proposed to attenuate noise emissions.
cl 76: Subst 6.6.2003.
77   Land which may be contaminated by virtue of previous development
The Council may grant consent for the development of land only if it is satisfied that State Environmental Planning Policy (Resilience and Hazards) 2021, section 4.6 has been complied with.
cl 77: Subst 6.6.2003. Am 2022 (72), Sch 1.43[2].
78   Greenhouse emissions and global warming
The Council may grant development consent for development that has an estimated value in excess of $500,000 and that will result in the consumption of non-renewable energy and the production of greenhouse gases only if it has made an assessment of—
(a)  details of the possible measures that could be incorporated in the development to reduce the consumption of non-renewable energy and the production of greenhouse gases, and
(b)  any measures incorporated in the proposed development to minimise the energy requirements of the proposed development, including building design, construction methods, materials, solar orientation, plant and equipment technology, space heating, cooling and lighting systems, and landscaping, and
(c)  whether conditions should be imposed on the consent aimed at reducing the consumption of non-renewable energy or the production of greenhouse gases.
cl 78: Subst 6.6.2003.
79   Waste minimisation and disposal
(1)  The Council may grant consent for development only if it is satisfied that the person proposing to carry out the development—
(a)  has, in the Council's opinion, taken all reasonable measures to minimise the quantities of waste likely to be generated by the development through waste avoidance, recycling or reuse, and
(b)  has made or intends to make arrangements for the proper collection and disposal of wastes to an appropriate landfill site or reprocessing facility, and
(c)  has made adequate provision on site for the storage of waste materials prior to their collection and removal.
(2)  However, if the Council cannot satisfy itself of the matters referred to in subclause (1) or the development has an estimated value in excess of $500,000, the Council may grant consent for development only if—
(a)  it has taken into account a statement of environmental effects that details—
(i)  the types of wastes likely to be generated by the construction and future users of the proposed development, and
(ii)  the likely waste disposal methods, including any measures that might be taken to recycle materials or by-products or to minimise pollution, and
(b)  it has considered whether conditions should be imposed on the consent aimed at waste minimisation, or the collection, disposal or minimising of pollution.
cl 79: Subst 6.6.2003.
80   Covenants and agreements—suspension in Zones 3 (a), 3 (b), 3 (c), 4 (a) and 4 (b)
(1)  This clause applies to land within Zone 3 (a), 3 (b), 3 (c), 4 (a) or 4 (b).
(2)  If any covenant, agreement or other similar instrument prohibits development allowed by this plan, then it shall not apply to that development, to the extent necessary to allow that development.
(3)  In accordance with section 28 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979, the Governor approved of subclauses (1) and (2) before this plan was made.
81   (Repealed)
cl 81: Subst 24.12.1999. Rep 2021 (716), Sch 1.20[1].
81A   Land transferred from Yarrowlumla
(1)  This clause applies to land shown edged heavy black on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 28)” and land shown edged heavy black and lettered on Sheet 1 of the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 43)” deposited in the office of the Council of the City of Queanbeyan, which is referred to in this clause as transferred land.
(2)  Any transferred land that was, immediately before 1 January 1995, within a zone under Yarrowlumla Local Environmental Plan 1993 specified in Column 1 of the following Table is taken to be within the corresponding zone under this plan specified in Column 2 of that Table, or as shown edged heavy black and lettered on Sheet 1 of the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 43)”.
Table of equivalent zones
Column 1
Column 2
1 (a)
1 (a)
1 (d)
1 (c)
7 (e)
7 (a), in the case of publicly owned land
7 (b), in the case of privately owned land
(3)  Despite any other provision of this plan if, immediately before 1 January 1995—
(a)  development could have been carried out without consent under Yarrowlumla Local Environmental Plan 1993 on or with respect to any transferred land but may only be carried out with consent or is prohibited by, or could not be carried out without contravening a development standard imposed by, any other provision of this plan, it may be carried out on that land without development consent, or
(b)  development could have been carried out with consent under Yarrowlumla Local Environmental Plan 1993 on or with respect to any transferred land but is prohibited by, or could not be carried out without contravening a development standard imposed by, any other provision of this plan, it may be carried out on or with respect to that land with development consent.
cl 81A: Ins 6.12.2002. Am 2006 (552), Sch 2 [14] [15].
81B   Exceptions to development standards
(1)  The objectives of this clause are as follows—
(a)  to provide an appropriate degree of flexibility in applying certain development standards to particular development,
(b)  to achieve better outcomes for and from development by allowing flexibility in particular circumstances.
(2)  Development consent may, subject to this clause, be granted for development even though the development would contravene a development standard imposed by this or any other environmental planning instrument. However, this clause does not apply to a development standard that is expressly excluded from the operation of this clause.
(3)  Development consent must not be granted for development that contravenes a development standard unless the consent authority has considered a written request from the applicant that seeks to justify the contravention of the development standard by demonstrating—
(a)  that compliance with the development standard is unreasonable or unnecessary in the circumstances of the case, and
(b)  that there are sufficient environmental planning grounds to justify contravening the development standard.
(4)  Development consent must not be granted for development that contravenes a development standard unless—
(a)  the consent authority is satisfied that—
(i)  the applicant’s written request has adequately addressed the matters required to be demonstrated by subclause (3), and
(ii)  the proposed development will be in the public interest because it is consistent with the objectives of the particular standard and the objectives for development within the zone in which the development is proposed to be carried out, and
(b)  the concurrence of the Planning Secretary has been obtained.
(5)  In deciding whether to grant concurrence, the Planning Secretary must consider—
(a)  whether contravention of the development standard raises any matter of significance for State or regional environmental planning, and
(b)  the public benefit of maintaining the development standard, and
(c)  any other matters required to be taken into consideration by the Planning Secretary before granting concurrence.
(6)  Development consent must not be granted under this clause for a subdivision of land in Zone 1 (a) Rural A, Zone 1 (b) Rural B, Zone 1 (c) Rural C, Zone 7 (a) Environmental Protection A or Zone 7 (b) Environmental Protection B if—
(a)  the subdivision will result in 2 or more lots of less than the minimum area specified for such lots by a development standard, or
(b)  the subdivision will result in at least one lot that is less than 90% of the minimum area specified for such a lot by a development standard.
(7)  After determining a development application made pursuant to this clause, the consent authority must keep a record of its assessment of the factors required to be addressed in the applicant’s written request referred to in subclause (3).
(8)  This clause does not allow development consent to be granted for development that would contravene any of the following—
(a)  a development standard for complying development,
(b)  a development standard that arises, under the regulations under the Act, in connection with a commitment set out in a BASIX certificate for a building to which State Environmental Planning Policy (Building Sustainability Index: BASIX) 2004 applies or for the land on which such a building is situated.
cl 81B: Ins 2019 (659), Sch 1.22.
81C   Temporary use of land
(1)  The objective of this clause is to provide for the temporary use of land if the use does not compromise future development of the land, or have detrimental economic, social, amenity or environmental effects on the land.
(2)  Despite any other provision of this plan, development consent may be granted for development on land in any zone for a temporary use for a maximum period of 52 days (whether or not consecutive days) in any period of 12 months.
