Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan
Executive Position
The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Mechanism Summary
- Approval mechanism: GC28 creates the statutory planning permission, while the ICP creates the contribution machinery needed for development commencement. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Infrastructure mechanism: PSP land use is feasible only when roads, drainage, open space, sports reserves, schools, utilities, and contribution liabilities can be sequenced. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Sports mechanism: the Council model converts population growth into reserve hierarchy, reserve hectares, fields, courts, pavilions, lighting, water supply, and management obligations. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Open-space mechanism: flood-prone, culturally significant, and biodiversity-rich land can shift from private yield to public network through PSP/ICP transfer, encumbered open space, PAO, or GAIC works-in-kind where eligible. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Feasibility mechanism: unencumbered land is most valuable for housing and most needed for active sport, while encumbered land is less developable but often essential for flood, habitat, culture, and passive recreation. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Staging mechanism: early stages require contribution certainty; later stages require population-triggered sports delivery, school-sharing agreements, land-transfer continuity, and ecological/cultural investigations. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt; Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt; Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Evidence Ledger
Lens: statutory approval
- L0001 [statutory approval] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0002 [statutory approval] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0003 [statutory approval] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0004 [statutory approval] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0005 [statutory approval] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0006 [statutory approval] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0007 [statutory approval] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0008 [statutory approval] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0009 [statutory approval] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0010 [statutory approval] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0011 [statutory approval] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0012 [statutory approval] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0013 [statutory approval] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0014 [statutory approval] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0015 [statutory approval] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0016 [statutory approval] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0017 [statutory approval] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0018 [statutory approval] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0019 [statutory approval] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0020 [statutory approval] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0021 [statutory approval] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0022 [statutory approval] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0023 [statutory approval] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0024 [statutory approval] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0025 [statutory approval] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0026 [statutory approval] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0027 [statutory approval] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0028 [statutory approval] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0029 [statutory approval] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0030 [statutory approval] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0031 [statutory approval] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0032 [statutory approval] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0033 [statutory approval] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0034 [statutory approval] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0035 [statutory approval] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0036 [statutory approval] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0037 [statutory approval] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0038 [statutory approval] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0039 [statutory approval] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0040 [statutory approval] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0041 [statutory approval] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0042 [statutory approval] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0043 [statutory approval] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0044 [statutory approval] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0045 [statutory approval] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0046 [statutory approval] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0047 [statutory approval] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0048 [statutory approval] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0049 [statutory approval] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0050 [statutory approval] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0051 [statutory approval] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0052 [statutory approval] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0053 [statutory approval] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0054 [statutory approval] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0055 [statutory approval] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0056 [statutory approval] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0057 [statutory approval] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0058 [statutory approval] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0059 [statutory approval] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0060 [statutory approval] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0061 [statutory approval] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0062 [statutory approval] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0063 [statutory approval] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0064 [statutory approval] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0065 [statutory approval] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0066 [statutory approval] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0067 [statutory approval] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0068 [statutory approval] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0069 [statutory approval] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0070 [statutory approval] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0071 [statutory approval] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0072 [statutory approval] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0073 [statutory approval] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0074 [statutory approval] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0075 [statutory approval] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0076 [statutory approval] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0077 [statutory approval] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: document architecture
- L0078 [document architecture] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0079 [document architecture] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0080 [document architecture] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0081 [document architecture] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0082 [document architecture] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0083 [document architecture] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0084 [document architecture] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0085 [document architecture] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0086 [document architecture] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0087 [document architecture] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0088 [document architecture] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0089 [document architecture] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0090 [document architecture] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0091 [document architecture] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0092 [document architecture] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0093 [document architecture] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0094 [document architecture] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0095 [document architecture] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0096 [document architecture] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0097 [document architecture] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0098 [document architecture] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0099 [document architecture] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0100 [document architecture] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0101 [document architecture] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0102 [document architecture] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0103 [document architecture] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0104 [document architecture] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0105 [document architecture] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0106 [document architecture] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0107 [document architecture] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0108 [document architecture] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0109 [document architecture] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0110 [document architecture] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0111 [document architecture] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0112 [document architecture] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0113 [document architecture] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0114 [document architecture] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0115 [document architecture] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0116 [document architecture] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0117 [document architecture] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0118 [document architecture] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0119 [document architecture] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0120 [document architecture] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0121 [document architecture] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0122 [document architecture] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0123 [document architecture] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0124 [document architecture] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0125 [document architecture] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0126 [document architecture] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0127 [document architecture] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0128 [document architecture] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0129 [document architecture] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0130 [document architecture] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0131 [document architecture] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0132 [document architecture] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0133 [document architecture] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0134 [document architecture] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0135 [document architecture] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0136 [document architecture] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0137 [document architecture] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0138 [document architecture] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0139 [document architecture] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0140 [document architecture] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0141 [document architecture] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0142 [document architecture] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0143 [document architecture] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0144 [document architecture] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0145 [document architecture] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0146 [document architecture] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0147 [document architecture] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0148 [document architecture] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0149 [document architecture] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0150 [document architecture] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0151 [document architecture] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0152 [document architecture] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0153 [document architecture] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0154 [document architecture] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: infrastructure contributions
- L0155 [infrastructure contributions] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0156 [infrastructure contributions] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0157 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0158 [infrastructure contributions] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0159 [infrastructure contributions] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0160 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0161 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0162 [infrastructure contributions] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0163 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0164 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0165 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0166 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0167 [infrastructure contributions] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0168 [infrastructure contributions] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0169 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0170 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0171 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0172 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0173 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0174 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0175 [infrastructure contributions] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0176 [infrastructure contributions] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0177 [infrastructure contributions] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0178 [infrastructure contributions] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0179 [infrastructure contributions] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0180 [infrastructure contributions] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0181 [infrastructure contributions] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0182 [infrastructure contributions] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0183 [infrastructure contributions] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0184 [infrastructure contributions] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0185 [infrastructure contributions] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0186 [infrastructure contributions] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0187 [infrastructure contributions] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0188 [infrastructure contributions] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0189 [infrastructure contributions] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0190 [infrastructure contributions] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0191 [infrastructure contributions] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0192 [infrastructure contributions] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0193 [infrastructure contributions] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0194 [infrastructure contributions] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0195 [infrastructure contributions] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0196 [infrastructure contributions] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0197 [infrastructure contributions] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0198 [infrastructure contributions] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0199 [infrastructure contributions] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0200 [infrastructure contributions] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0201 [infrastructure contributions] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0202 [infrastructure contributions] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0203 [infrastructure contributions] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0204 [infrastructure contributions] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0205 [infrastructure contributions] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0206 [infrastructure contributions] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0207 [infrastructure contributions] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0208 [infrastructure contributions] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0209 [infrastructure contributions] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0210 [infrastructure contributions] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0211 [infrastructure contributions] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0212 [infrastructure contributions] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0213 [infrastructure contributions] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0214 [infrastructure contributions] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0215 [infrastructure contributions] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0216 [infrastructure contributions] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0217 [infrastructure contributions] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0218 [infrastructure contributions] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0219 [infrastructure contributions] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0220 [infrastructure contributions] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0221 [infrastructure contributions] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0222 [infrastructure contributions] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0223 [infrastructure contributions] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0224 [infrastructure contributions] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0225 [infrastructure contributions] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0226 [infrastructure contributions] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0227 [infrastructure contributions] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0228 [infrastructure contributions] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0229 [infrastructure contributions] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0230 [infrastructure contributions] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0231 [infrastructure contributions] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: development commencement
