Local Planning Expertise

Beaumaris Architects

Specialists in Beaumaris's mid-century modernist character. Heritage-sensitive design and considered coastal-interface response.

Reviewed May 2026
98% Approval Rate
210+ Projects Delivered
67% Repeat Client Rate
15+ Years Experience
BEAUMARIS AT A GLANCE Reviewed May 2026
Council
Bayside
Predominant zones
NRZ, GRZ, RGZ
Heritage Overlay
Applied across mid-century modernist precincts
Typical dual-occ lot
600–900m²
Avg permit timeline
6–10 months for typical dual occupancy
Top refusal grounds
Visual bulk inconsistent with Beaumaris's mid-century character

Beaumaris sits at Bayside's southern bayside edge, characterised by mid-century and contemporary housing on generous lot sizes, a substantial mid-century modernist architectural heritage, established canopy, and Beaumaris Bay framing the suburb's coastal interface. The combination of Heritage Overlay coverage across mid-century precincts and Bayside's housing strategy framework makes considered design response critical.

Why Beaumaris Expertise Matters

Beaumaris has specific planning requirements within Bayside Council. With numerous projects approved across the suburb, we have built relationships with council planners and understand exactly what they look for in applications.

Mid-century Heritage Overlay expertise
Coastal-interface design
Tree retention strategy
Larger-lot configurations
Pre-lodgement strategy

Planning context in Beaumaris

Most residential land in Beaumaris falls within one of these zone families, each with materially different development outcomes.

Neighbourhood Residential Zone

NRZ

Applies under Bayside's Minimal Change and Incremental Change framework — the applicable change area shapes built-form expectations under the Bayside Housing Strategy.

  • Max height9 metres (Minimal/Incremental Change framework applies under Bayside Housing Strategy)
  • Garden area35% (lots ≥400m²)
  • Site coverage60%

General Residential Zone

GRZ

Applies in denser residential pockets and contemporary townhouse precincts where multi-unit development is most readily achievable.

  • Max height11 metres
  • Garden area35%
  • Site coverage65%

Residential Growth Zone

RGZ

Applies to selected main road frontages and apartment-scale residential sites.

  • Max height13.5 metres
  • Garden areaNot applicable
  • Site coverage70%

Source: Bayside Planning Scheme, planning-schemes.app.planning.vic.gov.au. Latest amendment C162bays, last verified May 2026.

Common overlays affecting Beaumaris development

Overlay status should be confirmed for any specific site before contract exchange. The planning scheme is the authoritative source — Vicmap Property and the Bayside Property Profile tool are useful starting points.

What Bayside Council looks for

+

Responds well to

high-quality coastal-responsive design, sympathetic heritage outcomes, mature canopy retention

!

Strict on

neighbourhood character, heritage precincts, vegetation retention, bayside view interfaces

?

Often missed

detailed neighbourhood character statement aligning with the Bayside Housing Strategy

@

Average turnaround

8–12 weeks for first Request for Information (RFI)

Per Feasibly council intelligence data, last verified May 2026.

For Beaumaris specifically, the council pays particular attention to heritage overlay considerations.

Built form that works in Beaumaris

Common refusal patterns to design around

  1. 1
    Visual bulk inconsistent with Beaumaris's mid-century character
  2. 2
    Demolition or unsympathetic alteration of buildings within mid-century Heritage Overlay precincts
  3. 3
    Inadequate tree retention strategy on lots with mature canopy
  4. 4
    Inadequate coastal-interface response on bayside-adjacent sites

Recent planning developments affecting Beaumaris

C162bays

Bayside Housing Strategy

Gazetted 2022

Translated the Bayside Housing Strategy into the planning scheme — refined residential zone schedules, set Minimal Change/Incremental Change/Substantial Change areas, and applied differentiated NCO schedules across Brighton, Hampton, and Sandringham

View source →
C152bays

Bayside Heritage Review

Gazetted earlier

Heritage Overlay applied to additional precincts and individual places identified in the council's heritage review, particularly across Brighton and Sandringham

View source →
VC267

Townhouse and Low-Rise Code

Gazetted 6 March 2025

Statewide reform introducing a deemed-to-comply pathway under Clause 55 for multi-dwelling developments of three storeys or less. Where every standard is met, no third-party appeal applies. Operative for applications lodged from 31 March 2025.

