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Sally Carson
Object
LANE COVE , New South Wales
Message
Development Application Objection
Proposal: 300 Burns Bay Road, Lane Cove West (225 apartments, up to 15 storeys)

I am a local resident of 25 Best Street, Lane Cove, at Unit 56 and I wish to formally object to the proposed development at 300 Burns Bay Road.

1. Inadequate Transport Infrastructure and Unsustainable Density

The scale of this development—225 apartments across buildings of up to 15 storeys—represents a significant increase in both height and density, far exceeding the current planning controls (21m height limit). However, this uplift is not supported by adequate public transport infrastructure.

While the Environmental Impact Statement suggests the site is well-serviced by “high-frequency” public transport, this does not reflect the lived reality for residents:
-Bus services such as the 251 only operate every 15-20 minutes during weekday peak periods and do not run on weekends. This needs to be increased to every 5-10 minutes.
-The 252 service is unreliable and frequently cancelled.
-There is no nearby train or metro station providing consistent, high-frequency access to the Sydney CBD.

As a resident, my current door-to-door commute to the city takes approximately over 65 minutes, despite being only ~10 km from the CBD. This is more than commute times for colleagues living 40-50 km away in significantly lower-density areas and much more affordable housing. This clearly demonstrates that existing transport infrastructure is already insufficient.

The proposal’s reliance on a “Green Travel Plan” is unrealistic given these constraints. Increased density without corresponding investment in transport will:
-Exacerbate already congested road conditions along Burns Bay Road
-Increase car dependency
-Place further strain on unreliable bus services

Request:
Any approval of this development should be conditional on significant, concurrent investment in transport infrastructure that is completed at the same time as housing is released to new residents, including:
-A commitment to a future metro or rapid transit connection servicing Lane Cove West
-Substantial improvements to bus frequency, reliability, and 7-day service coverage that runs every 5-10 minutes
Without these, the proposal represents overdevelopment unsupported by infrastructure.


2. Overshadowing and Impact on Community Open Space (Burns Bay Reserve)

While overshadowing impacts to private residences are a concern, my primary objection relates to the impact on Burns Bay Reserve, a key local community asset.
This reserve is already:
-Poorly drained and often muddy
-Heavily shaded and is a mosquito haven
-Widely used for community recreation, including children’s sport (soccer and cricket)
The proposed building height (up to 15 storeys / 54.5m) will significantly increase overshadowing of this space, further reducing sunlight access and usability—particularly in winter months when sunlight is critical.

This directly undermines the value and function of one of the area’s few accessible green spaces, especially in the context of increasing population density.
Additionally, while there have been long-standing discussions about upgrading the reserve, no meaningful improvements have been delivered. Increasing local population without first improving this infrastructure will further degrade community amenity.

Request:
A comprehensive and transparent overshadowing assessment specifically addressing impacts on Burns Bay, with an improvement plan that factors in a more conservative building height.

Reserve
A requirement that any development approval be tied to funded and delivered upgrades to the reserve, including drainage, usability, and sunlight access considerations.