(3)  Development consent must not be granted unless the consent authority is satisfied that—
(a)  the temporary use will not prejudice the subsequent carrying out of development on the land in accordance with this plan and any other applicable environmental planning instrument, and
(b)  the temporary use will not adversely impact on any adjoining land or the amenity of the neighbourhood, and
(c)  the temporary use and location of any structures related to the use will not adversely impact on environmental attributes or features of the land, or increase the risk of natural hazards that may affect the land, and
(d)  at the end of the temporary use period the land will, as far as is practicable, be restored to the condition in which it was before the commencement of the use.
(4)  Despite subclause (2), the temporary use of a dwelling as a sales office for a new release area or a new housing estate may exceed the maximum number of days specified in that subclause.
(5)  Subclause (3)(d) does not apply to the temporary use of a dwelling as a sales office mentioned in subclause (4).
cll 81C: Ins 2019 (659), Sch 2.22.
81D   Conversion of fire alarms
(1)  This clause applies to a fire alarm system that can be monitored by Fire and Rescue NSW or by a private service provider.
(2)  The following development may be carried out, but only with development consent—
(a)  converting a fire alarm system from connection with the alarm monitoring system of Fire and Rescue NSW to connection with the alarm monitoring system of a private service provider,
(b)  converting a fire alarm system from connection with the alarm monitoring system of a private service provider to connection with the alarm monitoring system of another private service provider,
(c)  converting a fire alarm system from connection with the alarm monitoring system of a private service provider to connection with a different alarm monitoring system of the same private service provider.
(3)  Development to which subclause (2) applies is complying development if it consists only of—
(a)  internal alterations to a building, or
(b)  internal alterations to a building together with the mounting of an antenna, and any support structure, on an external wall or roof of a building so as to occupy a space of not more than 450mm × 100mm × 100mm.
(4)  A complying development certificate for any such complying development is subject to a condition that any building work may only be carried out between 7.00 am and 6.00 pm on Monday to Friday and between 7.00 am and 5.00 pm on Saturday, and must not be carried out on a Sunday or a public holiday.
(5)  In this clause—
private service provider means a person or body that has entered into an agreement that is in force with Fire and Rescue NSW to monitor fire alarm systems.
cll 81D: Ins 2019 (659), Sch 2.22.
81E   Standards that cannot be used to refuse consent—playing and performing music
(1)  The consent authority must not refuse consent to development in relation to licensed premises on the following grounds—
(a)  the playing or performance of music, including the following—
(i)  the genre of music played or performed, or
(ii)  whether the music played or performed is live or amplified, or
(iii)  whether the music played or performed is original music, or
(iv)  the number of musicians or live entertainment acts playing or performing, or
(v)  the type of instruments played,
(b)  whether dancing occurs,
(c)  the presence or use of a dance floor or another area ordinarily used for dancing,
(d)  the direction in which a stage for players or performers faces,
(e)  the decoration to be used, including, for example, mirror balls, or lighting used by players or performers.
(2)  The consent authority must not refuse consent to development in relation to licensed premises on the grounds of noise caused by the playing or performance of music, if the consent authority is satisfied the noise may be managed and minimised to an acceptable level.
(3)  In this clause—
licensed premises has the same meaning as in the Liquor Act 2007.
cl 81E: Ins 2020 (724), Sch 3.
Part 14 Public land
82   Classification and reclassification of public land as community land
The public land described in Schedule 5 is classified, or reclassified, as community land for the purposes of the Local Government Act 1993.
cl 82: Subst 8.6.2001.
cl 82, table: Am 7.5.1999. Rep 8.6.2001.
83   Classification and reclassification of public land as operational land
(1)  The public land described in Schedule 6 is classified, or reclassified, as operational land for the purposes of the Local Government Act 1993, subject to this clause.
(2)  Land described in Part 1 of Schedule 6 is land that was classified, or reclassified, as operational land before the application of the amendments made by the Local Government Amendment (Community Land Management) Act 1998 to section 30 of the Local Government Act 1993.
(3)  Land described in Part 2 of Schedule 6—
(a)  to the extent (if any) that the land is a public reserve, does not cease to be a public reserve, and
(b)  continues to be affected by any trusts, estates, interests, dedications, conditions, restrictions or covenants by which it was affected before its classification, or reclassification, as the case requires, as operational land.
(4)  Land described in Columns 1 and 2 of Part 3 of Schedule 6, to the extent (if any) that it is a public reserve, ceases to be a public reserve on the commencement of the relevant amending plan and, by the operation of that plan, is discharged from all trusts, estates, interests, dedications, conditions, restrictions and covenants affecting the land or any part of the land except those specified opposite the land in Column 3 of Part 3 of Schedule 6.
(5)  In this clause, the relevant amending plan, in relation to land described in Part 3 of Schedule 6, means the local environmental plan that inserted the description of the land into that Part of that Schedule.
(6)  Before the relevant amending plan inserted the description of land into Part 3 of Schedule 6, the Governor approved of subclause (4) applying to the land.
cl 83: Ins 8.6.2001. Am 2011 (583), Sch 1 [1].
sch 1: Am 24.12.1998; 22.1.1999; 7.5.1999; 24.9.1999; 10.12.1999; 24.12.1999; 23.6.2000; 16.3.2001; 12.4.2001; 27.7.2001; 12.10.2001; 1.2.2002; 28.3.2002; 23.8.2002; 22.11.2002; 6.6.2003; 5.9.2003; 12.9.2003; 2005 (257), cl 4; 2005 (435), Sch 1 [2]; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [16]–[19]; 2007 (332), Sch 1 [4] [5]; 2007 No 82, Sch 2.14; 2008 (122), cl 4; 2011 (583), Sch 1 [2]; 2021 (175), Sch 2.10; 2021 (716), Sch 1.20[2]; 2022 (72), Sch 1.43[3].
Dictionary
(Clause 5 (1))
A frame sign means a moveable stand that displays an advertisement in front of a site on a public footway which—
(a)  is not more than 1.2 metres in height or 750 millimetres in width, and
(b)  displays an advertisement with wording that does no more than describe the place or premises comprising or situated on the site or a person residing or carrying out an occupation there or describe or depict an occupation being carried out there or give directions, cautions or notifications, or particulars relating to goods, commodities, services, activities, trades, professions or other businesses dealt with or provided at the place or premises.
Aboriginal object means any deposit, object or other material evidence (not being a handicraft made for sale) relating to the Aboriginal habitation of an area of New South Wales, being habitation before or concurrent with (or both) the occupation of that area by persons of non-Aboriginal extraction, and includes Aboriginal remains.
adjoining land means land which abuts other land or is separated from it only by a pathway, driveway or similar thoroughfare.
advertisement has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
advertising structure has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
agriculture means the use of land for any purpose of husbandry, including the keeping or breeding of livestock, poultry or bees, and for the growing of crops, fruit or vegetables and includes horticulture and the like.
amusement centre means a building or place used mainly for the purpose of playing—
(a)  billiards, pool or similar games, or
(b)  electrically or mechanically operated amusement devices such as pinball machines and the like, but only if more than 3 such machines are installed in the building or place.
