Create | Birkdale Community Precinct

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Bringing a world-class precinct to life

It is the largest, most encompassing and diverse community project ever delivered by Council for Redlands Coast. It is Birkdale Community Precinct (BCP), and it is being shaped into something truly wonderful in a collaboration between the community and Council.

We encourage you to keep visiting this site to learn the latest on this regionally significant project set on glorious former farmland in Birkdale. This Your Say project page has a wealth of background on the precinct, including a copy of the Birkdale Community Precinct Master Plan and its supporting document, and details around the journey to this point. It shares the rich culture and history of the much-loved land and details how this heritage will be protected and celebrated. It also explains the unique natural habitat which will be protected and enhanced. It shows how your thoughts and input are shaping it into the world-class community asset that this generation and those to come will enjoy and cherish.

BCP will continue to tell its stories while locals and visitors to the precinct create their own.


Bringing a world-class precinct to life

It is the largest, most encompassing and diverse community project ever delivered by Council for Redlands Coast. It is Birkdale Community Precinct (BCP), and it is being shaped into something truly wonderful in a collaboration between the community and Council.

We encourage you to keep visiting this site to learn the latest on this regionally significant project set on glorious former farmland in Birkdale. This Your Say project page has a wealth of background on the precinct, including a copy of the Birkdale Community Precinct Master Plan and its supporting document, and details around the journey to this point. It shares the rich culture and history of the much-loved land and details how this heritage will be protected and celebrated. It also explains the unique natural habitat which will be protected and enhanced. It shows how your thoughts and input are shaping it into the world-class community asset that this generation and those to come will enjoy and cherish.

BCP will continue to tell its stories while locals and visitors to the precinct create their own.


  • Willards Farm recommended for State heritage register

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    One of Redlands Coast’s oldest surviving farms and residences which was saved by Redland City Council in 2016 from being demolished and subdivided into housing has been recommended for entry into the Queensland Heritage Register.

    Willards Farm, built during the periods of the 1860s to 1910s, was bought by Council in March 2016 and entered into the local Heritage Places Register in June of the same year.

    Redland City Mayor Karen Williams said Willards Farm at 302 Old Cleveland Road East, Birkdale, represented a core value within the 62-hectare Birkdale Community Precinct and is a centre-point for the precinct’s current stage of draft master planning.

    “The Department of Environment and Science has recommended Willards Farm be entered into the Queensland Heritage Register (QHR) with the Queensland Heritage Council (QHC) expected to make the final decision by March this year,” Cr Williams said.

    Cr Williams said Council had identified Willards Farm and all heritage values in the Birkdale Community Precinct as being a priority for protection in the site’s draft master planning.

    “We have been and we will continue to manage heritage values within the precinct appropriately,” she said.

    “In 2021, Council commissioned an updated Conservation Heritage Management Plan which informs the best ways to protect and restore the heritage values of Willards Farm.

    “The original Willards homestead and some original surrounding buildings, such as the milking shed and creamery, are still standing and help to define the whole precinct in terms of our city’s European pioneer history.

    “This is such a well-loved and important property. It will no doubt become a jewel in the crown of Birkdale Community Precinct as we go forward.”

    Cr Williams said Council budgeted $250,000 in the 2021/22 financial year to undertake primarily detailed design works for the restoration of Willards Farm and is appointing a heritage architect to undertake this work, in preparation for its restoration. The work was temporarily halted during the QHR consideration process.

    Division 10 Councillor Paul Bishop said Council was committed to protecting Willards Farm due to its significance for the community.

    “This is quite a remarkable property which offers our community many more layers of value and significance than appears at first glance,” Cr Bishop said.

    “It is a portal into our pioneer past with a wealth of stories, lessons and knowledge to impart, including stories of connection with First Nations People and South Sea Islander labourers. It also remains a place that can be enjoyed, treasured and celebrated by generations to come.”

    This is the second time an application has been made to the DES to enter the property into the QHR, with an ultimately unsuccessful submission being made in July 2015. Both applications were made by the Birkdale Progress Association. QHC has the discretion to make a decision which differs from the current DES recommendation.


  • Historic Willards Farm looks to the future

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    Maintenance work and an updated Conservation Management Plan (Heritage) are underway for the historic heritage-protected Willards Farm as its future place within Birkdale Community Precinct begins to take shape.

    Redland City Mayor Karen Williams said a program of works was being prepared around future restoration priorities for the site, which is one of the oldest surviving farms and residences on Redlands Coast, believed to date back to the 1870s.

    “Works were completed recently to help stabilise the structural integrity of the farmhouse’s main supports,” Cr Williams said.

    “This is such a well-loved and important property in terms of our city’s European history and it will no doubt become a jewel in the crown of Birkdale Community Precinct as we go forward.

    “On-site investigations have been completed as part of developing the updated conservation management plan for Willards Farm.

    “There also will be maintenance work carried out on some of the farm’s significant trees in coming months.”

    Cr Williams said that as well as Willards Farm, Birkdale Community Precinct’s protected heritage areas included the former World War II radio receiving station built in 1943 by the US Army Signals Corp and its associated rhombic array of radio antennas.

    “The heritage values of this precinct are incredibly important, genuinely fascinating and will be protected,” Cr Williams said.

    Division 10 Councillor Paul Bishop said Willards Farm, aka The Pines, held a special place in both history and the heart of the Birkdale community.

    “There are so many heritage values tied up in this place, there are gateways to knowledge and ongoing stories of significance yet to be explored here,” Cr Bishop said.

    The original homestead and surrounding buildings, such as the milking shed and creamery, help to anchor the entire Birkdale Community Precinct within its early European and pioneer context.

    “The place is of so much value to future generations it cannot be underestimated.

    “The structures were built by the Willards using simple bush carpentry techniques made from local timbers felled on site, including white beech, swamp beech, cedar and pine.

    “The exact date the homestead was constructed is uncertain but it was likely around 1876 when owners James and Margaret Willard took out a mortgage on the land they had owned and farmed since 1865.”

    Cr Williams said Council bought the property at 302 Old Cleveland Road East, Birkdale, in March 2016 following community concern that the site was subject to a development approval for subdivision into residential allotments.

    “Once Willards Farm was saved, Council worked long and hard to negotiate the purchase of the neighbouring 61-hectares of Commonwealth land,” she said.

    “The Commonwealth had indicated this land was tagged as surplus. As such, it also was in threat of being subdivided into residential allotments, with the Government suggesting it could accommodate 400 houses.

    “Council managed to secure the purchase of the land in December 2019.

    “The combined properties now form Birkdale Community Precinct.

    “It is such a large property that a large number of uses and facilities can be accommodated without impacting on the precinct’s heritage values.

    “Other uses will also bring attention and appreciation to the heritage-listed sites that it contains.”

    Cr Williams said a vision document for the precinct was currently being prepared and would be presented to Council shortly.

    “The document will include high level, aspirational concepts for Willards Farm and its surrounding land to reflect ideas as suggested by the community during Council’s seven-week community engagement program earlier this year,” she said

    Some of the ideas put forward for Willards Farm by the community include ventures such as farmers’ market place, bush food gardens, a café or restaurant, paddock-to-plate dining experiences, and an agrifarm experience demonstrating traditional and contemporary farming methods.

    Further community consultation will occur at the master planning stage, Cr Williams said.

Page last updated: 07 Feb 2024, 03:17 PM