Conclusion
This proposal represents a significant departure from existing planning controls in both height and density. Without corresponding investment in transport and community infrastructure, it risks setting a precedent for unsustainable overdevelopment in Lane Cove West.
I strongly urge that the application be refused or significantly amended unless these critical infrastructure and amenity concerns are addressed.
Name Withheld
Object
Castle Hill , New South Wales
Message
I totally object to this development as:
A. Interfere with the environmental integrity of the area;
B. It will add extra congestion to an already congested complex;
C. It will result in additional burden to the existing infrastructure which is already under pressure;
D. Further development would have a detrimental impact to the characteristics of the landscape;
Note: It is our responsibility of ensuring the area is environmentally sustainable and have a responsible resource strategy in place to avoid any further development.
Name Withheld
Object
RIVERVIEW , New South Wales
Message
I am writing to express my concerns regarding proposed development of some 221 dwellings over 15 storeys at 300 Burns Bay Rd Lane Cove. Whilst I acknowledge the need to increase housing supply, this proposal raises significant issues which warrant careful consideration.
1. Incompatibility with existing built form and height. The proposed 15 storeys will substantially impact the area, overshadowing townhouses and other unit complexes in the vicinity. Appears excessive for the location. The development fails to demonstrate appropriate height transition to adjoining lower scale development, consideration of cumulative bulk and visual impact. The results being an overbearing built form that dominates the streetscape and appearance, eroding neighbourhood character and overbearing on the site when viewed from Riverview St or Burns Bay reserve.
2. Traffic and congestion. Both in terms of access in/out of the development given how much traffic there already is, as well as traffic flow on Burns Bay Rd feeding into Victoria Rd, Epping Rd and River Rd, which already suffers from traffic congestion. Insufficient capacity for existing road infrastructure to accommodate additional traffic, a substantial increase in daily vehicle movements.
3. Parking and amenity. There is already limited car spaces and visitor access or accessibility to the area due to current roads/units in the location. The proposal is insufficient given household composition, visitor demand and current density.
4. Infrastructure. Increasing the density in this location is excessive and not well serviced by local roads, public transport and community services.
5. Overdevelopment. The addition of this 221 dwellings within this complex with multi tower complex appears excessive relative to the site and the surrounding dwellings and bushland. Consideration should be given to a more moderate scale of development that aligns with the existing character, heights of surrounding buildings and capacity of the area.

6. Amenity impacts. The proposal is likely to result in adverse amenity outcomes such as overshadowing neighbouring properties, loss of privacy, increased noise, urban heat. The intensity of use within this site exceeds what can reasonably be supported by the existing infrastructure and is inconsistent with principles of orderly and sustainable development,

I respectfully request that the consent authority refuse this application in its current form or require significant modifications to reduce height, density, traffic impact and impact to existing buildings in the 300 Burns Bay a precinct.
Name Withheld
Object
LANE COVE , New South Wales
Message
I am a resident of the block immediately adjoining the proposed development and lodge this formal objection on the basis that the proposal will substantially and directly impact both my amenity and the broader neighborhood. I am particularly concerned that this proposal represents a clear case of overdevelopment that is out of scale with the surrounding built environment and will place unacceptable pressure on local infrastructure, transport, and amenity.

1. Excessive Scale and Incompatibility with Surrounding Development
The proposed building is double the size of surrounding developments and is clearly incompatible with the established built form of the area. Its height and bulk will cause it to tower over neighbouring buildings, including my own, resulting in significant visual dominance and loss of amenity. The proposal represents an overdevelopment of the site and is not consistent with the scale of recent developments in the immediate vicinity.

2. Out of Scale with the Neighbourhood Character
Nearby developments were limited to approximately 6–8 levels when approved and constructed only a short time ago, reflecting planning controls and community expectations for appropriate density in this area. Allowing a substantially taller development on this site is inconsistent, inequitable, and undermines confidence in the planning framework. The proposal fails to respect the established character and scale of the neighbourhood and sets an undesirable precedent.

3. Substantial Impact on Adjacent Residents
As a resident of the next-door block, I will be significantly and disproportionately impacted by this development. The excessive height and bulk will result in overshadowing, loss of outlook, increased noise, and a heightened sense of enclosure. These impacts go beyond what could reasonably be expected in an established residential area and will materially diminish residential amenity.

4. Overstretching of Local Infrastructure and Resources
The area is already tightly developed, with roads, parking, public transport, and local infrastructure operating near capacity. The scale of this proposal will overstretch these already strained resources. No adequate justification or infrastructure upgrades have been demonstrated to support development of this magnitude. The proposal mentions the site is "well located" in relation to public transport, but the buses on Burns Bay Road run only 30 minute schedules during the day, and the only bus that goes to the city runs during morning peak time only.