ANEF contour means the noise exposure contour shown as an ANEF contour on a plan of Canberra (Fairbairn) Airport or surrounding land prepared by an appropriate Commonwealth public authority or private lessor of the Airport.
animal establishment means a building or place used intensively for the purpose of animal husbandry or the boarding, training or keeping of animals, birds, fish, crustaceans, insects, reptiles or the like.
appointed day means the day on which this plan took effect.
archaeological site means the site (as shown on the Heritage Map and listed in Schedule 4) of one or more relics.
area of an advertisement in the form of a sign means—
(a)  for a sign with only one side occupied by the matter displayed, the area within the outline of that sign, or
(b)  for a sign with two sides occupied by the matter displayed, the area within the outline of that sign or, where one side is larger than the other, the area within the outline of the larger side, or
(c)  for any other sign, one-third of the total surface area of the sign.
arterial road means—
(a)  a road shown on the map as such, or
(b)  a classified road within the meaning of the Roads Act 1993.
arts and crafts gallery means a building used for the creation, display or sale of arts and crafts, or materials of an artistic or historical nature.
Australian noise exposure forecast (ANEF) for land means a value allocated to the land on an index used for predicting the cumulative exposure to aircraft noise in communities near airports during a specified time period.
automotive use means the use of a building or work or land for the purpose of fuelling, lubricating, cleaning, caring for, maintaining or repairing motor vehicles or of offering for sale and installing automotive accessories or parts and includes the use of an automotive workshop, a shop selling automotive spare parts, tyres or car batteries, a tyre retreading workshop and any other establishment performing similar functions including a car repair station, but does not include the use of a panel beating workshop (other than a place used for minor panel beating ancillary to a motor showroom) or a service station.
balcony means an open or covered elevated horizontal platform attached to the upper floor of a building, projecting or recessed into the face of the wall, accessible from an adjacent room, and protected by a railing or balustrade.
barbecue means an outdoor facility, located in a backyard or courtyard, for domestic cooking.
bed and breakfast means the provision of accommodation and meals for commercial purposes within a dwelling-house—
(a)  by the permanent residents of the dwelling-house, and
(b)  on a short term basis,
where not more than 10 people occupy the dwelling-house, including the permanent residents.
boarding house means a building or place—
(a)  where accommodation and meals are provided, for payment, to the residents of the building or place, and
(b)  which is not licensed to sell liquor within the meaning of the Liquor Act 1982,
but does not include a dwelling-house used to provide bed and breakfast, a motel or a serviced apartment.
brothel means premises habitually used for the purpose of prostitution. Premises may constitute a brothel even though used by only one prostitute for the purposes of prostitution.
Building Code of Australia has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
building envelope means the part of a site either occupied or proposed to be occupied by a dwelling.
building line or boundary setback means a line drawn parallel to any property boundary of an allotment.
bulky goods salesroom or showroom means a building or place used for the sale (by retail or auction), hire or display of items (whether goods or materials) which are of such a size, shape or weight as to require—
(a)  a large area for handling, storage or display, or
(b)  direct vehicular access to the site of the building or place by members of the public for the purpose of loading items into their vehicles after purchase (for example a building or place used for the sale or display of automotive equipment and spares, floor coverings, tiles and paving, garden equipment and furniture, hardware, household fittings and furniture, plants, swimming pools and spas and whitegoods),
but does not include a building or place used for the sale of foodstuffs or clothing or, where the term is used in the general development controls, a building or place defined elsewhere in this Schedule.
bus depot means a building or place used for the servicing, repair and garaging of buses and other vehicles used for the purposes of a bus transport undertaking.
bushfire hazard reduction means a reduction (by controlled burning or mechanical or manual means) of material that constitutes a bushfire hazard.
business identification sign means a sign—
(a)  that indicates—
(i)  the name of the person, and
(ii)  the business carried on by the person,
at the premises or place at which the sign is displayed, and
(b)  that may include the address of the premises or place and a logo or other symbol that identifies the business,
but that does not include any advertising relating to a person who does not carry on business at the premises or place.
bus station means a building or place used as a terminal for the assembly and dispersal of passengers travelling by bus.
car park means a building or place used for parking vehicles and any associated manoeuvring space and access, whether operated for gain or not.
caravan park means land (such as a camping ground) on which caravans (or caravans and other moveable dwellings) are, or are to be, placed or erected.
carport means a roofed, open or semi-enclosed structure for the sheltering of motor vehicles, attached to, adjacent to, or near a dwelling-house.
cemetery means a building or place used for the disposal or processing of dead human beings or animals, and includes a crematorium and burial ground.
child care centre means a building or place which is used (whether or not for profit) for the purpose of educating, minding or caring for children (whether or not any of the children are related to the owner or operator), but only if the following conditions are satisfied—
(a)  the children number 6 or more, are under 6 years of age, and do not attend a government school, or a registered non-government school, within the meaning of the Education Reform Act 1990, and
(b)  the building or place does not provide residential care for any of the children (other than those related to the owner or operator).
cladding means the outer non-load bearing covering of external walls or roof of a framed building or structure, applied for weather-proofing or decorative purposes or both.
club means a building used by persons associated, or by a body incorporated, for social, literary, political, sporting, athletic, recreational or other lawful purposes, whether or not the whole or part of such building is the premises of a club registered under the Registered Clubs Act 1976.
cluster housing means a group of more than two dwellings having communal open space and other shared facilities on a single allotment of land, detached or attached in groups of two.
commercial premises means a building or place used as an office or for other business or commercial purposes, but (in the general development controls) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this Schedule.
community facility means a building or place owned or controlled by a public authority, including the Council or a body of persons which may provide for the physical, social, cultural or intellectual development or welfare of the local community, but (in the general development controls) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this Schedule.
community land means public land classified or reclassified as community land within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1993.
complying development has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
contaminate has the same meaning as it has in the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997.
contamination has the same meaning as it has in the Contaminated Land Management Act 1997.
convenience store means a shop with a gross floor area of not more than 240 square metres selling a variety of small consumer goods, whether or not other goods are available for sale or hire at the shop.
Council means the Council of the City of Queanbeyan.
curtilage, in relation to a heritage item or conservation area, means the area of land (including land covered by water) surrounding a heritage item, a heritage conservation area, or building, work or place within a heritage conservation area, which contributes to its heritage significance.
demolish, in relation to a heritage item, or a building, work, relic or tree within a heritage conservation area, means wholly or partly destroy, dismantle or deface the heritage item or the building, work, relic or tree.
demolition in relation to a building or work, means the damaging, defacing, destruction, pulling down or removal of the building or work, in whole or in part.
depot means a building or place used for the storage or repair (but not sale) of plant, machinery, goods or materials used or intended to be used by the owner or occupier of the building or place, but (in the general development controls) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this Schedule.
development has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
driveway means a defined area within a property used by vehicles travelling between a carriageway and a property adjacent to or near a road.
dual occupancy housing means housing consisting of 2 dwellings only (whether or not attached) on one allotment of land.
dwelling means a room or suite of rooms occupied or used or so constructed or adapted as to be capable of being occupied or used as a separate domicile.
dwelling-house means a dwelling which is the only dwelling erected on an allotment of land.
ecologically sustainable development means development which uses, conserves and enhances the community’s resources so that ecological processes, on which life depends, are maintained, and the total quality of life, now and in the future, can be increased.
educational establishment means a building or place used for education (including teaching) and includes—
(a)  a school, and
(b)  a tertiary institution, being a university, a TAFE college (within the meaning of the Technical and Further Education Commission Act 1990), teachers college, technical college or other tertiary college providing formal education which is constituted by or under an Act, and
(c)  an art gallery or museum that is not used to sell the items displayed in it,
whether or not accommodation for staff or students, or both, is provided and whether or not used for the purpose of gain.
