Property
Big Shifts for North Canberra: New Developments Set to Transform the City’s Fringe
Major projects in Gungahlin and Belconnen are expanding Canberra’s skyline and reshaping who can afford to call these neighbourhoods home.
3 min read
Property
Major projects in Gungahlin and Belconnen are expanding Canberra’s skyline and reshaping who can afford to call these neighbourhoods home.
3 min read

Cranes are up along Gundaroo Drive and diggers hum at the southern edge of Lake Ginninderra: a fresh wave of development is reshaping North Canberra, as new projects in Gungahlin and Belconnen move forward this winter. The most eye-catching is the multi-stage precinct set for Emu Bank, which will deliver nearly 500 apartments and a new retail strip by 2028.
The timing is critical. Canberra’s rental vacancy sits below 1%, according to Domain’s June 2026 snapshot, and sales agents say public service workers are crowding new listings as rental pressure shows no sign of easing. With the ACT’s median house price at $835,000 and auction clearance rates stuck at 65%, buyers are eyeing off-plan apartments for affordability — and out of necessity.
The most ambitious plans focus on Gungahlin’s town centre, where Geocon’s ‘Lumière’ tower is on track for completion by Christmas. The 24-storey building on Gribble Street adds 370 apartments, a childcare centre, and ground-level cafes. Down the corridor in Belconnen, a partnership between Doma Group and the Suburban Land Agency means earthworks have started on the Belconnen Arts Precinct. The $120 million project will include an expanded public plaza linking Emu Bank to Lake Ginninderra, plus 110 affordable dwellings for key workers.
The Gungahlin Community Council has raised concerns about congestion on Horse Park Drive, but the ACT Government says a funding boost for buses and a planned light rail extension, expected to begin preliminary works in 2027, should help manage the expected population jump. For nearby residents, that means watching laneways once lined with single-storey brick homes give way to mid-rise towers and bustling ground-level retail.
So far, early releases for Lumière have sold briskly, with studio apartments reportedly going under contract at $415,000 – offering some relief in a city where detached house prices keep public servants scrambling for a foothold. In Belconnen, Real Estate Institute of the ACT data shows the local unit median has tipped over $600,000 for the first time in June: up almost 8% year-on-year. The new stock is expected to add downward price pressure, with 800 apartments across the two precincts hitting the market by late 2027, says property analyst Will Carter.
But not everyone welcomes the pace of change. The Lake Ginninderra Residents Association points to increased traffic along Nettlefold Street as a flashpoint, and warns of ‘gentrification by stealth’ as older renters are priced out. The ACT’s own Housing Strategy team insists new inclusionary zoning rules, introduced in May, will guarantee 15% of approvals are earmarked for affordable or social housing — though some councils question how thoroughly these targets will be enforced.
For buyers and renters keeping an eye out, the window for nabbing affordable off-plan stock is likely to narrow quickly. Urban planners predict the construction boom will peak in 2027, then slow as government incentives wind down. Still, with public investment in new transport and retail, the Gungahlin-Belconnen growth corridor is poised for a busy few years. Would-be residents should keep tabs on release schedules from Geocon and Doma, or connect with local agencies like Housing ACT, to capitalise on new supply and government grants. The cranes on the northern horizon are more than a skyline shift: they are the new face of Canberra’s changing, and contested, property future.

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