Brisbane's riverfront renaissance, and the developers leading the charge
The Brisbane River has well and truly come alive. In the last decade there have been billions in new developments, both apartments and mixed-use precincts that have changed the face of the waterfront in the Queensland capital. The completion of the redevelopment of Howard Smith Wharves in 2019 was a key milestone. The 3.4 hectares of prime riverfront underneath the Story Bridge is now a vibrant hospitality hub with several restaurants, bars, hotels, and event spaces.
The riverfront had to wait another five years before the completion of Far East Consortium’s $3.6 billion mega-precinct, Queens Wharf. The huge 12-hectare precinct, a new landmark for Brisbane, is home to four new luxury hotels, over 50 new restaurants, bars and entertainment experiences, luxury retail, and a state-of-the-art event centre, home to Brisbane’s largest hotel ballroom. Between the resort’s four towers, 37 metres above street level, is a 12,000 sqm, open-air Leisure Deck will deliver a mixed-use space for hotel guests and the public. The Leisure Deck features an Event Deck, expansive lawn area for sunset picnics and exclusive resort amenities overlooking the city skyline.
While there’s now limited land on the northern side of the Story Bridge and on the fringe of the CBD, there is still significant opportunity down the river for more waterside development. Economic Development Queensland is undertaking the largest urban renewal project in the state, and arguably the country. They are creating Northshore, a new mixed-use community on 304 hectares of previously industrial port land at inner-city Hamilton. The 40-year development, which started 10 years ago, is estimated to cost $12 billion.
There will be around 14,000 new homes built over the next three decades that will home roughly 24,500 residents. Over 25,000 employees will call Northshore their place of work, with an innovation and technology precinct covering over eight hectares of the precinct. That will comprise commercial, retail, and clean industrial businesses. In December, Northshore’s central precinct achieved a 6 Star Green Star – Communities certified rating. Northshore will also play host to Brisbane Athletes’ Village for the Brisbane 2032 Olympics and Paralympic Games.
While there have been major commercial developments that have driven huge economic boosts to Brisbane, the riverfront boom hasn’t been lost on some of states best new apartment developers. Don O’Rorke’s Consolidated Properties was quick to act back in 2021 when they snapped up the 1.5-hectare former ABC site on Coronation Drive in Toowong. The prime site, with 130m of waterfrontage, is also home to the heritage-listed Middenbury House, which is being restored as part of the new development, Monarch Residences. Monarch has been one of the best-selling developments across Brisbane in recent years, with nearly all of the apartments spoken for well before its late 2025 completion through Hutchinson Builders.
Just a handful of penthouses remain in the two-tower project with nine of the 11 residences in the Penthouse Collection, which includes several riverside homes, snapped up in recent months. Predominantly local downsizers seized the opportunity, with an average sale price of $5.85 million. Colliers Director of Residential for Queensland, Andrew Scriven says the demand for Monarch’s top floors and unique River Homes has been incredibly strong, and the remaining penthouses will sell quickly.
"Since coming onto the market, the demand for these once-in-a-lifetime ultra-premium penthouse homes has been incredible," Scriven said.
"We’re continuing to see enquiry from local buyers as well as from out-of-state buyers. The level of interest in these homes speaks to the calibre and design of the Penthouse Collection."
Consolidated Properties Group CEO and chairman Don O’Rorke says the development team’s vision was to deliver a super-premium residential project worthy of its unique north-facing location on the Brisbane River.
“The Monarch Residences penthouses offer unparalleled views, elegant design, and the kind of luxury living rarely seen in Brisbane,” O’Rorke said.
“Every apartment in the buildings is beautiful and in a class of its own – but with the penthouses, we’ve created a very small, exclusive set of residences that elevate themselves into a new class.”
With Monarch nearly sold out, Brisbanites are now turning their attention to other opportunities to live by the river. The latest launch is in Teneriffe, where Kokoda Property Group—the developer behind The Ambrose and Ruby Ruby in Milton, as well as a major precinct project in Melbourne—has unveiled Teneriffe Banks (right and below). This development will be located on one of the last riverfront sites in the suburb, on Skyring Terrace.
Teneriffe Banks will feature five distinct, slender buildings housing over 200 residences, lofts, and penthouses, designed by Studio McCue, Cottee Parker Architects, and Carr. One of the buildings will house the first Kimpton Hotels & Restaurants in Brisbane. The development will also offer an expansive commercial precinct, including more than 4,800 sqm of waterfront dining and retail space, as well as a redeveloped, purpose-built community centre.
Before the official launch of Teneriffe Banks, there were $285 million worth of sales. Over half of the residences have already been sold in The Interloom and The Skyform buildings. The Interloom building connects the urban landscape with the waterfront, featuring up to 404 sqm luxury residences with soaring 3.8-metre ceilings and panoramic views. Perched above the soon-to-be-released Store House Lofts, The Skyform features more spacious apartments that offer up to 334 sqm of luxury living with four-metre ceilings and panoramic views of the Brisbane River and city skyline.
Residents of Teneriffe Banks will enjoy resort-style amenities, with each building including private dining rooms, personal wellness spaces, mineral baths, infinity pools, and exclusive access to the Canopy Club, one of the largest private members’ clubs in Queensland. The Ferry Building, a smaller-scale building, and The Skyform, merges Teneriffe’s historic woolstores with contemporary apartment design. Each Ferry Building home incorporates a large, private courtyard as an extension of the living space, with higher floors offering large terraces to entertain from.
Supply on the river looks like it will continue over the coming years. The next project to launch will come from national developer Traders in Purple. Late last year they secured the prized 1.25-hectare West End site from Crown Group and have plans in with the Brisbane City Council for around 130 apartments and 32 river and terraces homes designed by Rothelowman.
Traders in Purple Director George Geagea said the size and location of the West End site presented a rare opportunity to create a remarkable lifestyle-focused destination just 4km from the Brisbane CBD. “We have long wanted to make our mark in Brisbane’s inner-city but we were prepared to wait until the right site came along.”
Another national developer, ICD Property, who is creating mixed-use towers in Adelaide and Sydney after a string of successful buildings in Melbourne, snared the well-known R&F site on the West End riverfront. While they are yet to revise the plans, approval is there for seven towers with over 1000 apartments on the 1.68-hectare block. ICD paid just under $50 million for the prime riverfront site that cost R&F $82.5 million in 2015.
Plans have also been submitted on the site next door by concrete supplier Heidelberg Materials. Heidelberg, formerly Hanson, is also seeking to develop a new riverside community, which just falls into the suburb of South Brisbane rather than West End. Heidelberg had global design firm fjcstudio draw up plans for a 1.3-hectare precinct that will comprise three 50-level residential buildings with 620 apartments, a food and beverage plaza, and a 5,400 sqm public park (right).
Brisbane is poised for continued growth, following its strongest market performance in nearly four decades in 2024. According to CoreLogic data, unit values in the city surged by more than 16 per cent last year, marking the highest annual return since 1988. With a robust pipeline of projects in the works, Brisbane is set to maintain its upward trajectory, positioning itself as a serious contender to Sydney’s dominance. Last year Brisbane surpassed Melbourne to become the second most expensive property market in the country.