5. Traffic, Access, and Construction Impacts
The site relies on a small shared access lane connecting to a roundabout. This access arrangement is wholly inadequate for the volume of traffic generated by a development of this size, particularly during construction. Increased construction traffic, heavy vehicles, and additional ongoing vehicle movements will exacerbate congestion, reduce safety, and disrupt the functioning of the roundabout and surrounding streets. The noise and dust from the construction will undoubtedly have an impact on neighbors and wildlife in the adjoining reserve.

6. Parking and Public Transport Pressure
Parking availability in the area is already extremely limited, and public transport services are under pressure. The proposal will intensify competition for parking and strain public transport services, adversely affecting existing residents. Overflow parking into surrounding streets is inevitable and unacceptable given current conditions. The only neighboring streets where parking will overflow to are narrow and already pose issues to bus drivers attempting to navigate them.

7. Noise and Ongoing Amenity Impacts
Extended construction periods, followed by increased residential density, servicing, and traffic, will significantly increase noise levels. As an immediately adjoining resident, I will be directly affected by these impacts, which will erode reasonable expectations of residential amenity.

Conclusion and Request
For the reasons outlined above, this proposal is excessive, inconsistent with surrounding development, and contrary to sound planning principles. Its scale, access constraints, and cumulative impacts make it unsuitable for this site.

I respectfully request that the application be rejected, or alternatively that it be substantially modified and reduced to a height consistent with neighbouring developments (approximately 6–8 levels), in line with recent approvals and the established character of the area.
Kirsten Clarke
Object
Lane Cove , New South Wales
Message
Please see the attached document
Name Withheld
Object
LANE COVE , New South Wales
Message
I am writing to formally object to the proposed development of 15th storey high 225 residential units at 300 Burns Bay Road. I am a resident of the neighbouring 300 A, B and C apartment complex and wish to raise serious concerns regarding the proposal’s impact on traffic, safety, amenity, infrastructure, and public health.

1. Traffic Congestion and Road Network Failure
The existing road network is already operating beyond its practical capacity.
A single small roundabout at Waterview Drive provides the only access point connecting multiple high-density developments to Burns Bay Road.
Currently, this roundabout serves: -
1. 2 Waterview Drive Apartments (104 units -approx. 260 residents based on 2.5 persons per dwelling)
2. 10 Waterview Drive Apartments (56 units -approx. 140 residents based on 2.5 persons per dwelling)
3. 290 Burns Bay Road (39 units -approx. 98 residents based on 2.5 persons per dwelling)
4. 300 A, B and C Apartments (166 units – approx. 415 residents based on 2.5 persons per dwelling)
5. 302 Riverview Apartments (70 units -approx. 175 residents based on 2.5 persons per dwelling)
This equates to:
435 existing units (approx. 1,088 residents) already relying on one constrained access point.
The proposed development adds:
225 additional units (approx. 563 residents)
Total impact:
660 units (approx. 1,650 - 2000 residents) funnelling through a single roundabout and access road.

Traffic Load Reality
Using conservative assumptions:
~0.8–1 vehicle movements per resident per day
Peak hour concentration ~10–15%
This results in:
Existing demand: ~800–1,000 daily trips
Additional demand: ~500–650 daily trips
Total: ~1,300–1,650 vehicle movements per day
Peak hour impact:
~130–250 vehicles per hour attempting to enter/exit via a single roundabout and narrow access road
This does not account for:
Delivery vehicles
Ride-share services
Visitors
Service and maintenance vehicles
The current road layout cannot physically accommodate this level of traffic.