environment has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
entertainment facility means a building or place used for the purpose of sport, entertainment, exhibitions or displays, and includes—
(a)  a sports stadium, showgrounds, race courses and the like, and
(b)  theatres, cinemas, music halls, open air theatres, drive-in theatres and the like.
excavation or filling means works which alter the ground level.
exempt development has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
exhibition home means a dwelling-house or dwelling used temporarily for display purposes.
extractive industry means—
(a)  a land use involving the winning or removal of extractive material from land, or
(b)  an industry or undertaking (other than a mine) which depends for its operation on the winning or removal of extractive material from the land on which it is carried on.
extractive material means a substance such as sand, soil, gravel, clay, turf, rock or stone, but does not include coal, shale, petrol, uranium or any mineral within the meaning of the Mining Act 1992.
fast food take-away restaurantmeans a building or place (including a take-away restaurant, drive-in take-away restaurant or the like) where food or drink is prepared or offered for sale, whether or not the food or drink is consumed in that building or place or elsewhere, but, where the term is used in the general development controls, does not include a building or place specifically defined elsewhere in this Schedule.
flood prone land means land that would be inundated by the 1 in 100 year flood as shown on the map.
floodway means land, whether or not aligned with obvious naturally defined channels, over which there is a significant passage of water during flood events.
floor means the space within a building between one floor level and the floor level next above or, if there is no floor above, the ceiling or roof above.
floor space ratio of a site means the ratio of the gross floor area of any building or buildings on the site to the area of the site.
garden shed means a small building, usually of metal or timber construction, for the storage of garden implements and the like.
greenhouse effect means the extra warming of the earth due to absorption of the earth’s emitted infra-red radiation by greenhouse gases.
greenhouse gases means the following gases: carbon dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons, methane, nitrous oxide, tropospheric ozone and any other compounds or component the breakdown of which could form any of those gases and lead to ozone depletion.
gross floor area means the sum of the areas of each floor of a building, where the area of each floor is taken to be the area within the outer face of the external enclosing walls as measured at a height of 1,400 millimetres above each floor level, excluding—
(a)  columns, fin walls, sun control devices and any elements, projections or works outside the general lines of the outer face of the external wall, and
(b)  lift towers, cooling towers, machinery and plant rooms and ancillary storage space and vertical air-conditioning ducts, and
(c)  carparking needed to meet any requirements of the Council and any internal access to it, and
(d)  space for the loading and unloading of goods.
ground level means the level of a site prior to any development, including any excavation, filling or grading, that has taken place and, where the ground level has been altered after the appointed day, the ground level is taken to be that level of the site as determined by the Council.
group home means a permanent group home or a transitional group home.
hazardous industry means a development for the purposes of an industry which, when the development is in operation and when all measures proposed to reduce or minimise its impact on the locality have been employed, would pose a significant risk, in relation to the locality—
(a)  to human health, life or property, or
(b)  to the biophysical environment.
health consulting rooms means the use in a dwelling-house in a residential area of not more than 2 rooms as surgeries by members of a profession providing health care services.
height means the greatest distance measured vertically from any point of a building, including its roof, to the ground level below that point.
helipad means an area or place not open to the public use which is authorised by the Commonwealth Department of Transport and which is set apart for the taking off and landing of helicopters.
heritage conservation area means—
(a)  an area of land that is shown as a heritage conservation area on the Heritage Map (including any heritage items situated on or within that conservation area), or
(b)  a place of Aboriginal heritage significance shown on the Heritage Map.
heritage conservation management plan means a document prepared in accordance with guidelines prepared by the Department of Planning that documents the heritage significance of an item, place or heritage conservation area and identifies conservation policies and management mechanisms that are appropriate to enable that significance to be retained.
heritage impact statement means a document consisting of—
(a)  a statement demonstrating the heritage significance of a heritage item, archaeological site, place of Aboriginal heritage significance or other heritage conservation area, and
(b)  an assessment of the impact that proposed development will have on that significance, and
(c)  proposals for measures to minimise that impact.
heritage item means a building, work, archaeological site, tree, place or Aboriginal object specified in an inventory of heritage items that is available at the office of the Council and the site and nature of which is described in Schedule 4 (and shown on the Heritage Map).
Heritage Map means the Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 Heritage Map, as amended by the maps marked as follows—
Editorial note—
The amending maps are not necessarily listed in the order of gazettal. Information about the order of gazettal can be determined by referring to the Historical notes at the end of the plan.
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 47)
heritage significance means historical, scientific, cultural, social, archaeological, architectural, natural or aesthetic value.
high technology industry means an enterprise which has as its primary function the manufacture, development, production, processing or assembly of, or research into, any of the following—
(a)  electronic and micro-electronic systems, goods and components,
(b)  computer software and hardware,
(c)  instrumentation and instruments,
(d)  biological, pharmaceutical, medical or paramedical systems, goods and components, and
(e)  other goods, systems and components intended for use in science, technology or industry.
home activity means any activity or pursuit carried out in a room or a number of rooms forming part of, or within the curtilage of, a dwelling-house on an allotment, or in another building for which consent has been granted situated on the allotment, where—
(a)  only goods made or produced, or services offered, as a result of the activity or pursuit are displayed, sold or provided, and
(b)  the primary use of the building is residential, and
(c)  the carrying out of the activity or pursuit—
(i)  does not interfere with the amenity of the locality by reason of the emission of noise, vibration, smell, fumes, smoke, vapour, steam, soot, ash, dust, waste water, waste products, grit or oil or otherwise, and
(ii)  is not visible from any public place, and
(iii)  does not require the provision of any essential service main of a greater capacity than that available in the locality, and
(iv)  does not generate traffic out of keeping with the surrounding area, and
(v)  does not involve the employment of more than one person other than the permanent residents of the dwelling-house, and
(vi)  does not involve the exhibition of any notice, advertisement or sign other than a notice or sign exhibited on the dwelling-house, or on land on which the dwelling-house is erected, to indicate the names and occupation of the permanent residents of the dwelling-house, and
(vii)  does not involve a change in the appearance of the dwelling-house, or the land on which the dwelling-house is erected, that is, in the opinion of the Council, out of character with the appearance of the adjoining area, and
(viii)  does not involve prostitution, and
(d)  the gross floor area where the activity or pursuit is carried out does not exceed 50 square metres, and
(e)  provision is made for the parking of all visiting customers’ or clients’ vehicles, in accordance with the Council’s requirements, behind the building line or in a suitably screened area within the allotment boundary, and
(f)  any retail sales are ancillary to the home activity, and
(g)  the activity or pursuit is carried out by at least one of the permanent residents of the dwelling-house.
home based child minding service means any service—
(a)  that is provided by a person for the purpose of educating, minding or caring for (but without providing residential care for) not more than 5 children under the age of 15 (excluding those children normally residing within the dwelling), and
(b)  that is provided with or without fee, gain or reward at the premises where the person providing the service resides, and
(c)  that is required to be licensed under the Children (Care and Protection) Act 1987.
