Neutral Bay Set for Major Redevelopment Under $191 Million Approval

Woolworths Group‘s development arm Fabcot has secured approval for a $191 million mixed-use project in Neutral Bay, bringing a 12-storey building to the Lower North Shore site that will bury the supermarket below ground and replace it with a new street-level plaza, retail, a medical centre and 97 apartments.



Approval was granted in May, three days after a Housing Delivery Authority rezoning lifted height controls on the 4,207-square-metre site, clearing the way for a project that caps a six-year push by Fabcot through a series of planning obstacles.

It is the first project in North Sydney to receive Housing Delivery Authority rezoning and State Significant Development approval at the same time, something Woolworths Group national general manager of mixed-use development Pierre Abrahamse said could help open the door for more projects across the area

The project is designed by Koichi Takada Architects and is scheduled to begin construction in 2026, with completion targeted for 2029.

Six years from proposal to approval

Fabcot first approached the planning process in 2020, engaging with the Military Road corridor and the Neutral Bay town centre with a scheme that was refused twice at the local level before being escalated to a state rezoning review and eventually the HDA pathway.

Photo Credit: Sydney Build Expo/LinkedIn

The earlier proposal had been shaped around a part-six and part-eight-storey scheme of approximately 62 apartments, a 1.8:1 minimum non-residential floor-space ratio and around 372 basement car spaces. The approved scheme is considerably more ambitious.

Height controls lifted from 26 metres and 31 metres to 31 metres and 44 metres under the HDA rezoning, and the minimum non-residential floor-space ratio fell to 1.5:1. The result is a taller, more mixed-use project with significantly more apartments, more commercial space and a stronger contribution to Neutral Bay’s public domain.

Photo Credit: Sydney Build Expo/LinkedIn

Local opposition remained strong throughout the process. Thirty of the 46 public submissions objected to the project, raising concerns about traffic, height, overshadowing, parking, affordable housing and the treatment of the Yeo Street boundary.

The state planning department backed the project, finding the site sat within the Neutral Bay town centre where greater height and mixed-use renewal were expected, noting that similar nine to 14-storey buildings already existed within 250 metres.

Photo Credit: Sydney Build Expo/LinkedIn

A closer look at the proposal

The approved scheme stacks a significant amount of program into a single building. At the base, a 1,100-square-metre plaza links Rangers Road, Yeo Street and Military Lane, creating a new piece of publicly accessible outdoor space in the heart of the commercial precinct.

Ten ground-floor retail tenancies activate the street edge, while the Woolworths supermarket moves to an underground position, freeing the street level for outdoor dining and movement.

Photo Credit: Sydney Build Expo/LinkedIn

Levels one to three house a medical centre providing a new health services anchor for the suburb. Above that sit 87 market apartments and 10 affordable apartments to be maintained at that tenure for 15 years, spread across a mix of one, two, three and four-bedroom configurations.

The commercial component totals 6,575 square metres, while a covered through-site link from Yeo Street, eight metres wide and six metres high, provides weather-protected pedestrian movement through the site. The department accepted the covered link over the local preference for an open-to-sky break, finding the dimensions provided sufficient visual relief.

A suburb built around Military Road

Military Road became Neutral Bay’s commercial spine from the early 1870s, when a track running along the ridge from North Sydney towards Middle Head fortifications gradually attracted shops and businesses along its length. The suburb, known to the Cammeraygal people as Wirra-birra, was declared a neutral harbour by Governor Arthur Phillip in 1789 for foreign ships visiting Port Jackson.

The Military Road corridor has since evolved through trams, department stores, the Big Bear supermarket and decades of mixed commercial development, with mixed-use apartment buildings replacing earlier low-rise shopping strips across recent decades. The Fabcot project continues that long trajectory, this time at a scale made possible by the state’s housing fast-track framework.

The project will generate 263 construction jobs and 143 operational jobs on completion. Consent conditions include groundwater testing, wind, traffic, landscaping and construction management requirements before a construction certificate can be issued.



Published 18-May-2026

Woolworths Launches Legal Challenge Over Neutral Bay Supermarket Redevelopment

Woolworths has filed a legal appeal over the redevelopment of its Neutral Bay supermarket, escalating a long-standing dispute over the $169 million project. The appeal follows delays in the decision-making process, which led to the application being “deemed refused.”



Background of the Dispute

The proposed development (10.2024.00000281.001) was lodged by Woolworths subsidiary Fabcot Pty Ltd. It seeks to transform the existing supermarket site at 1-7 Rangers Road and 50 Yeo Street into a mixed-use complex. Plans include an eight-storey building with 70 residential units, a modernised Woolworths supermarket, additional retail spaces, a public plaza, and 326 basement parking spaces.

