Greenhill Recreation Precinct Master Plan is a concept-level master plan for a recreation precinct in Wallan around the Green Hill volcanic cone. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source frames the precinct as a combined active-sport, indoor-recreation, aquatic, trail, community-park, and landscape-restoration project rather than a single-sport reserve upgrade. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan’s central planning move is to concentrate formal sport and indoor recreation around the lower precinct while using the volcanic cone, summit access, nature corridors, trails, wetlands, swales, and revegetation to protect and activate the landscape setting. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source is a master plan image/text extract, not a full feasibility report, so this page distinguishes confirmed plan elements from unresolved implementation questions. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Source Basis
The source basis for this page is the extracted concept master plan text file greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The extracted source contains a short narrative and a 35-item concept master plan legend. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source does not provide a publication date, adoption date, author, cost estimate, staging table, land-title schedule, planning-zone schedule, overlay schedule, or community-engagement report. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source does not include a capital works program, which means feasibility must be inferred from facility scale, access dependencies, environmental works, and known absences rather than from adopted budgets. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source uses the wording “propose” for the range of facilities, which indicates a concept/master-plan status rather than evidence of funded delivery. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source states that the facilities are intended to cater to diverse interests and age groups, giving the plan a broad community-infrastructure function beyond club sport. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source names Wallan and the Green Hill volcanic cone, tying the project to a specific landscape identity rather than a generic recreation reserve template. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source shows multiple parking nodes marked P, but the extract does not quantify the number of parking spaces. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source shows an existing northern sport area and a new southern indoor/aquatic hub, implying a two-node precinct structure. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source includes a potential future road connection and a potential future ecological link, meaning the plan relies partly on network conditions outside the immediate listed sport buildings. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Planning Context
Wallan is the named locality for the precinct, and the source says the design must blend with the local natural environment. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The volcanic cone is described as iconic, so the master plan has a visual-landscape constraint as well as a recreation-supply function. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source identifies the precinct as Greenhill, while also referring to Green Hill as the volcanic cone; the naming should be standardised in further council records. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The northern precinct contains existing football, netball, and cricket assets, so the plan is partly an upgrade of an established reserve. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The southern precinct contains the proposed new aquatic, indoor recreation, gymnastics, multipurpose-court, tennis, bowls, plaza, trailhead, wetland, and landscape elements. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The master plan therefore creates a mixed asset portfolio with different governance demands: seasonal field sport, indoor court sport, aquatic operations, allied health tenancy, passive open space, trails, and environmental assets. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The northern-southern split matters because renewal of existing sport facilities can proceed differently from construction of a new aquatic and indoor-recreation facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source identifies Duke Street as the northern connection point for the shared path, making Duke Street a key access and active-transport interface. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a main entrance/exit and a southern entrance/exit with left-in/left-out movement, indicating access-management constraints around vehicle circulation. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source contains no traffic modelling, so the access design remains a material gap for events, aquatic peak periods, and weekend sport peaks. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Master Plan Logic
The plan retains and improves existing northern facilities rather than replacing all sport infrastructure with a new-build precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
This reuse strategy lowers land-acquisition pressure compared with a wholly new site, but it increases construction-staging complexity because existing clubs may need continuity during upgrades. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The proposed aquatic and indoor recreation facility is placed at the southern heart of the precinct, making it the primary anchor for southern access, parking, plaza activity, and indoor year-round use. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The indoor district-level aquatic centre is paired with health, fitness, and allied health facilities, suggesting a service model that combines sport, wellness, and possible commercial or tenant-based operations. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Regional gymnastics is planned inside the same integrated facility, increasing the building’s regional draw beyond ordinary local recreation demand. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Indoor multipurpose courts are also housed in the integrated facility, creating a high-intensity indoor sport node with multiple user groups and peak-time parking demand. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Outdoor multipurpose courts connect to the indoor courts by a pedestrian plaza, giving the plaza a functional circulation role rather than just a visual open space. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Tennis courts and bowls greens are located south of the aquatic facility, concentrating court and bowling sports in the southern precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The bowls and tennis shared pavilion is a consolidation device: one building can serve two sports if governance, scheduling, storage, and social-space arrangements are resolved. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The trailhead community park sits near the cone walking trails, so passive recreation and summit access are treated as part of the same precinct economy as formal sport. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Quantified Facility Schedule