home occupation means any occupation or pursuit carried out in a room or a number of rooms forming part of, or within the curtilage of, a dwelling-house on an allotment, or in another building for which consent has been granted situated on the same allotment as a dwelling-house, where—
(a)  only goods made or produced, or services offered, as a result of the occupation or pursuit are displayed, sold or provided, and
(b)  the primary use of the dwelling is residential, and
(c)  the gross floor area where the occupation or pursuit is carried out does not exceed 30 square metres, and
(d)  the occupation or pursuit does not—
(i)  interfere with the amenity of the locality by reason of the emission of noise, vibration, smell, fumes, smoke, vapour, steam, soot, ash, dust, waste water, waste products, grit or oil, or otherwise, or
(ii)  involve exposure to view from any public place of any matter, or
(iii)  require the provision of any essential service main of a greater capacity than that available in the locality, or
(iv)  involve the exhibition of an advertising structure and the display of an advertisement on it or an advertisement that is not an advertising structure other than as exempt development, or
(v)  involve a change in the appearance of the dwelling-house, or the land on which the dwelling-house is erected, that is, in the opinion of the Council, out of character with the appearance of the adjoining area, or
(vi)  involve prostitution, and
(e)  any retail sales are ancillary to the occupation or pursuit, and
(f)  the occupation or pursuit is carried out by at least one of the permanent residents of the dwelling-house.
hospital means a building or place used for the purpose of providing professional health services to people admitted as in-patients, whether or not out-patients are also cared for or treated at the building or place, and includes—
(a)  ancillary facilities for the accommodation of nurses or other health care workers, ancillary convenience shops and ancillary accommodation for persons receiving health care or their visitors, and
(b)  facilities situated in the building or at the place and used for educational or research purposes, whether or not they are used only by hospital staff or health care workers, and whether or not any such use is a commercial use.
hostel means a hostel housing aged persons or disabled persons where cooking and dining, laundering, cleaning and other facilities are provided on a shared basis and where a person having nursing or social work experience or other similar experience provides services for and maintains the residence on a full-time basis.
hotel means the premises to which a hotelier’s licence granted under the Liquor Act 1982 relates, but does not include a tavern.
housing for aged or disabled persons means residential accommodation which may take any building form, which is or is intended to be used permanently as housing for the accommodation of aged persons or disabled persons and which may consist of hostels or a grouping of 2 or more self-contained dwellings, or a combination of both, and which includes 1 or more of the following facilities provided for use in connection with that accommodation—
(a)  accommodation for staff employed in connection with that accommodation,
(b)  chapels,
(c)  medical consulting rooms,
(d)  meeting rooms,
(e)  recreational facilities,
(f)  shops,
(g)  therapy rooms,
(h)  any other facilities for the use or benefit of aged persons or disabled persons.
industry means—
(a)  any manufacturing process within the meaning of the Factories, Shops and Industries Act 1962, or
(b)  the breaking up or dismantling of any goods or any article for trade or sale or gain or as development ancillary to carrying on any business.
institution means a penal or reformative establishment.
integrated housing means—
(a)  the subdivision of land into 5 or more allotments, each with an area of not less than 450 square metres, and
(b)  the erection of a dwelling-house on each of the allotments created by that subdivision, each of which may have a “zero side boundary setback” nominated by the Council which allows an external wall to be built up to that boundary.
land has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
landscaped area means the part of an allotment not occupied by a building or used or proposed to be used for driveways, parking areas or drying yards and which is predominantly planted with trees, shrubs, grasses and the like.
laundromat means a place or building containing coin operated washing machines, spin dryers and hot air dryers available for public use.
light industry means an industry in which the processes carried on, or the transportation involved or the machinery or materials used, does not interfere unreasonably with the amenity of the neighbourhood.
local heritage significance, in relation to a place, building, work, archaeological site, tree or precinct, means its heritage significance to an area.
maintenance, in relation to a heritage item or a building, work, archaeological site, tree or place within a heritage conservation area, means ongoing protective care. It does not include the removal or disturbance of existing fabric, alterations, such as carrying out extensions or additions, or the introduction of new materials or technology.
manufactured home means a self-contained dwelling (that is, a dwelling that includes at least one kitchen, bathroom, bedroom and living area and that also includes toilet and laundry facilities), being a dwelling—
(a)  that comprises one or more major sections, and
(b)  that is not capable of being registered under the Traffic Act 1909,
and includes any associated structures that form part of the dwelling.
manufactured home estate means land on which manufactured homes are, or are to be, erected.
materials recycling yard means a building or place used for collecting, dismantling, storing, abandoning or recycling of second-hand or scrap materials for the purpose of resale.
medical centre means a building or place used for the purpose of providing professional health services (including preventative care, diagnosis, medical or surgical treatment or counselling) to out-patients only.
mine means a place which depends for its operation on the winning or removal of any material to which the Mining Act 1992 or the Petroleum (Onshore) Act 1991 applies, and includes a place used for the storage and primary processing of the material obtained.
mixed use building means a building (other than a residential flat building) containing commercial or retail uses on the ground floor and which contains fewer than four self-contained dwellings on the floor or floors above the ground floor.
motel means premises, not being a hotel, dwelling-house providing bed and breakfast, boarding house or serviced apartment, used for the temporary or short-term accommodation of travellers and which may include an ancillary restaurant.
motor showroom means a building or place used or intended for use for the display or sale of motor vehicles and accessories, including boats, caravans and trailers.
moveable dwelling means—
(a)  any tent, or any caravan or other van or other portable device (whether on wheels or not), used for human habitation, or
(b)  a manufactured home, or
(c)  any conveyance, structure or thing of a class or description prescribed by the regulations under the Local Government Act 1993 for the purposes of the definition of moveable dwelling in that Act.
multi-dwelling housing means a group of two or more dwellings, not being a residential flat building, and may include cluster housing, integrated housing, terraces, townhouses, villas and the like.
native vegetation has the same meaning as it has in the Native Vegetation Conservation Act 1997.
natural areas means those areas of the City of Queanbeyan retaining predominantly endemic native vegetation and providing habitat or corridor functions (or both) for native flora and fauna species.
natural values means the individual endemic components or groups of endemic components that together make a natural area.
offensive industry means a development for the purposes of an industry which, when the development is in operation and when all measures proposed to reduce or minimise its impact on the locality have been employed, would emit a polluting discharge in a manner which would have a significant adverse impact in the locality or on the existing or likely future development of other land in the locality.
offensive storage establishment means any establishment where goods, materials or products are stored which, when in operation and when all measures proposed to reduce or minimise its impact on the locality have been employed, would emit a polluting discharge in a manner which would have a significant adverse impact in the locality or on the existing or likely future development on other land in the locality.
operational land means public land classified or reclassified as operational land within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1993.
paintball establishment means a building or place used for the purpose of providing facilities for recreational field games such as paintball, skirmish or the like.
panel beating workshop means a building or place used for the purpose of carrying out repairs to motor vehicles and agricultural machinery, where the work involved includes—
(a)  body building, and
(b)  panel beating (which may or may not involve dismantling), and
(c)  spray painting.
parking space means a defined and unobstructed area accessible to and, in the opinion of the Council, suitable for the parking of motor vehicles.
permanent group home means a dwelling—
(a)  used to provide a household environment for disabled persons or socially disadvantaged persons, whether those persons are related or not, and
(b)  occupied by the persons referred to in paragraph (a) as a single household, either with or without paid or unpaid supervision or care and with or without payment for board and lodging being required,
but does not include a building to which State Environmental Planning Policy No 5—Housing for Older People or People with a Disability applies or a transitional group home.