The project has been under review for more than two years, and NSC is under scrutiny for its prolonged assessment process. Community feedback has been divided, with some residents welcoming the revitalisation while others opposing the scale and height of the development.

Proposed Woolworths supermarket and public plaza at Neutral Bay.
Photo Credit: DA/10.2024.00000281.001

Details of the Proposed Development

Designed by Koichi Takada Architects, the project would replace the existing supermarket and commercial building with a structure ranging from six to eight storeys. It includes:

  • 70 residential apartments (11 one-bedroom, 29 two-bedroom, 28 three-bedroom, and two four-bedroom units).
  • A redeveloped Woolworths supermarket spanning 3,850 square metres.
  • Specialty retail space covering 1,352 square metres.
  • A future medical centre occupying 2,389 square metres across two floors.
  • A public plaza of 1,100 square metres.
  • An underground five-level parking facility with 342 spaces, including dedicated spots for residents, retail, and medical centre visitors.

The project also incorporates sustainable design features. Green spaces and upgraded pedestrian pathways along Rangers Road and Yeo Street were also considered.

Artistic impression of the Neutral Bay Woolworths redevelopment.
Photo Credit: DA/10.2024.00000281.001

Community Concerns and NSC Response

The redevelopment proposal has generated mixed reactions among Neutral Bay residents. Some support the upgrade, citing the need for a modern supermarket and additional amenities. Woolworths has referenced a community survey indicating 57% of respondents were in favour of the development, with many describing the current store as outdated.

However, opposition remains over the height and density of the project, with concerns about overshadowing, increased traffic congestion, and compliance with NSC’s development controls, particularly regarding parking provisions.

In response to the legal challenge, the NSC stated that the application was complex and required careful planning consideration but did not provide further comments on the court appeal.

Woolworths Neutral Bay plans
Photo Credit: DA/10.2024.00000281.001

Next Steps in the Legal Process

With Woolworths’ appeal now before the Land and Environment Court, the final decision on the Neutral Bay redevelopment will be determined through legal proceedings. The case could set a precedent for future major developments in the area, particularly regarding NSC planning approvals and private sector investment.



Should the court rule in favour of Woolworths, the project is expected to create up to 263 ongoing jobs and introduce new residential and commercial infrastructure to Neutral Bay.

Published 25-Feb-2025

Locals and Council Oppose Woolworths’ Neutral Bay Plans, Retailer Appealing

Major Australian retailer Woolworths is taking its proposed redevelopment of its Neutral Bay supermarket location to the NSW government for approval after facing rejection from North Sydney council and some local residents.


Read: Appeal Lodged for Ben Boyd Rd Apartment Development in Neutral Bay


The proposed multimillion-dollar project aims to redevelop the existing Woolworths store on Rangers Rd in Neutral Bay. However, it has faced opposition from North Sydney council, with a majority of councillors voting against supporting the redevelopment plans.

Key concerns raised by the council and neighbourhood locals have focused on the proposed building’s height and bulk, as well as potential traffic impacts on surrounding residential streets. Critics argue the large scale project is out of step with the mainly low-rise character of Neutral Bay.

Aerial view of the site (Photo credit: www.woolworthsneutralbay.com.au)

After the council rejected the development application, Woolworths filed an appeal with the Department of Planning for a rezoning review.

Proposal

The proposed development by Woolworths involves a striking “organic architecture” complex designed by architect Koichi Takada. The underground supermarket would allow a public plaza above, creating a “town centre” with outdoor dining and public space.

Artist’s impression of Woolworths Neutral Bay redevelopment (Photo credit: www.woolworthsneutralbay.com.au)

It would comprise over 19,000 sqm of floor space including a full-line supermarket, retail, office space and 91 apartments. The public plaza aims to activate the site and provide a new heart for Neutral Bay.

Woolworths believes the proposal would deliver a new generation mixed-use building to support new jobs and strengthen the local economy, but locals and the council remain opposed over concerns about its scale and traffic impacts.

In its website, the company stated that they are committed to working with local communities as they adapt and change their stores to meet community needs and preferences.


Read: Smoking Ban in Neutral Bay, North Sydney LGA Public Areas Eyed


Regarding the Neutral Bay site, Woolworths claimed “there is an important opportunity for Rangers Road to be adapted to create a full-line supermarket, enhanced public domain and high-quality apartments separated from Military Road.”

Published 17-July-2023