The concept legend identifies 35 numbered master plan elements. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains 1 existing vehicle entrance/exit. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 new shared path. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes sheltered seating areas as a listed element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a pedestrian ramp, indicating an explicit grade or accessibility intervention. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains existing club amenities while upgrading social facilities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains 1 existing northern oval. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains an existing playground. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 6 cricket nets. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains 2 existing netball courts. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a change pavilion. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes spectator facilities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan retains 1 existing south oval. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a main entrance/exit. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes nature corridors as a repeated landscape element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a meeting point. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 aquatic, indoor multipurpose courts, and gymnastics stadium building or integrated complex. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a cafe, forecourt, and plaza. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 4 outdoor multipurpose courts. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 12 tennis courts. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 bowls and tennis shared pavilion. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 covered bowls green. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 outdoor bowls green. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 southern entrance/exit limited to left-in/left-out movements. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 trailhead community park. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 nature play area. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 kickabout space. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a nature trail. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes an active trail. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes an accessible trail. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 summit lookout. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes cultural artwork. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a wetland experience. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a pond/swale. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 potential future road connection. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes 1 potential future ecological link. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Sport And Recreation Supply
The formal outdoor-sport base is broad: football, netball, cricket, tennis, bowls, multipurpose courts, and kickabout space are all identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan’s 12 tennis courts create the largest quantified single-sport court allocation in the extract. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The 4 outdoor multipurpose courts create an expandable court-sport supply that can support multiple codes if line marking, lighting, storage, and bookings are resolved. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The 2 existing netball courts anchor existing northern court sport, while the southern outdoor multipurpose courts create a second court cluster. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The 6 cricket nets support training capacity for cricket using the existing oval network. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The existing northern oval and existing south oval mean the precinct has at least 2 oval assets before any new field expansion. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan does not quantify oval dimensions, turf type, lighting, drainage, irrigation, fencing, or seasonal carrying capacity, so playing-field feasibility remains unresolved. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Football and cricket are named as northern precinct uses, creating seasonal sharing implications for oval surfaces and pavilion scheduling. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Netball is named as an existing northern precinct use, which means court condition, female-friendly change, and spectator amenity are central renewal issues even though the extract does not provide condition ratings. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The bowls provision is substantial because it includes both 1 covered green and 1 outdoor green, allowing the plan to serve all-weather and outdoor bowling markets if operating costs are manageable. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Aquatic And Indoor Facility
The source describes the aquatic component as a district-level aquatic centre. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
District-level classification matters because it implies a catchment larger than the immediate neighbourhood but the source does not define the district boundary. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The aquatic facility is integrated with health, fitness, allied health, gymnastics, and indoor multipurpose courts, increasing building complexity and capital cost risk. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source calls the gymnastics component regional, which implies a broader catchment than the district aquatic function. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Mixed catchments inside one building create planning tension: aquatic parking, court sport, gymnastics events, cafe use, and allied-health visits may peak at different times. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source does not identify the number of pools, pool lengths, learn-to-swim water, warm-water pools, spectator seats, court numbers, gymnastics floor area, or health tenancy floor area. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The absence of aquatic specifications is material because pool mix determines energy demand, operating subsidy, user fees, accessibility, and development contributions arguments. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source’s phrase “supporting health, fitness and allied health facilities” suggests a possible revenue and service-integration strategy, but no operating model is provided. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The cafe, forecourt, and plaza connect the indoor building to outdoor recreation uses, making building siting and public-realm design a major dependency. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plaza connection to outdoor courts gives the integrated facility a circulation role that must work for pedestrians moving between indoor and outdoor sport. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Landscape And Environmental Structure