place of Aboriginal heritage significance means an area of land shown on the Heritage Map that is—
(a)  the site of one or more Aboriginal objects or a place that has the physical remains of pre-European occupation by, or is of contemporary significance to, the Aboriginal people. It can (but need not) include items and remnants of the occupation of the land by Aboriginal people, such as burial places, engraving sites, rock art, midden deposits, scarred and sacred trees and sharpening grooves, or
(b)  a natural Aboriginal sacred site or other sacred feature. It includes natural features such as creeks or mountains of long-standing cultural significance, as well as initiation, ceremonial or story places or areas of more contemporary cultural significance.
place of worship means a church, chapel or other place of public worship or religious instruction or place used for the purpose of religious training.
plant and equipment hire establishment means a building or place where plant and equipment are stored, displayed and hired or leased to persons for temporary use, but does not include premises used for the purpose of hiring home entertainment equipment, such as stereo sound systems, televisions, video cassette recorders, video tapes and the like.
playground equipment means equipment such as swings and slides, designed primarily for use by children for the purposes of play.
pollution means any one of the following—
(a)  air pollution,
(b)  pollution of waters within the meaning of the Clean Waters Act 1970,
(c)  the emission of offensive noise as defined in section 4 (1) of the Noise Control Act 1975,
(d)  pollution of any other kind, being pollution affecting any part of the environment and however caused.
potentially hazardous industry means a development for the purposes of an industry which, if the development were to operate without employing any measures to reduce or minimise its impact in the locality or on the existing or likely future development on other land, would emit a polluting discharge in a manner which would have a significant adverse impact in the locality or on the existing or likely future development on other land, and includes an offensive industry and an offensive storage establishment.
prostitution means sexual acts or sexual services engaged in for payment or other gain.
public building means a building or place used to carry on a business of, or as an office by, a public authority or an organisation established for public purposes.
real estate exhibition sign means a free standing advertising structure, and the display of an advertisement on it, on a public footway, where the structure or advertisement—
(a)  has dimensions of not more than 750 millimetres in height or 600 millimetres in width, and
(b)  only contains a direction to the location of a property for sale, auction or lease, or of an exhibition home.
real estate sign means an free standing advertising structure and the display of an advertisement on it in respect of a place or premises to which it is affixed which contains only a notice that the premises are for sale or letting together with particulars of the sale or letting and—
(a)  in the case of a free standing advertising structure and the display on it in respect of residential or rural premises relating to letting, sale by private treaty or sale by auction—
(i)  does not exceed 2.5 square metres in area, and
(ii)  has returns not exceeding 180 millimetres, and
(b)  in the case of a free standing advertising structure and the display of an advertisement on it in respect of commercial and industrial premises, does not exceed 4.5 square metres in area, and
(c)  is not displayed for more than 14 days after letting or completion of the sale of the premises to which the sign relates.
reception centre means a building or place used mainly for group functions such as weddings and the like and where meals are served for gain.
recreation facility means a building or place used for sporting activities, recreation or leisure activities, whether or not operated for the purpose of gain, but (in the general development controls) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this Schedule.
relic means any deposit, object or other material evidence of human habitation—
(a)  that relates to the settlement of the area of the City of Queanbeyan, not being Aboriginal settlement, and
(b)  that is more than 50 years old, and
(c)  that is a fixture or is wholly or partly within the ground.
renovation in relation to a building or work, means—
(a)  the making of structural changes to the inside or outside of the building or work, or
(b)  the making of non-structural changes to the fabric or appearance of the outside of the building or work, such as changes that involve the repair, or the painting, plastering or other decoration of the building or work.
residential flat building means a building that comprises or includes—
(a)  two or more storeys (not including levels below ground level provided for car parking or storage, or both, that protrude less than 1.2 metres above ground level), and
(b)  four or more self-contained dwellings (whether or not the building includes uses for other purposes, such as shops),
but does not include a Class 1a building or a Class 1b building under the Building Code of Australia.
restaurant means a building or place, the principal purpose of which is the provision of food to people for consumption on the premises and includes a cafe, bistro or tea-room but (in the general development controls) does not include a building or place elsewhere defined in this Schedule.
restricted premises means premises where—
(a)  publications classified as Category 1 restricted, Category 2 restricted or RC (Refused Classification) under the Classification (Publications, Films and Computer Games) Act 1995 of the Commonwealth are shown, exhibited, displayed, sold or otherwise rendered accessible to the public, or
(b)  a business to which section 578E of the Crimes Act 1900 applies is conducted,
but does not include a newsagency or pharmacy.
retail plant nursery means a building or place used for growing plants and selling plants by retail, whether or not landscape supplies (including earth products) or other landscape and horticultural products are also sold there.
road includes—
(a)  highway, street, lane, pathway, footpath, cycleway, thoroughfare, bridge, culvert, causeway, road-ferry, ford, crossing, bypass and trackway, whether temporary or permanent, and
(b)  any part of any thing referred to in paragraph (a).
road reserve means the part of a road which is not used or only occasionally used by motor vehicles registered under the Traffic Act 1909.
roadside stall means a place or temporary structure used for selling of agricultural produce from the same or an adjacent allotment of land.
road transport terminal means a building or place used primarily for the bulk handling of goods for transport by road and includes related facilities for the loading and unloading of vehicles used to transport those goods and for the parking, servicing and repair of those vehicles.
rural industry means the handling, treating, processing or packaging of primary products and includes the servicing in a workshop of plant or equipment used for rural purposes in the locality.
scenic protection area means land shown as such on the map.
serviced apartments means a building containing 2 or more dwellings which are cleaned and otherwise serviced or maintained by the owner or manager of the building or the owner’s or manager’s agent.
service station means a building or place primarily used for the fuelling of motor vehicles involving the sale by retail of petrol, oil or other petroleum products, and which may also be used for one or more of the following—
(a)  the hiring of trailers,
(b)  the retail selling or the installing of spare parts and accessories for motor vehicles,
(c)  the washing and greasing of motor vehicles,
(d)  the repairing or servicing of motor vehicles (other than body building, panel beating or spray painting),
(e)  the retail selling or hiring of small consumer goods.
shop means a building or place used for the purpose of selling items (whether goods or materials) whether by retail or auction, for hiring items or for displaying items for the purpose of selling or hiring them, but, where the term is used in the general development controls, does not include a building or place specifically defined elsewhere in this Schedule.
site in relation to development, means the area of land to which an application for consent to carry out the development relates, excluding any land on which the development is not permitted by or under this or any other environmental planning instrument.
site coverage means the part of the site on which buildings are situated. For the purpose of this definition, buildings include tennis courts, swimming pools, drying yards, hard surface recreation areas, garbage collection and handling spaces and paved areas, such as driveways.
soil means the loose material which forms the upper layer of the mantle of the earth.
statutory fire safety measure has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Regulation 1994.
stock and sale yard means a building or place used for the purpose of offering livestock or poultry for sale.
storey means—
(a)  the space between two floors, or
(b)  the space between any floor and its ceiling or roof above, or
(c)  building foundation areas, garages, workshops, storerooms and the like, where the height between ground level and the floor above is 1.2 metres or more.