2. Single Access Constraint and Blockage Risk
There is only one main access route serving all developments.
At present:
When a removal truck, delivery vehicle, or service vehicle stops on the road, the entire access can be blocked
Residents are forced to wait, with no alternative exit route
With 660 units (1,650 residents):
Blockages will become more frequent
Delays will increase significantly
Emergency access (ambulance, fire services) may be compromised

3. Pedestrian Safety Risks
The current situation already presents serious safety concerns:
There is no safe pedestrian crossing at or near the roundabout
Residents must run across Waterview drive to Burns Bay Road to access bus stops
With an increase to over 1,650 residents:
Pedestrian movements will increase significantly
Traffic volume will increase simultaneously
This creates a high-risk conflict between vehicles and pedestrians, particularly affecting:
Children
Elderly residents
Families accessing the childcare centre at 2 Waterview drive

4.4. Public Transport Capacity Is Already Insufficient
Current bus services are already unable to meet demand:
During peak hours, buses are often full, requiring residents to wait for the next service
Existing demand already exceeds capacity from ~1,088 residents ( based on 2.5 ppl per unit)
With an additional ~563 residents( new 225 units)
Bus overcrowding will worsen
Wait times will increase
More residents will be forced to drive, further increasing traffic congestion
There is no evidence of:
Increased bus frequency
Transport infrastructure upgrades

5. Existing Parking Deficiency and Community Impact
There is already a severe shortage of parking in the area:
Existing ~435 units (1,088 residents) already exceed available parking capacity
Nearby park facilities are overcrowded, especially on weekends
Visitors are forced to park far away and walk significant distances
Additional pressure points:
Childcare centre at 2 Waterview Drive already experiences parking shortages during drop-off and pick-up, forced
to stop unsafely to drop young children
With an additional 225 units (~563 residents):
Parking demand will significantly exceed supply
Illegal or unsafe parking will increase
Access to public amenities will be further reduced

6. Overshadowing and Loss of Amenity (Please refer to attached Shadow diagram)
The increase in building height from 7–8 storeys to approximately 15 storeys will result in:
Significant overshadowing of 300 A, B, C apartments (166 units – ~415 residents)
Loss of natural sunlight and daylight access
This affects:
Hundreds of residents’ daily living conditions
Indoor comfort, natural ventilation, and liveability

7. Health Impacts – Mould, Dampness and Lack of Sunlight
This is not just an amenity issue — it is a public health concern.
The 300 A, B, C building is already experiencing:
Moisture issues
Mould growth
Structural deterioration
Further reduction in sunlight will:
Increase dampness
Worsen mould growth
Impact the health of ~415 residents directly
This is a serious and foreseeable consequence of the proposed overshadowing.

8. Inadequate Infrastructure Planning
The proposal increases population from:
~1,088 residents → ~1,650 residents (over 60% increase)
However, there is:
No road upgrade
No additional access point
No public transport expansion
No meaningful parking solution
No pedestrian safety upgrade
Infrastructure has not been scaled to match population growth.

State Environmental Planning Policy (SEPP) – Housing
Principles require:
Adequate infrastructure support
Good urban design and amenity
Sustainable density
Failure:
Infrastructure not scaled to population increase
Poor amenity outcomes
Overdevelopment of constrained site

9. Bushfire Risk and Emergency Evacuation Failure
The site is located adjacent to Burns Bay Reserve, a bushland area, raising significant bushfire concerns.
Critical Issue:
There is only one vehicular exit route for all residents
With the proposed development:
Total population: ~1,650 residents - 2000 ( base on 2.5 to 3 ppl per household unit)
In a bushfire or emergency situation:
All residents must evacuate via one congested access point
Traffic congestion may lead to gridlock
Residents may be unable to evacuate safely
There is:
No alternative escape route by vehicle
No evacuation strategy demonstrated
No infrastructure upgrade to support emergency scenarios
Emergency vehicles will also be forced to use the same constrained road, further compromising response times.

10. Cumulative Impact of Overdevelopment
The proposal increases population by over 60%:
From ~1,000 → ~1,650 to 2000 residents
The proposal must be considered in the context of cumulative strain:
Existing infrastructure is already under pressure
Nearby developments share the same constrained access
The addition of 225 units (~563 residents) represents a disproportionate increase
A smaller-scale development may be feasible example 40 to 60 units instead of 225 units, but this proposal is excessive and incompatible with the site’s capacity.
This represents a clear mismatch between development scale and infrastructure capacity.