- L0232 [development commencement] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0233 [development commencement] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0234 [development commencement] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0235 [development commencement] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0236 [development commencement] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0237 [development commencement] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0238 [development commencement] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0239 [development commencement] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0240 [development commencement] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0241 [development commencement] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0242 [development commencement] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0243 [development commencement] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0244 [development commencement] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0245 [development commencement] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0246 [development commencement] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0247 [development commencement] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0248 [development commencement] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0249 [development commencement] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0250 [development commencement] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0251 [development commencement] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0252 [development commencement] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0253 [development commencement] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0254 [development commencement] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0255 [development commencement] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0256 [development commencement] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0257 [development commencement] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0258 [development commencement] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0259 [development commencement] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0260 [development commencement] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0261 [development commencement] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0262 [development commencement] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0263 [development commencement] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0264 [development commencement] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0265 [development commencement] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0266 [development commencement] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0267 [development commencement] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0268 [development commencement] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0269 [development commencement] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0270 [development commencement] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0271 [development commencement] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0272 [development commencement] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0273 [development commencement] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0274 [development commencement] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0275 [development commencement] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0276 [development commencement] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0277 [development commencement] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0278 [development commencement] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0279 [development commencement] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0280 [development commencement] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0281 [development commencement] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0282 [development commencement] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0283 [development commencement] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0284 [development commencement] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0285 [development commencement] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0286 [development commencement] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0287 [development commencement] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0288 [development commencement] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0289 [development commencement] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0290 [development commencement] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0291 [development commencement] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0292 [development commencement] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0293 [development commencement] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0294 [development commencement] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0295 [development commencement] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0296 [development commencement] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0297 [development commencement] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0298 [development commencement] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0299 [development commencement] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0300 [development commencement] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0301 [development commencement] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0302 [development commencement] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0303 [development commencement] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0304 [development commencement] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0305 [development commencement] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0306 [development commencement] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0307 [development commencement] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0308 [development commencement] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: land budget risk
- L0309 [land budget risk] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0310 [land budget risk] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0311 [land budget risk] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0312 [land budget risk] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0313 [land budget risk] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0314 [land budget risk] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0315 [land budget risk] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0316 [land budget risk] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0317 [land budget risk] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0318 [land budget risk] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0319 [land budget risk] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0320 [land budget risk] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0321 [land budget risk] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0322 [land budget risk] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0323 [land budget risk] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0324 [land budget risk] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0325 [land budget risk] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0326 [land budget risk] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0327 [land budget risk] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0328 [land budget risk] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0329 [land budget risk] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0330 [land budget risk] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0331 [land budget risk] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0332 [land budget risk] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0333 [land budget risk] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0334 [land budget risk] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0335 [land budget risk] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0336 [land budget risk] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0337 [land budget risk] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0338 [land budget risk] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0339 [land budget risk] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0340 [land budget risk] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0341 [land budget risk] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0342 [land budget risk] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0343 [land budget risk] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0344 [land budget risk] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0345 [land budget risk] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0346 [land budget risk] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0347 [land budget risk] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0348 [land budget risk] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0349 [land budget risk] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0350 [land budget risk] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0351 [land budget risk] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0352 [land budget risk] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0353 [land budget risk] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0354 [land budget risk] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0355 [land budget risk] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0356 [land budget risk] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0357 [land budget risk] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0358 [land budget risk] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0359 [land budget risk] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0360 [land budget risk] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0361 [land budget risk] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0362 [land budget risk] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0363 [land budget risk] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0364 [land budget risk] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0365 [land budget risk] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0366 [land budget risk] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0367 [land budget risk] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0368 [land budget risk] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0369 [land budget risk] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0370 [land budget risk] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0371 [land budget risk] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0372 [land budget risk] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0373 [land budget risk] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0374 [land budget risk] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0375 [land budget risk] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0376 [land budget risk] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0377 [land budget risk] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0378 [land budget risk] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0379 [land budget risk] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0380 [land budget risk] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0381 [land budget risk] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0382 [land budget risk] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0383 [land budget risk] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0384 [land budget risk] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0385 [land budget risk] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: PSP staging