A storey which exceeds 4.5 metres is counted as two storeys.
subdivision has the same meaning as it has in the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
surgery means a room used by a member or members of a health care profession to practise that profession.
tavern means any premises specified in a hotelier’s licence endorsed as a tavern granted under the Liquor Act 1982, which do not provide accommodation.
temporary sign means an advertisement of a temporary nature which—
(a)  announces any local event of a religious, educational, cultural, political, social or recreational character or relates to any temporary matter in connection with such an event, and
(b)  does not include advertising of a commercial nature (except for the name of an event’s sponsor), and
(c)  is displayed for a period of not more than 28 days.
the map means the sheets of the maps marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998” kept in the offices of Queanbeyan City Council as amended by the maps (or by the specified sheets of the maps) so kept and marked as follows—
Editorial note—
The amending maps are not necessarily listed in the order of gazettal or publication on the NSW legislation website. Information about the order of gazettal or publication can be determined by referring to the Historical notes at the end of the plan.
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 1)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 2)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 3)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 4)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 5)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 7)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 8)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 10)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 11)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 14)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 18)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 19)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 21)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 22)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 23)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 30)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 31)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 35)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 40)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 42)
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 43)—Sheet 1
Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 48)
tourist facilities means an establishment providing short term holiday accommodation and recreation, and may include hotels, motels, bed and breakfasts, serviced apartments, holiday cabins, caravan parks, camping grounds or houseboats, and associated swimming pools, golf courses, tennis courts and ancillary restaurants and souvenir shops, but does not include an establishment providing short-term rental accommodation within the meaning of State Environmental Planning Policy (Housing) 2021, Chapter 3, Part 6.
transitional group home means a dwelling—
(a)  used to provide temporary accommodation, for the purposes of relief or rehabilitation, for disabled persons or socially disadvantaged persons, whether those persons are related or not, and
(b)  occupied by the persons referred to in paragraph (a) as a single household, either with or without paid or unpaid supervision or care and with or without payment for board and lodging being required,
but does not include a building to which State Environmental Planning Policy No 5—Housing for Older People or People with a Disability applies.
transport depot means a building or place used for the parking or storage of motor powered or motor drawn vehicles used in connection with a passenger transport undertaking, business, industry or shop and includes a bus depot or a road transport terminal.
utility installation means a building or work used for a utility undertaking.
utility undertaking means any undertaking carried on by or by authority of any Government department, or in pursuance of any Commonwealth or State Act, for the purposes of—
(a)  railway, road, water or air transport, or wharf or river undertakings, or
(b)  the provision of sewerage or drainage services, or
(c)  the supply of water, hydraulic power, electricity or gas, or
(d)  telecommunications facilities.
veterinary hospital means a building or place used for diagnosing or surgically or medically treating animals, whether or not animals are kept on the premises for the purposes of treatment.
warehouse or distribution centre means a building or place primarily used for storing, handling or displaying items (whether goods or materials) which have been produced or manufactured for sale, other than retail sale to the public from the warehouse or distribution centre.
waste has the same meaning as it has in the Local Government Act 1993.
waters means the whole or any part of—
(a)  any river, stream, lake, lagoon, swamp, wetlands, unconfined surface water, natural or artificial watercourse, dam or tidal waters (including the sea), or
(b)  any water stored in artificial works, any water in water mains, water pipes or water channels, or any underground or artesian water.
zone means a classification of land shown on the map.
Schedule 2 Special Sites Map
(Clauses 17 and 26)
Sheet 1
Sheet 2
Schedule 3 Subdivision Control Map
(Clause 18)
Sheet 1
sch 3: Am 1.2.2002.
Schedule 4 Environmental heritage
(Clause 56)
Note—
An asterisk (*) indicates the heritage item is an archaeological site and a hash (#) indicates the heritage item is listed on the State Heritage Register and is subject to the provisions of the Heritage Act 1977.
Column 1
Column 2
Column 3
Column 4
Locality
Description
Address
Significance
Environa (Tralee Homestead Complex)
H2: Open Air Motor Sport Track (shown on Sheet 3 of the Heritage Map)
Directly to the east of the Fraser Park Raceway complex
Local
Environa (Tralee Homestead Complex)
H5: Shed Ruins (shown on Sheet 3 of the Heritage Map)
On the southern bank of Jerrabomberra Creek
Local
Environa (Tralee Homestead Complex)
H8: Sheep Dip (shown on Sheet 3 of the Heritage Map)
200 metres to the northeast of the Tralee Homestead complex
Local
Environa (Tralee Homestead Complex)
H9: Tralee Landing Ground (shown on Sheet 3 of the Heritage Map)
Directly to the east of Tralee Homestead Complex
Local
Jerrabomberra
Mount Jerrabomberra (shown edged heavy black on Sheet 5 of the Heritage Map)
Jerrabomberra Hill Road
Local
Jerrabomberra
The Poplars, site of endangered button wrinkleworts rutiodosis leptorhynchoides (shown on Sheet 6 of the Heritage Map)
Near corner of Lanyon Drive and Tompsitt Drive
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of cottages
2–6 Alice Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
9 Alice Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
12 Alice Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
30 Atkinson Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
38 Atkinson Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
57 Atkinson Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House known as “Coroda”
58 Atkinson Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Sir Murray Tyrrell’s Cottage”
11 Blundell Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Cantle Cottage”
3 Booth Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Gabriel’s Cottage”
26 Booth Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
21 Buttle Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
49 Cameron Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
55 Cameron Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Duplex house
57–59 Cameron Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
61 Cameron Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House known initially as “Mimosa” and now as “Karabar”
71 Cameron Road
Local
# Queanbeyan
Dwelling, part of complex known as “Kawaree”
50 Canberra Avenue
State
# Queanbeyan
“Byrne’s Mill” (currently used partly as a restaurant)
55 Collett Street
State
# Queanbeyan
“Byrne’s Mill” (currently used partly as a craft shop)
57 Collett Street
State
# Queanbeyan
House known as “Hibernia Lodge”
69 Collett Street
State
Queanbeyan
Cottage
72 Collett Street
Local
# Queanbeyan
Building (former hospital known as “Rusten House”)
87–105 Collett Street
State
Queanbeyan
Greek Orthodox Church
120 Collett Street (northeast corner of Campbell and Collett Streets)
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
126 Collett Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
145 Collett Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
5 Collins Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
22 Collins Street
Local
* Queanbeyan
Limestone Kilns (shown as HS3 on Sheet 4 of the Heritage Map)
Land bounded by Cooma Street and Wickerslack Lane, known as the Gale Precinct
Local
* Queanbeyan
Scarred tree sites (shown as GP8 on Sheet 4 of the Heritage Map)
Land bounded by Cooma Street and Wickerslack Lane, known as the Gale Precinct
Local
* Queanbeyan
Site GP8 (shown on Sheet 4 of the Heritage Map)
Land bounded by Cooma Street and Wickerslack Lane, known as the Gale Precinct
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
46 Cooma Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
48 Cooma Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
58 Cooma Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottages
22–24 Crawford Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Hotel Queanbeyan
63 Crawford Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Building
76 Crawford Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Queanbeyan Recreation and Leisure Centre
121–147 Crawford Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
11 and 13 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
21 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
23 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
25 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
35 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
82 Derrima Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Homestead known as “Langdene”
17 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
25 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
36 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
38 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
41 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
43 Donald Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
12 Early Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Riverside Cemetery