The source says the facilities are designed to blend with the unique natural environment of Wallan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The Green Hill volcanic cone is the dominant natural feature named in the plan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The master plan includes walking trails to the summit of the volcanic cone. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a summit lookout, confirming that the cone is intended to become a destination point rather than just a backdrop. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes nature trail, active trail, and accessible trail categories, indicating differentiated trail experiences and access levels. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The accessible trail is significant because summit environments can be physically constrained; the extract does not state whether the accessible trail reaches the summit or another accessible destination. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The active trail suggests higher-energy movement around the precinct, potentially adding fitness-loop function if designed with gradients, surfaces, and signage. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The nature trail supports passive recreation and environmental education if revegetation, wayfinding, and habitat interpretation are delivered. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source says a revegetation program will restore the landscape, making ecological repair a core workstream rather than optional embellishment. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes nature corridors, a wetland experience, pond/swale, and a potential future ecological link, which together create a green-infrastructure network. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Water And Drainage
The source says passive water features are proposed throughout the precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The concept legend identifies a wetland experience as a specific element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The concept legend identifies a pond/swale as a specific element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
These water elements may have stormwater, landscape, cooling, biodiversity, and amenity roles, but the source does not provide hydrology evidence. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan does not state whether the wetland and swale are drainage assets, constructed habitat, ornamental water, water-sensitive urban design, or a combination. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
This distinction matters because drainage assets require different approvals, maintenance standards, safety treatments, and asset ownership compared with ornamental park features. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The pond/swale location near southern recreation uses may increase landscape amenity, but it also creates child-safety, mosquito, water-quality, and maintenance questions not answered in the source. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Wetland experience design could support trail-based learning if linked to cultural artwork and nature trails. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The source provides no catchment size, flood level, drainage reserve boundary, water-quality target, or maintenance-cost estimate. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Further design should test whether water features conflict with car parking, court platforms, road access, trail routes, or ecological-link objectives. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Access And Movement
The plan includes a new shared path from Duke Street to the new facility and to the southern part of the precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The shared path is explicitly for pedestrian and cycling connectivity, so it is an active-transport infrastructure item, not just an internal footpath. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The path improves north-south integration by connecting Duke Street, the new indoor/aquatic facility, and the southern precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a pedestrian ramp, showing that grade or universal-access management is a built design issue. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The plan includes a meeting point, which can support trail orientation, event marshalling, emergency rendezvous, and wayfinding if designed into the circulation network. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The existing vehicle entrance/exit is retained, indicating continuity of current northern reserve access. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The main entrance/exit is a separate listed element, suggesting the precinct needs a primary access point distinct from the existing vehicle entrance/exit. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The southern entrance/exit is limited to left-in/left-out, which reduces turning conflict but may push some vehicle movements to other intersections. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The potential future road connection is unresolved, so full southern precinct access may depend on external transport-network delivery. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Parking is shown at multiple points on the concept plan, but the extract provides no count, no accessible-space count, no bus/drop-off detail, and no event-overflow strategy. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Community And Public Realm
The plan includes sheltered seating, spectator facilities, a cafe, a forecourt, a plaza, a trailhead community park, nature play, a kickabout space, cultural artwork, and a summit lookout. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
This mix shows the master plan is not solely a club-sport asset; it also targets informal recreation, daily park use, family use, cultural interpretation, and visitor experience. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The trailhead community park is located at the trail head, creating an orientation and gathering function before users enter the cone-trail network. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Nature play and kickabout space broaden the age and activity spectrum beyond organised sport. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Sheltered seating supports passive surveillance and comfort if distributed around courts, trails, park areas, and spectator spaces. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Spectator facilities are listed separately from sheltered seating, implying formal sport viewing needs as well as general rest points. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Cultural artwork is listed as a landscape/community element, but the source does not state Traditional Owner involvement, themes, locations, or procurement method. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The cafe can activate the plaza and trailhead if open across sport and non-sport hours. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Cafe feasibility depends on the final patronage model for aquatic, gymnastics, indoor courts, tennis, bowls, trails, and events. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