View source →
Tribunal Reference

Forecho Brighton Pty Ltd v Bayside CC

[2024] VCAT 72

Tribunal review of a residential development in Brighton — addresses heritage and neighbourhood character considerations central to Bayside premium-suburb assessment.

Practical implication: Heritage impact and neighbourhood-character documentation should be lodged at intake; Bayside applies stringent design-quality and character expectations across Brighton/Hampton/Sandringham.

How successful Beaumaris applications typically work

Across recent Beaumaris dual occupancy and townhouse outcomes, a recognisable pattern of successful applications emerges. While every site differs, the following observations apply to most viable approval pathways in the suburb.

Site selection patterns

  • Lot sizes and frontages consistent with the typical successful configurations described above (in most cases 600–900m² with 15m+ frontage for side-by-side dual occupancy).
  • Heritage or character-protected sites consistently proceed via retention of the existing front dwelling rather than full demolition.
  • Lots constrained by mature canopy or vegetation typically require design adjustment around protection zones rather than seeking removal.

Design response patterns

  • Subordinate scale to the established streetscape consistently expected across Bayside applications.
  • Materials palette consistent with Bayside's assessment framework — restrained, contextual, considered.
  • Front building line matching the prevailing street setback rather than projecting forward of adjoining houses.

Process patterns

  • Pre-lodgement consultation with Bayside materially reduces RFI iteration counts.
  • Direct neighbour engagement before lodgement reduces VCAT review risk on applications attracting objections.
  • Strongest applications lodge with all required supporting documentation (heritage, arboricultural, bushfire, ESD where applicable) attached at intake.

Tribunal context

Tribunal decisions on Bayside applications regularly address the council's neighbourhood character framework, particularly the differentiated treatment of Minimal Change, Incremental Change and Substantial Change areas under the Bayside Housing Strategy. Detailed character statements aligning the proposal with the specific change area expectations are a recurring assessment criterion.

These patterns indicate typical successful pathways. Site-specific outcomes depend on the particular planning context, design response, and engagement strategy chosen.

Beaumaris's mid-century modernist heritage and bayside interface reward considered design that engages genuinely with the precinct's distinctive character.

Sammi Lian, Principal Architect, SQM Architects

— On developing in Beaumaris

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Beaumaris Planning FAQs

There's no single minimum — Bayside assesses each application against ResCode. In practice, 700m² with 16m+ frontage is the typical practical floor for workable side-by-side configurations.
Selected Beaumaris streets are within mid-century modernist Heritage Overlay precincts. Demolition of contributory buildings is unlikely to be supported; considered additions are the standard pathway.
Bayside's average first RFI is 8–12 weeks. Beaumaris dual occupancy applications typically take 6–10 months from lodgement to permit issue.
Townhouse development is uncommon in Beaumaris given the predominantly NRZ context and Heritage/Minimal Change designations. Dual occupancy is the realistic ceiling on most blocks.

Development Services for Beaumaris

Dual Occupancy

Expert dual occupancy designs optimised for Beaumaris's zoning and character requirements.

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Townhouses

Multi-unit townhouse developments designed to maximise your Beaumaris site.

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Apartments

Apartment developments where Bayside Council zoning permits higher density.

Learn more →

More Bayside + Victorian planning resources

Planning Resources

Official Bayside Planning Information

About this page

210+ projects delivered across Melbourne’s east. 98% planning approval rate.

This page provides general information about engaging architects for property development in Beaumaris, Victoria. It is not architectural, planning, or financial advice. Site-specific outcomes vary and should be confirmed by qualified professionals after a site-specific assessment. Planning scheme provisions and council practices are subject to change; references on this page were verified May 2026.

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