Erin Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Tourist information centre (former municipal chambers)
Lazarus sundial
World War I Memorial
William Farrer Memorial
1–3 Farrer Place
Local
Queanbeyan
Queanbeyan and District Historical Society Museum
8 Farrer Place
Local
Queanbeyan
Queanbeyan Showground
19–41 Farrer Place
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant house
2 Federal Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Homestead
15 Fergus Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
31 Fergus Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Building
19 Hayes Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of cottages
21–25 Hayes Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
34–36 Hayes Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Bull’s Cottage
24 Henderson Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Railway worker’s cottage
37 Henderson Road
Local
# Queanbeyan
Queanbeyan Railway Station
43 Henderson Road
State
# Queanbeyan
Station Master’s Cottage
47 Henderson Road
State
Queanbeyan
House
76 Henderson Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
101 Henderson Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
1 and 5 Hirst Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Houses
6 and 8 Hirst Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
26–30 Hirst Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Suspension bridge
Isabella Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
11 Isabella Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Public schoolhouse
35 Isabella Street
Local
Queanbeyan
St Benedict’s Convent
39 Isabella Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Houses
4–6 Kathleen Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Building
17–19 Kathleen Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of dwellings
28–34 Kathleen Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Boer War Memorial
Lowe Street
Local
Queanbeyan
St Raphael’s Roman Catholic Church and St Gregory’s School complex
47–59 Lowe Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Ye Olde Kent Hotel
2 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage known as “Dog and Stile Inn”
11–13 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
St Gregory’s Roman Catholic Church
15–21 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
33 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Lazarus Cottage”
38 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Torpy’s Cottage”
51 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of semi-detached dwellings
70–80 MacQuoid Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Glenrock Cottage”
26 Malcolm Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
1 McEwan Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Remnant cottage
3 McKeahnie Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
14 McKeahnie Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
8 Moore Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Cottage
15 Moore Street
Local
Queanbeyan
St Stephen’s Presbyterian Church
2 Morisset Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Furlong House”
15 Morisset Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
32 Morton Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
33 Morton Street
Local
Queanbeyan
“Mill Thorpe House”
7 Mowatt Street
Local
# Queanbeyan
Queanbeyan Rail Bridge (over Queanbeyan River)
East of Queanbeyan Railway Station
State
Queanbeyan
Cottage
26 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
27 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
29 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
66 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
88 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
132 Ross Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Parish Hall—Anglican Parish of Queanbeyan
19 Rutledge Street
Local
# Queanbeyan
Christ Church Anglican Church group, including rectory, former school and first extension, church hall and landscape
39 Rutledge Street
State
Queanbeyan
House (former Kinkora Private Hospital)
5 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Houses
17–19 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
39 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
41–45 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
51–55 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
57 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
59 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
73 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
75 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
91 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
95 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
97 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
99 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
105 Stornaway Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
31 Surveyor Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Houses
1 and 3 Symonds Street
Local
Queanbeyan
Houses
5 and 7 Symonds Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
1 The Crescent
Local
Queanbeyan
House
9 The Crescent
Local
Queanbeyan
House
19 The Crescent
Local
Queanbeyan
House
43 The Crescent
Local
Queanbeyan
“O’Neill’s Cottage”
6 Trinculo Place
Local
Queanbeyan
House
24 Uriarra Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
44 Uriarra Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
57–59 Uriarra Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
96 Uriarra Road
Local
Queanbeyan
House
17 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
House
27 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
36–38 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
Group of houses
37–41 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
House
42 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
House
47 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
House
48 White Avenue
Local
Queanbeyan
House
10 Young Street
Local
Queanbeyan
House
14 Young Street
Local
sch 4: Subst 2007 (332), Sch 1 [6].
Schedule 5 Classification and reclassification of public land as community land
(Clause 82)
sch 5: Ins 8.6.2001.
Schedule 6 Classification and reclassification of public land as operational land
(Clause 83)
Part 1 Land classified, or reclassified, before the application of amendments made to s 30 of LGA 1993
Part of 1 Southbar Road, being part of Lot 548, DP 259942, as shown edged heavy black on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 3)”.
2 Southbar Road, being Lots 514–518, DP 244051.
Part 2 Interests not changed
5 Erin Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 3, DP 717706, 155A Crawford Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 1, DP 714419, 151A Crawford Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 12, DP 715626, 151B Crawford Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 2, DP 724766, 16 Morisset Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 2, DP 702120, 26 Morisset Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 3, DP 556476, Lot 22, DP 575063, Lot 62, DP 630941, Lot 52, DP 630944, Lot 22, DP 713562, Lot 12, DP 606914, Lot 201, DP 601279, 251 Crawford Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 1, DP 873175, 50 Lowe Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 22, DP 550226, Lots 1 & 2, DP 856523, Lot 1, DP 748338, Lots 1 & 2, DP 806157, 9G Morisset Street, Queanbeyan, being Lot 22, DP 544753, Lot 24, DP 545522, Lot A, DP 371908, Lot 2, DP 239955, Lot 142, DP 540498, Part Lot 13 & Part Lot 8 Sec 24, DP 758862, Lot 13, DP 544916, Lot 15, DP 543424, Lot 9, DP 530627, Lot 3, DP 239955, Lot 19, DP 544636, Lot 11, DP 543425, Lots 5 & 9, DP 239955, Lot 26, DP 544107, 24A Rutledge Street, Queanbeyan, being Part Lot 5 & Part Lot 1, DP 241551, Part Lot 51, DP 615125, Part Lot 2, DP 1007933, Lot 1, DP 1007933 and 24 Rutledge Street, Queanbeyan, being Lots 41 & 42, DP 615038, as shown edged heavy black on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 22)” deposited in the office of the Council.
Land bounded by Morisset, Collett, Antill and Carinya Streets, Queanbeyan, as shown edged heavy black and lettered “5 (a) Carpark” on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 30)”.
113 Canberra Avenue, Queanbeyan, being Lot 1, DP 1027494.
Part 3 Interests changed
Column 1
Column 2
Column 3
Locality
Description
Trusts etc not discharged
Crestwood
13 Beatty Crescent.
Lot 57, DP 246824.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s) as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 57/246824.
7 Kaye Place.
Lot 20, DP 264522.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s), and two restriction(s) on the use of land (DP261419 and DP264522), as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 20/264522.
126A Morton Street.
Lot 14, DP 216046.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s) as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 14/216046.
130 Munro Road.
Lot 248, DP 243990.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s) as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 248/243990.
Karabar
30A Candlebark Road.
Lot 32, DP 576516.
Reservation of minerals and any other reservations and conditions in favour of the Crown—see Crown Grant(s), as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 32/576516.
158 Candlebark Road, Karabar.
Part of Lot 243, DP 869283, as shown edged heavy black on Sheet 3 of the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 43)”.
Nil.
9 Cantle Place.
Lot 120, DP 710557.
Reservation of minerals and any other reservations and conditions in favour of the Crown—see Crown Grant(s), as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 120/710557.
46 Pindari Crescent.
Lot 65, DP 242927.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s), and restriction(s) on the use of the land (DP242570), as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 65/242927.
Queanbeyan
No 12 Cassia Crescent, and two laneways leading from the land to Grevillea Place and Cameron Road, respectively.
Lot 118, DP 239180, and two laneways, as shown edged heavy black on the map marked “Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 19”—Queanbeyan Local Environmental Plan 1998 (Amendment No 19).
Nil
Queanbeyan East
10 Aurora Place.
Lot 29, DP 246601.
Reservations and conditions in the Crown Grant(s), and easement for transmission line (DP246601), as noted on Certificate of Title Folio Identifier 29/246601.
sch 6: Ins 8.6.2001. Am 27.7.2001; 12.10.2001; 22.11.2002; 2006 (552), Sch 2 [20]; 2011 (583), Sch 1 [3]–[5].