- L0386 [PSP staging] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0387 [PSP staging] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0388 [PSP staging] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0389 [PSP staging] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0390 [PSP staging] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0391 [PSP staging] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0392 [PSP staging] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0393 [PSP staging] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0394 [PSP staging] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0395 [PSP staging] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0396 [PSP staging] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0397 [PSP staging] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0398 [PSP staging] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0399 [PSP staging] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0400 [PSP staging] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0401 [PSP staging] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0402 [PSP staging] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0403 [PSP staging] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0404 [PSP staging] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0405 [PSP staging] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0406 [PSP staging] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0407 [PSP staging] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0408 [PSP staging] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0409 [PSP staging] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0410 [PSP staging] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0411 [PSP staging] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0412 [PSP staging] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0413 [PSP staging] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0414 [PSP staging] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0415 [PSP staging] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0416 [PSP staging] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0417 [PSP staging] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0418 [PSP staging] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0419 [PSP staging] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0420 [PSP staging] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0421 [PSP staging] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0422 [PSP staging] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0423 [PSP staging] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0424 [PSP staging] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0425 [PSP staging] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0426 [PSP staging] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0427 [PSP staging] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0428 [PSP staging] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0429 [PSP staging] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0430 [PSP staging] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0431 [PSP staging] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0432 [PSP staging] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0433 [PSP staging] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0434 [PSP staging] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0435 [PSP staging] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0436 [PSP staging] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0437 [PSP staging] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0438 [PSP staging] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0439 [PSP staging] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0440 [PSP staging] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0441 [PSP staging] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0442 [PSP staging] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0443 [PSP staging] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0444 [PSP staging] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0445 [PSP staging] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0446 [PSP staging] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0447 [PSP staging] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0448 [PSP staging] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0449 [PSP staging] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0450 [PSP staging] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0451 [PSP staging] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0452 [PSP staging] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0453 [PSP staging] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0454 [PSP staging] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0455 [PSP staging] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0456 [PSP staging] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0457 [PSP staging] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0458 [PSP staging] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0459 [PSP staging] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0460 [PSP staging] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0461 [PSP staging] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0462 [PSP staging] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: sports hierarchy
- L0463 [sports hierarchy] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0464 [sports hierarchy] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0465 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0466 [sports hierarchy] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0467 [sports hierarchy] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0468 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0469 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0470 [sports hierarchy] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0471 [sports hierarchy] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0472 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0473 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0474 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0475 [sports hierarchy] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0476 [sports hierarchy] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0477 [sports hierarchy] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0478 [sports hierarchy] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0479 [sports hierarchy] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0480 [sports hierarchy] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0481 [sports hierarchy] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0482 [sports hierarchy] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0483 [sports hierarchy] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0484 [sports hierarchy] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0485 [sports hierarchy] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0486 [sports hierarchy] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0487 [sports hierarchy] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0488 [sports hierarchy] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0489 [sports hierarchy] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0490 [sports hierarchy] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0491 [sports hierarchy] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0492 [sports hierarchy] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0493 [sports hierarchy] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0494 [sports hierarchy] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0495 [sports hierarchy] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0496 [sports hierarchy] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0497 [sports hierarchy] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0498 [sports hierarchy] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0499 [sports hierarchy] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0500 [sports hierarchy] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0501 [sports hierarchy] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0502 [sports hierarchy] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0503 [sports hierarchy] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0504 [sports hierarchy] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0505 [sports hierarchy] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0506 [sports hierarchy] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0507 [sports hierarchy] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0508 [sports hierarchy] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0509 [sports hierarchy] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0510 [sports hierarchy] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0511 [sports hierarchy] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0512 [sports hierarchy] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0513 [sports hierarchy] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0514 [sports hierarchy] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0515 [sports hierarchy] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0516 [sports hierarchy] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0517 [sports hierarchy] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0518 [sports hierarchy] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0519 [sports hierarchy] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0520 [sports hierarchy] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0521 [sports hierarchy] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0522 [sports hierarchy] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0523 [sports hierarchy] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0524 [sports hierarchy] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0525 [sports hierarchy] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0526 [sports hierarchy] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0527 [sports hierarchy] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0528 [sports hierarchy] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0529 [sports hierarchy] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0530 [sports hierarchy] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0531 [sports hierarchy] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0532 [sports hierarchy] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0533 [sports hierarchy] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0534 [sports hierarchy] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0535 [sports hierarchy] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0536 [sports hierarchy] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0537 [sports hierarchy] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0538 [sports hierarchy] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0539 [sports hierarchy] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: active open space
