Skip to main content
The Daily Canberra

All of Canberra, every day

Property

Rezoning Push Could Reshape Dickson's Low-Rise Streets Forever

A proposal before the ACT Planning Authority would open up a stretch of Dickson to mid-rise apartment development, and residents have until September to respond.

Share

By Canberra Property Desk · Published 4 July 2026, 7:53 am

4 min read

How we reported this

This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Canberra is independently owned and covers Canberra news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. Read our editorial standards →

Rezoning Push Could Reshape Dickson's Low-Rise Streets Forever
Photo: Photo by Gilberto Olimpio on Pexels

The ACT government is pressing ahead with a rezoning proposal for a key corridor in Dickson that would permit buildings of up to eight storeys along sections of Cowper Street and Badham Street — a shift that would fundamentally alter one of the inner north's last pockets of freestanding housing within walking distance of a town centre. The draft variation to the Territory Plan, catalogued as DV392, was placed on public exhibition on June 30 and closes for comment on September 12.

The timing matters. The ACT's residential vacancy rate sits below 1.2 percent, and the median house price across Canberra has settled around $835,000 — figures that keep first-home buyers locked out and push renters into bidding wars for anything within five kilometres of Civic. The Albanese government's Housing Australia Future Fund has put pressure on every state and territory to demonstrate genuine supply pipelines, and the ACT is scrambling to show Canberra can absorb the 11,400 new homes it has committed to deliver by 2029 under the National Housing Accord.

What the Proposal Actually Changes

Under current Territory Plan zoning, most of the affected Dickson blocks sit in the RZ2 residential low category, which caps buildings at two storeys and roughly 40 dwellings per hectare. DV392 would reclassify approximately 3.4 hectares between the Dickson Group Centre boundary and the existing public housing precinct on Antill Street to CZ5 mixed use — the same classification that already governs the strip along Woolley Street near the Dickson shops. That change would, in practice, allow developers to pitch proposals for apartment towers with ground-floor retail without needing a separate merit track assessment.

The ACT Planning Authority flagged Dickson specifically because of its proximity to light rail. Stop 11 at the Dickson interchange on Northbourne Avenue puts the suburb within the 800-metre walkshed the government uses to justify higher-density approvals. The authority's own modelling, released alongside DV392, projects the corridor could yield between 600 and 900 new dwellings if fully built out over the next decade. For context, the entire suburb of Dickson currently contains roughly 1,100 dwellings across all housing types.

Locals Weigh Up the Trade-offs

The Dickson Residents Group lodged a preliminary submission in May, before the formal exhibition period opened, arguing the government had not adequately addressed traffic loading on Cowper Street during the pre-consultation phase. Cowper Street already carries significant through-traffic from drivers avoiding the Northbourne Avenue–Antill Street intersection at peak hour, and the residents group says the current road configuration cannot accommodate the vehicle movements an 800-plus dwelling addition would generate.

The proposal also runs up against a practical problem familiar to anyone who has followed Canberra's densification push through Gungahlin and Belconnen: the Infrastructure Investment Program for 2025-26 does not include any stormwater or sewerage upgrades for inner north Dickson, according to budget papers tabled in April. Icon Water has confirmed it is in early-stage talks with the ACT Planning Authority about servicing requirements, but no commitment has been made.

There is a precedent worth watching. The rezoning of Braddon's residential streets between Lonsdale and Elouera streets, approved under DV341 in 2022, triggered five development applications within 18 months. Three have now received approval, and two are under construction. Land values along those streets jumped roughly 28 percent between settlement records lodged in early 2023 and mid-2025, according to ACT Revenue Office data — a dynamic that alarmed long-term renters in the area.

Anyone wanting to have their say on DV392 can lodge a submission through the ACT Planning website before September 12. The Planning Authority has scheduled two community information sessions: July 22 at the Dickson Library on Cowper Street and August 6 at the Ainslie and Downer Community Centre on Donaldson Street. After the exhibition period closes, the authority will compile a report for the Minister for Planning, with a final decision expected before the end of the calendar year. If approved, land owners in the rezoned corridor could begin lodging development applications as early as the first quarter of 2027.

You might also like

Editorial picks

How did this story land?

Spread the word

Share

Have your say

Loading comments…

Sources

About this article

Published by The Daily Canberra

Covering property in Canberra. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

Spread the word

Share

See something wrong? Suggest a correction.

Daily brief

Enjoyed this? Wake up to Canberra news every morning.

Free, in your inbox before 7am. Weekdays.

By subscribing you agree to receive emails from The Daily Canberra and accept our Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe anytime.

The Daily Network — local news across Australia