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Jacqueline Kirk
Object
NARRABEEN , New South Wales
Message
To Whom It May Concern,

I am writing to formally oppose the proposed development in our neighbourhood. As a resident and family living on Lagoon Street, I am deeply concerned about the lasting impacts this project will have on our community, environment, and overall safety.

Firstly, the planned removal of mature native pine trees represents a significant environmental loss. These trees are not only part of the area’s natural character but also provide habitat for local wildlife, shade, and erosion protection. Their removal would permanently alter the landscape and diminish the ecological value of our neighbourhood.

Secondly, the proposed structure—reaching heights of up to 20 metres—constitutes a clear case of overdevelopment. It will dominate the local skyline, create visual obstruction for hundreds of residents, and fundamentally change the look and feel of our community. The scale is inconsistent with existing dwellings and the established character of Lagoon Street.

Traffic and safety are also serious concerns. Lagoon Street and the surrounding roads are not designed to handle the additional volume of vehicles that a development of this magnitude will generate. Increased congestion, parking pressures, and potential safety hazards for pedestrians—especially children—are inevitable.

Equally troubling is the lack of genuine community consultation. Many residents feel excluded from the decision-making process, with limited opportunities to provide meaningful input or understand the full scope of the development. A project of this scale demands transparent, inclusive engagement with the local community.

Finally, the site’s Aboriginal heritage sensitivity must be respected. Any development in this area should be approached with cultural awareness and proper consultation with Traditional Custodians before approval is considered.

In summary, this proposal threatens to erode the environmental, cultural, and social integrity of our neighbourhood. It is out of scale, environmentally damaging, and not in keeping with the community values that make this area so special. I urge the Council to reject this application and work with residents to explore more sustainable, appropriately scaled alternatives.

Sincerely,
Jacqueline Kirk
Lagoon Street Resident
Finlay Newall
Object
WARRIEWOOD , New South Wales
Message
It does not support the community and will create big problems for traffic and become an eye sore and ruin the landscape. Narrabeen is not Dee Why and it should stay that way.
Name Withheld
Object
NORTH NARRABEEN , New South Wales
Message
I strongly oppose the proposed Indigo by Moran seniors’ housing development at 156 Ocean Street, Narrabeen. I am a local Narrabeen resident and I use the streets around the area daily. I respectfully request that the NSW Department of Planning refuse the current application or require a comprehensive redesign to ensure compliance with local planning controls and alignment with community expectations.

Coastal and Flooding Risk

The proposed site lies within a known flood-prone and coastal erosion hazard area, as outlined in the EIS Appendices E & F (Flood and Coastal Hazard Reports). The development footprint extends into zones identified as high hazard under the Northern Beaches Council Flood Study and Coastal Zone Management Plan.

While the EIS acknowledges these risks, it fails to provide adequate mitigation strategies beyond basic floor height adjustments. These measures do not sufficiently address Narrabeen’s increasing exposure to coastal erosion, sea level rise, and storm surge events, rendering the proposal inconsistent with sustainable coastal planning principles.

Traffic, Parking and Access

The Traffic and Parking Assessment (EIS Appendix J) significantly underestimates vehicle movements and parking demands generated by residents, staff, service vehicles, and visitors. Ocean Street and Lagoon Street are already under pressure from high traffic volumes, particularly during weekends, holidays and local events. I am concerned about the safety of my children and others walking or riding their bikes to and from the beach along these roads.

The addition of a large seniors’ living complex will further exacerbate congestion, reduce pedestrian and cyclist safety, and impede emergency vehicle access. There is a kindergarten present in the area and the surrounding narrow streets are not designed to accommodate the anticipated increase in traffic and parking demand.

Height, Scale and Visual Impact

The proposed building substantially exceeds the height and bulk envisioned for this sensitive coastal setting. The Visual Impact Assessment (EIS Appendix L) confirms the development would dominate the low-scale residential character of Ocean Street and obstruct key public view corridors.