- L0540 [active open space] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0541 [active open space] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0542 [active open space] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0543 [active open space] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0544 [active open space] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0545 [active open space] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0546 [active open space] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0547 [active open space] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0548 [active open space] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0549 [active open space] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0550 [active open space] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0551 [active open space] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0552 [active open space] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0553 [active open space] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0554 [active open space] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0555 [active open space] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0556 [active open space] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0557 [active open space] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0558 [active open space] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0559 [active open space] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0560 [active open space] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0561 [active open space] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0562 [active open space] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0563 [active open space] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0564 [active open space] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0565 [active open space] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0566 [active open space] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0567 [active open space] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0568 [active open space] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0569 [active open space] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0570 [active open space] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0571 [active open space] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0572 [active open space] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0573 [active open space] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0574 [active open space] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0575 [active open space] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0576 [active open space] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0577 [active open space] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0578 [active open space] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0579 [active open space] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0580 [active open space] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0581 [active open space] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0582 [active open space] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0583 [active open space] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0584 [active open space] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0585 [active open space] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0586 [active open space] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0587 [active open space] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0588 [active open space] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0589 [active open space] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0590 [active open space] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0591 [active open space] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0592 [active open space] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0593 [active open space] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0594 [active open space] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0595 [active open space] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0596 [active open space] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0597 [active open space] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0598 [active open space] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0599 [active open space] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0600 [active open space] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0601 [active open space] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0602 [active open space] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0603 [active open space] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0604 [active open space] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0605 [active open space] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0606 [active open space] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0607 [active open space] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0608 [active open space] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0609 [active open space] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0610 [active open space] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0611 [active open space] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0612 [active open space] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0613 [active open space] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0614 [active open space] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0615 [active open space] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0616 [active open space] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: school sharing
- L0617 [school sharing] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0618 [school sharing] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0619 [school sharing] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0620 [school sharing] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0621 [school sharing] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0622 [school sharing] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0623 [school sharing] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0624 [school sharing] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0625 [school sharing] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0626 [school sharing] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0627 [school sharing] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0628 [school sharing] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0629 [school sharing] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0630 [school sharing] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0631 [school sharing] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0632 [school sharing] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0633 [school sharing] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0634 [school sharing] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0635 [school sharing] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0636 [school sharing] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0637 [school sharing] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0638 [school sharing] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0639 [school sharing] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0640 [school sharing] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0641 [school sharing] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0642 [school sharing] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0643 [school sharing] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0644 [school sharing] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0645 [school sharing] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0646 [school sharing] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0647 [school sharing] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0648 [school sharing] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0649 [school sharing] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0650 [school sharing] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0651 [school sharing] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0652 [school sharing] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0653 [school sharing] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0654 [school sharing] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0655 [school sharing] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0656 [school sharing] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0657 [school sharing] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0658 [school sharing] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0659 [school sharing] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0660 [school sharing] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0661 [school sharing] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0662 [school sharing] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0663 [school sharing] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0664 [school sharing] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0665 [school sharing] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0666 [school sharing] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0667 [school sharing] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0668 [school sharing] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0669 [school sharing] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0670 [school sharing] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0671 [school sharing] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0672 [school sharing] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0673 [school sharing] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0674 [school sharing] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0675 [school sharing] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0676 [school sharing] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0677 [school sharing] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0678 [school sharing] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0679 [school sharing] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0680 [school sharing] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0681 [school sharing] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0682 [school sharing] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0683 [school sharing] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0684 [school sharing] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0685 [school sharing] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0686 [school sharing] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0687 [school sharing] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0688 [school sharing] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0689 [school sharing] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0690 [school sharing] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0691 [school sharing] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0692 [school sharing] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0693 [school sharing] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: soccer demand
- L0694 [soccer demand] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0695 [soccer demand] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0696 [soccer demand] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0697 [soccer demand] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0698 [soccer demand] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0699 [soccer demand] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0700 [soccer demand] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0701 [soccer demand] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0702 [soccer demand] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0703 [soccer demand] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0704 [soccer demand] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0705 [soccer demand] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0706 [soccer demand] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0707 [soccer demand] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0708 [soccer demand] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0709 [soccer demand] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0710 [soccer demand] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0711 [soccer demand] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0712 [soccer demand] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0713 [soccer demand] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0714 [soccer demand] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0715 [soccer demand] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0716 [soccer demand] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0717 [soccer demand] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0718 [soccer demand] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0719 [soccer demand] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0720 [soccer demand] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0721 [soccer demand] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0722 [soccer demand] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0723 [soccer demand] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0724 [soccer demand] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0725 [soccer demand] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0726 [soccer demand] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0727 [soccer demand] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0728 [soccer demand] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0729 [soccer demand] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0730 [soccer demand] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0731 [soccer demand] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0732 [soccer demand] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0733 [soccer demand] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0734 [soccer demand] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0735 [soccer demand] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0736 [soccer demand] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0737 [soccer demand] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0738 [soccer demand] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0739 [soccer demand] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0740 [soccer demand] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0741 [soccer demand] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0742 [soccer demand] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0743 [soccer demand] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0744 [soccer demand] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0745 [soccer demand] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0746 [soccer demand] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0747 [soccer demand] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0748 [soccer demand] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0749 [soccer demand] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0750 [soccer demand] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0751 [soccer demand] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0752 [soccer demand] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0753 [soccer demand] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0754 [soccer demand] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0755 [soccer demand] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0756 [soccer demand] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0757 [soccer demand] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0758 [soccer demand] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0759 [soccer demand] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0760 [soccer demand] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0761 [soccer demand] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0762 [soccer demand] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0763 [soccer demand] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0764 [soccer demand] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0765 [soccer demand] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0766 [soccer demand] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0767 [soccer demand] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0768 [soccer demand] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0769 [soccer demand] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0770 [soccer demand] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: cricket-football sharing
- L0771 [cricket-football sharing] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0772 [cricket-football sharing] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0773 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0774 [cricket-football sharing] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0775 [cricket-football sharing] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0776 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0777 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0778 [cricket-football sharing] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0779 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0780 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0781 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0782 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0783 [cricket-football sharing] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0784 [cricket-football sharing] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0785 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0786 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0787 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0788 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0789 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0790 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0791 [cricket-football sharing] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0792 [cricket-football sharing] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0793 [cricket-football sharing] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0794 [cricket-football sharing] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0795 [cricket-football sharing] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0796 [cricket-football sharing] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0797 [cricket-football sharing] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0798 [cricket-football sharing] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0799 [cricket-football sharing] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0800 [cricket-football sharing] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0801 [cricket-football sharing] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0802 [cricket-football sharing] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0803 [cricket-football sharing] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0804 [cricket-football sharing] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0805 [cricket-football sharing] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0806 [cricket-football sharing] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0807 [cricket-football sharing] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0808 [cricket-football sharing] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0809 [cricket-football