Reedy Creek West Burleigh Projects

Project Overview

Boral has lodged a Development Application with Gold Coast City Council.

Once that application has been uploaded onto Council website we will provide a link to all documentation here.

What is different about this application?

The development application components sought for approval are summarised below:

Through this development application, Boral is offering an innovative solution to build capacity and capability for the Gold Coast to deal with this growth challenge through:

  1. Unlocking the State’s Key Resource Area 96 as part of the Reedy Creek Key Resource Area Project (RCKRA Project) to:
  • maintain a continued supply of local quarry materials of up to 1.2million tonnes annually in the southern Gold Coast area to meet the projected demand from the building and construction industry;
  • reduce the impact of additional 31,000 truck movements on the M1; and
  • reduce additional transport costs and maintain a competitive market, which has a nexus to housing delivery and affordability.
  1. Providing critical waste infrastructure as part of the West Burleigh Construction and Waste Resource Recovery Project (WBCWRR Project) to:
  • rehabilitate the existing void at West Burleigh Quarry through the disposal of residual non-putrescible construction waste to create a safe and stable landform in a timely manner;
  • reducing reliance on the City’s diminishing putrescible landfill airspace (non-private and private);
  • avoid the need to transport it elsewhere at significant congestion or environmental costs; and
  • positively contribute to the Local and State Government’s waste management strategies.

Project Facts

What's changed?

176.1ha has been identified as land for environmental purposes and will be protected, conserved and enhanced.

What's changed?

The quarry footprint is 20% less - roughly 14 football fields smaller.

What's changed?

The production output of the Quarry Project has been reduced by 40%. 

 

The state government wants to build 5,000 new homes.

It takes 110 tonnes of crushed rock and 53m3 of concrete to build the average home.

 

best

Local quarries:

Keep down your construction costs 

Mean less truck movements on your roads

Provide local jobs

 

Is there asbestos present at those two sites? No.

There are trace amounts of non-asbestiform actinolite.  Not considered a respiratory health hazard.

  • To build one kilometre of two-lane highway requires about 140,000 tonnes (or 400 truckloads) of construction aggregates.
  • There will be a habitat corridor which will improve the safety and security of wildlife.
  • We are planting close to 500 000 trees to create a green backdrop.

Further information