Local Planning Expertise

Glen Iris Architects

Expert architects for Glen Iris's family and downsizer market. Quality developments across Melbourne's leafy inner east.

Reviewed May 2026
98% Approval Rate
210+ Projects Delivered
67% Repeat Client Rate
15+ Years Experience
GLEN IRIS AT A GLANCE Reviewed May 2026
Council
Boroondara
Predominant zones
NRZ1, NRZ3, GRZ2, RGZ1
Heritage Overlay
Selected precincts particularly in older Edwardian residential streets
Typical dual-occ lot
600–900m²
Avg permit timeline
5–8 months for typical dual occupancy
Top refusal grounds
Visual bulk inconsistent with established street rhythm

Glen Iris spans the boundary between Boroondara and Stonnington councils, with the Boroondara portion forming a distinctive development environment of Edwardian and interwar housing on consistent lot sizes. The Gardiners Creek corridor and its tributaries influence development across substantial parts of the suburb. Successful projects here typically combine considered heritage response with a clear strategy for the creek-interface where it applies.

Why Glen Iris Expertise Matters

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

Downsizer market expertise
Family development focus
Neighbourhood character sensitivity
Quality townhouse design
Burke Road activity centre

Planning context in Glen Iris

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

Neighbourhood Residential Zone

NRZ1, NRZ3

The most common designation across this suburb's residential streets, including Boroondara's Low Scale, Low Density Residential precincts (NRZ3) where character protection is the dominant assessment criterion.

  • Max height9 metres
  • Garden area35% (lots ≥400m²)
  • Site coverage60%

General Residential Zone

GRZ2

Applies to denser residential pockets. GRZ2 (Contemporary Town House) and GRZ3 (Eclectic Inner Urban) support multi-unit townhouse development.

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

Residential Growth Zone

RGZ1

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

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

Source: Boroondara Planning Scheme, planning-schemes.app.planning.vic.gov.au. Latest amendment C284boro Part 1, last verified May 2026.

Common overlays affecting Glen Iris development

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

What Boroondara Council looks for

+

Responds well to

high-quality design, considered landscape plans, retention of mature trees, sympathetic heritage responses

!

Strict on

heritage character, tree retention, neighbourhood character interface

?

Often missed

detailed neighbourhood character assessment with photographic context

@

Average turnaround

6–8 weeks for first Request for Information (RFI)

Per Feasibly council intelligence data, last verified May 2026.

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

Built form that works in Glen Iris

Common refusal patterns to design around

  1. 1
    Visual bulk inconsistent with established street rhythm
  2. 2
    Inadequate stormwater management response on creek-adjacent sites
  3. 3
    Heritage impact in HO precincts
  4. 4
    Tree removal without strong justification

Recent planning developments affecting Glen Iris

GC172

Residential Zone Height Harmonisation

Gazetted 23 December 2020

Multi-council ministerial amendment (Boroondara among 9 councils) that increased the maximum building height in GRZ1, GRZ2 and GRZ3 schedules from 9 or 10.5 metres to 11 metres and three storeys, aligning local schedules with VC110.

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

Mirams v Boroondara CC

[2022] VCAT 928

restrictive covenant interpretation in a Boroondara residential context.

Practical implication: thorough title and covenant analysis must precede contract exchange, not follow it.

How successful Glen Iris applications typically work

Across recent Glen Iris 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 Boroondara applications.
  • Materials palette consistent with Boroondara'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 Boroondara 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

The principles applied in Mirams v Boroondara CC [2022] VCAT 928 illustrate the Tribunal's approach to the kinds of issues that recur in Glen Iris site assessment. The broader principle informs practice across Boroondara: title status, overlay verification, and council-framework alignment should be completed comprehensively before binding commitment to a site, not after.

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

Glen Iris is Melbourne's geographic centre and a prime downsizer market. We help developers navigate the character requirements and creek-corridor constraints to deliver projects that families and downsizers actually want.

Sammi Lian, Principal Architect, SQM Architects

— On developing in Glen Iris

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Glen Iris Planning FAQs

There's no single minimum — Boroondara assesses each application against ResCode and the planning scheme. In practice, 600m² with 15m+ frontage is the typical practical floor for workable side-by-side configurations.
Sites near Gardiners Creek and its tributaries may be subject to Special Building Overlay (flood-related) controls. These can require additional stormwater management documentation and may affect built form. Overlay status should be confirmed before contract exchange.
The Boroondara/Stonnington boundary runs through Glen Iris. The applicable council depends on the specific property — typically determined by postcode and street. This page focuses on the Boroondara portion. For Stonnington-side Glen Iris, the planning framework differs.
Boroondara's statutory timeframe is 60 days, but Glen Iris dual occupancy applications typically take 5–8 months. Heritage Overlay sites and creek-adjacent applications may take longer.

Development Services for Glen Iris

Dual Occupancy

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

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Townhouses

Multi-unit townhouse developments designed to maximise your Glen Iris site.

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Apartments

Apartment developments where Boroondara Council zoning permits higher density.

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More Boroondara + Victorian planning resources

Planning Resources

Official Boroondara 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 Glen Iris, 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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