The five-storey design is inconsistent with the existing built form and surrounding natural environment, creating a sense of enclosure, visual intrusion, and loss of open sky for neighbouring properties and public spaces. I am particularly concerned about the loss of light in the area and the eye-sore that this building will create.

Vegetation Loss and Biodiversity

The Arboricultural Impact Assessment (EIS Appendix H) identifies the planned removal of over 30 mature trees and established vegetation. These trees play a vital role in maintaining local shade, biodiversity, and coastal resilience. Their loss will degrade wildlife corridors, reduce canopy cover essential for urban cooling, and further erode the area’s ecological integrity.

Replacement landscaping cannot compensate for the loss of mature specimens, nor restore the environmental and visual values currently provided by existing vegetation.

Overshadowing, Privacy and Amenity Impacts

The building’s excessive height and footprint will cause substantial overshadowing and privacy loss for adjoining properties. As demonstrated in the Architectural and Shadow Diagrams (EIS Appendix – Figures 5.3–5.5), shadowing extends beyond site boundaries between 9am and 3pm in winter, severely impacting private open spaces and living areas of nearby dwellings.

This contravenes solar access requirements under Clause 6.9 of the Pittwater LEP 2014.
Furthermore, elevated terraces and balconies will overlook neighbouring yards, directly breaching Residential Flat Design Code (RFDC) visual privacy objectives.

Additional Localised Adverse Impacts

Construction disruption: Extended excavation, piling, and increased traffic will significantly impact nearby residents and park users.

Wind tunnelling: The building’s large scale and coastal exposure may create wind turbulence, posing risks to pedestrian comfort and safety.

Infrastructure strain: Flood-prone drainage and sewer systems may become overwhelmed.

Emergency access: Narrow streets and limited exit routes increase risks during flood or storm events.

Cumulative precedent: Approval would set an undesirable precedent for further oversized developments in Narrabeen’s fragile coastal corridor.


The Indigo by Moran proposal is fundamentally incompatible with the principles of sustainable, context-sensitive development for the Northern Beaches. It presents excessive bulk, unacceptable amenity and environmental risks, and long-term consequences for the community and local ecosystems.
Marie Boudreau
Object
COLLAROY , New South Wales
Message
Against high rise development on the beaches
Jarrod Smith
Object
WARRIEWOOD , New South Wales
Message
We do not want this development in our area. It’s will spoil the community and open up to more developers changing Narrabeen. We do not want this.
Susan Macdonald
Object
Narrabeen , New South Wales
Message
Secretary, DPHI : Objections to SSD-76220734 - 156 Ocean Street, Narrabeen.
I live at 44-50 Ocean Street, Narrabeen and I am totally opposed to this project due to its huge size, the impact the traffic generated by it will have on the adjacent streets and Narrabeen in general. A project such as this will completely change and destroy the character of Narrabeen especially the area between Pittwater Road and the beach.
This planned project would create a huge danger to the many pedestrians, young and elderly, who currently use Ocean and Lagoon Streets for exercise and access to the School, shops and beach. In addition the danger would be extremely heightened for the number of vehicles, cyclists, e-bikes etc that currently use all the surrounding streets.
And what of all the huge Norfolk pine trees that surround the property? Will they all be demolished in the name of greed by the developer?
The scale of the proposed development is totally out of proportion to anything else in the neighbourhood - it is a total overkill where the developers have obviously gone for 'bigger the better' and buggar all the current Residents of Narrabeen.
DO NOT APPROVE THIS PROJECT - LISTEN TO THE RESIDENTS!
Bryan Dalli
Object
Collaroy , New South Wales
Message
This is proposed development is too large for this coastal community and sets a dangerous precedent in allowable size and scale. Narrabeen is set on a fragile coast line that is already impacted by the environment and poor infrastructure management. I say No to all 6 stories.
Madelenne Post
Object
NARRABEEN , New South Wales
Message
This is such a packed residential area already with limited parking and narrow streets.
This is too much for this area and should stay the quiet residential family friendly area it is.
William Tulloch
Object
Mona Vale , New South Wales
Message
Refer Written Submission
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