The public realm must mediate between high-traffic indoor recreation and quieter volcanic-cone nature access. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Development Feasibility Implications
For Mitchell Shire Council, the plan creates a large multi-asset delivery obligation if adopted and funded, including aquatic infrastructure, indoor sport, outdoor courts, bowls, ovals, paths, water features, ecological works, and public realm. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For developers in surrounding Wallan growth areas, the plan may become a benchmark for community-infrastructure expectations, but the source does not identify development-contribution mechanisms. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For sport clubs, the plan offers improved facilities but also creates disruption risk during staged construction around existing northern oval, netball, cricket, and club amenities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For aquatic and indoor recreation operators, the integrated facility creates operational economies through shared entry, cafe, plaza, and parking, but the source does not test operating subsidy or lifecycle cost. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For transport planners, the plan creates new trips to the southern heart of the precinct and relies on multiple access points, including a left-in/left-out southern access. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For environmental planners, the plan combines revegetation, trails, wetlands, swales, corridors, and ecological links with high-intensity recreation, which requires careful edge design. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For universal-access assessment, the accessible trail and pedestrian ramp are positive signals, but the source does not establish accessibility across the full precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For landscape and heritage assessment, the iconic volcanic cone status makes building height, views, lighting, signage, and earthworks more sensitive than on a flat sports reserve. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For asset management, covered bowls, aquatic water bodies, indoor courts, gymnastics facilities, paths, wetlands, and ovals all carry different renewal cycles. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
For funding advocacy, quantified facility counts strengthen the case for staged investment, but missing cost estimates weaken the ability to rank this project against other Mitchell Shire recreation priorities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Mechanisms And Dependencies
Detailed design is required before the concept can resolve precise building footprints, court dimensions, path grades, parking numbers, stormwater assets, landscape interfaces, and construction staging. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Traffic and access design is required because the plan has an existing vehicle entrance/exit, main entrance/exit, southern left-in/left-out access, and a potential future road connection. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Ecological design is required because the plan includes nature corridors, revegetation, wetland experience, pond/swale, and a potential future ecological link. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Cultural design and engagement are required because cultural artwork is a numbered master plan element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Aquatic business-case work is required because the source proposes a district-level aquatic centre but does not provide pool schedule, operating model, catchment, patronage, or subsidy estimates. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Indoor sport planning is required because regional gymnastics and indoor multipurpose courts share a facility with aquatic, health, fitness, and allied-health uses. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Club transition planning is required because existing club amenities, football, netball, cricket, northern oval, south oval, and playground are part of the site. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Open-space governance is required because the same precinct must accommodate formal bookings, casual park use, trail access, landscape restoration, and visitor movement to the summit lookout. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Maintenance planning is required because the plan adds high-maintenance elements such as aquatic infrastructure, covered bowling green, outdoor courts, paths, wetlands, planted corridors, and water features. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Funding staging is required because the source provides a comprehensive end-state but no sequence, prioritisation, or confirmed capital program. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Contested Issues And Risks
The major risk is cost uncertainty because the source contains no total project estimate or itemised cost plan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A second risk is operating-cost uncertainty because aquatic centres and indoor recreation complexes usually require long-term operating arrangements, but the source provides no operating model. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A third risk is traffic uncertainty because parking is shown but not quantified, and access includes a restricted southern left-in/left-out. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A fourth risk is landscape conflict because large buildings, courts, car parks, and lighting must sit near an iconic volcanic cone. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A fifth risk is ecological fragmentation because trails and formal recreation can conflict with nature corridors and ecological links if fencing, surfaces, lighting, drainage, and maintenance are not resolved. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A sixth risk is user-group conflict because football, cricket, netball, tennis, bowls, gymnastics, indoor courts, aquatic users, trail users, families, and passive visitors all share one precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A seventh risk is accessibility uncertainty because the source lists an accessible trail and pedestrian ramp but does not confirm universal access to each key destination. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
An eighth risk is implementation sequencing because existing sport facilities may need to remain operational while upgrades and new southern works proceed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A ninth risk is governance complexity because shared pavilions, indoor facilities, aquatic uses, allied health, cafe, and open-space trails may have different managers and booking rules. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
A tenth risk is scope creep because the concept plan combines 35 listed elements without a prioritised staging hierarchy. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitoring Signals