10.Final Summary
The proposed development fails to adequately address:
Traffic congestion and road capacity
Pedestrian safety
Public transport limitations
Parking shortages
Overshadowing and loss of amenity
Health risks from reduced sunlight
Bushfire evacuation and emergency access
Lack of supporting infrastructure

The concentration of approximately 1,650 to 2000 residents relying on a single constrained access point is not safe, sustainable, or appropriate for this location.

I strongly object to this proposal and request that it be refused or significantly reduced in scale to align with the capacity of the surrounding infrastructure and ensure the safety and wellbeing of existing and future residents.

Yours sincerely,
Penny Cochrane
Residence of 300ABC Burns bay road
Attachments
Name Withheld
Object
Lane Cove , New South Wales
Message
I strongly object to this development proposal in its current form. Construction of three residential buildings double the height of surrounding buildings will forever change the character of the whole area.
Residents in neighbouring buildings will be badfly affected through the loss of view, overshadowing and loss of privacy that is very likely to result in significant loss of their property value.
Significant increase in traffic and parking problems with no mention of any plans to alleviate these problems.
Greg Field
Object
Lane Cove , New South Wales
Message
Objection to SSD-87925706
300 Burns Bay Road, Lane Cove Development Proposal

I have lived in the Burns Bay precinct for many years. Before moving into my current apartment on Level 5 at 290 Burns Bay Road, I also lived in another building within this same area. I chose to stay here because of what this precinct offers. It has always felt open, green, and balanced, not overbuilt. That is why this proposal is so confronting.
From my apartment, this will not be a minor or distant change. The photomontages make it clear that the building will dominate the outlook, sitting well above everything else around it.
What is there now feels open, varied, and leafy. What is being proposed replaces that with something much larger and far more imposing. It changes not just the view, but how the whole area would feel to live in.
As shown in this photo from my balcony, my entire South East view will be obstructed by this development .

The scale of this building feels completely out of place for this area. The surrounding buildings have been developed in a consistent way over time and generally step down towards the water. That consistency is part of what makes the area work. This proposal breaks away from that in a way that feels abrupt and excessive.

This is not just a visual concern. The scale being proposed goes well beyond what has been consistently delivered in this area under existing planning controls.
I also feel for residents in some of the surrounding buildings. There are apartments that will lose a significant amount of natural light and view, and one building that looks set to be left in shadow for much of the day because of the scale of this development. That is a permanent and unfair outcome for those residents.
There is also a broader issue. Residents and council have raised concerns from the beginning, particularly around height, traffic, and overall impact. Despite this, the proposal has increased in size, so it appears those concerns have not been meaningfully considered
and in reality have been ignored.
Traffic is already an issue in this area. Getting in and out of Burns Bay Road can be difficult, and it does not take much for surrounding streets to become congested. This is something residents deal with each day. Adding a development of this scale will only make that situation worse, even though the reporting seems to ignore that fact while also confirming that the streets operate at near failure already. The assessment may suggest the impact is manageable, but that does not reflect the everyday experience of residents already dealing with congestion.
There is also a clear difference between what exists on the site today and what is being proposed. The current setting has a more natural, open feel. Even though there is a car park, it is softened by established trees and surrounding greenery. The new proposal is far more built-up, twice the height, with limited landscaping largely contained within the development in very small amounts.
Overall, this does not feel like a development that has been shaped to fit its surroundings. It feels like a development that has been pushed to its limits in terms of size.
I understand that development will occur, but it needs to be proportionate and reflect the character and constraints of the area. I am not opposed to development, but this does not feel measured or appropriate. It feels excessive. For these reasons, I object to the proposal in its current form and ask that it be rejected. At a minimum it must be reconsidered with a scale and design that better respects the existing community and environment around it.

Mr Greg Field
505/290 Burns Bay Rd
Lane Cove NSW 2026
Attachments

Pagination

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