Monitor whether Mitchell Shire Council adopts, updates, funds, or supersedes the Greenhill Recreation Precinct Master Plan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether a business case is prepared for the district-level aquatic centre. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether regional gymnastics remains in the integrated facility or is separated into another project. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether indoor multipurpose court numbers are published in later plans. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the 12 tennis courts are retained through detailed design. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the covered bowls green and outdoor bowls green are retained through funding decisions. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the 4 outdoor multipurpose courts remain connected to indoor courts by the plaza. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the 6 cricket nets are delivered as renewal, relocation, or expansion of existing cricket infrastructure. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the southern left-in/left-out access is supported by traffic modelling. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the potential future road connection becomes a committed transport project. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the potential future ecological link is protected through planning controls or landscape plans. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether detailed drainage design clarifies the role of the pond/swale and wetland experience. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether cultural artwork is developed with Traditional Owner input. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether the summit lookout requires separate environmental, cultural heritage, or access approvals. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Monitor whether parking numbers, accessible spaces, coach/drop-off arrangements, and overflow event parking are published. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence Ledger
Evidence 1: the plan proposes active and passive recreation facilities for diverse interests and age groups. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 2: the plan seeks to blend facilities with the natural environment of Wallan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 3: the source names the Green Hill volcanic cone as an iconic landscape element. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 4: northern precinct works improve existing football facilities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 7: the new aquatic and indoor recreation facility is located at the southern heart of the precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 8: the aquatic centre is described as district level. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 9: health and fitness uses support the aquatic facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 10: allied health uses support the aquatic facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 11: regional gymnastics is included in the integrated building. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 12: indoor multipurpose courts are included in the integrated building. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 13: indoor courts connect to outdoor courts via a pedestrian plaza. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 14: new tennis courts are south of the aquatic facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 15: bowls greens are south of the aquatic facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 16: a public plaza connects the southern sport cluster. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 17: a shared path connects Duke Street to the new facility. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 18: the shared path also connects to the southern part of the precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 19: walking trails to the summit of the volcanic cone are part of the recreational offer. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 20: a community park is located at the trail head. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 21: a revegetation program is proposed to restore the landscape. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 22: passive water features are proposed throughout the precinct. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 23: existing club amenities are retained with upgraded social facilities. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 24: an existing northern oval is retained. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 25: an existing playground is retained. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 26: 6 cricket nets are proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 27: 2 existing netball courts are retained. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 28: a change pavilion is identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 29: spectator facilities are identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 30: an existing south oval is retained. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 31: 4 outdoor multipurpose courts are proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 32: 12 tennis courts are proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 33: a shared bowls and tennis pavilion is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 34: 1 covered bowls green is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 35: 1 outdoor bowls green is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 36: a southern entrance/exit is limited to left-in/left-out. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 37: nature play is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 38: a kickabout space is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 39: nature, active, and accessible trails are separately identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 40: a summit lookout is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 41: cultural artwork is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 42: a wetland experience is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 43: a pond/swale is proposed. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 44: a potential future road connection is identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Evidence 45: a potential future ecological link is identified. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Gaps And Research Queries
Confirm the master plan’s adoption status, date, author, council report number, and whether it remains current. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Locate any full report behind the concept drawing, including cost plan, consultation report, traffic assessment, ecological assessment, landscape plan, and staging plan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Confirm land ownership, reserve boundary, zoning, overlays, easements, and whether any land acquisition is required. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Confirm facility specifications for the aquatic centre, indoor courts, gymnastics stadium, tennis courts, bowls greens, ovals, cricket nets, pavilions, paths, parking, and water features. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)
Confirm whether the project is listed in any Mitchell Shire Council capital works program, development contributions plan, open-space strategy, aquatic strategy, or asset plan. (Source: greenhill-recreation-precinct-master-plan.txt)