sharing] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0810 [cricket-football sharing] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0811 [cricket-football sharing] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0812 [cricket-football sharing] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0813 [cricket-football sharing] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0814 [cricket-football sharing] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0815 [cricket-football sharing] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0816 [cricket-football sharing] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0817 [cricket-football sharing] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0818 [cricket-football sharing] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0819 [cricket-football sharing] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0820 [cricket-football sharing] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0821 [cricket-football sharing] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0822 [cricket-football sharing] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0823 [cricket-football sharing] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0824 [cricket-football sharing] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0825 [cricket-football sharing] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0826 [cricket-football sharing] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0827 [cricket-football sharing] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0828 [cricket-football sharing] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0829 [cricket-football sharing] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0830 [cricket-football sharing] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0831 [cricket-football sharing] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0832 [cricket-football sharing] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0833 [cricket-football sharing] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0834 [cricket-football sharing] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0835 [cricket-football sharing] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0836 [cricket-football sharing] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0837 [cricket-football sharing] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0838 [cricket-football sharing] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0839 [cricket-football sharing] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0840 [cricket-football sharing] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0841 [cricket-football sharing] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0842 [cricket-football sharing] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0843 [cricket-football sharing] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0844 [cricket-football sharing] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0845 [cricket-football sharing] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0846 [cricket-football sharing] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0847 [cricket-football sharing] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: tennis-netball courts
- L0848 [tennis-netball courts] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0849 [tennis-netball courts] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0850 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0851 [tennis-netball courts] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0852 [tennis-netball courts] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0853 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0854 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0855 [tennis-netball courts] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0856 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0857 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0858 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0859 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0860 [tennis-netball courts] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0861 [tennis-netball courts] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0862 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0863 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0864 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0865 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0866 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0867 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0868 [tennis-netball courts] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0869 [tennis-netball courts] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0870 [tennis-netball courts] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0871 [tennis-netball courts] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0872 [tennis-netball courts] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0873 [tennis-netball courts] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0874 [tennis-netball courts] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0875 [tennis-netball courts] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0876 [tennis-netball courts] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0877 [tennis-netball courts] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0878 [tennis-netball courts] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0879 [tennis-netball courts] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0880 [tennis-netball courts] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0881 [tennis-netball courts] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0882 [tennis-netball courts] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0883 [tennis-netball courts] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0884 [tennis-netball courts] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0885 [tennis-netball courts] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0886 [tennis-netball courts] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0887 [tennis-netball courts] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0888 [tennis-netball courts] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0889 [tennis-netball courts] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0890 [tennis-netball courts] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0891 [tennis-netball courts] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0892 [tennis-netball courts] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0893 [tennis-netball courts] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0894 [tennis-netball courts] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0895 [tennis-netball courts] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0896 [tennis-netball courts] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0897 [tennis-netball courts] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0898 [tennis-netball courts] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0899 [tennis-netball courts] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0900 [tennis-netball courts] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0901 [tennis-netball courts] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0902 [tennis-netball courts] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0903 [tennis-netball courts] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0904 [tennis-netball courts] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0905 [tennis-netball courts] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0906 [tennis-netball courts] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0907 [tennis-netball courts] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0908 [tennis-netball courts] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0909 [tennis-netball courts] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0910 [tennis-netball courts] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0911 [tennis-netball courts] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0912 [tennis-netball courts] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0913 [tennis-netball courts] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0914 [tennis-netball courts] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0915 [tennis-netball courts] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0916 [tennis-netball courts] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0917 [tennis-netball courts] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0918 [tennis-netball courts] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0919 [tennis-netball courts] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0920 [tennis-netball courts] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0921 [tennis-netball courts] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0922 [tennis-netball courts] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0923 [tennis-netball courts] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0924 [tennis-netball courts] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: pavilion scale
- L0925 [pavilion scale] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0926 [pavilion scale] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0927 [pavilion scale] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0928 [pavilion scale] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0929 [pavilion scale] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0930 [pavilion scale] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0931 [pavilion scale] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0932 [pavilion scale] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0933 [pavilion scale] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0934 [pavilion scale] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0935 [pavilion scale] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0936 [pavilion scale] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0937 [pavilion scale] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L0938 [pavilion scale] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0939 [pavilion scale] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0940 [pavilion scale] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0941 [pavilion scale] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0942 [pavilion scale] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0943 [pavilion scale] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0944 [pavilion scale] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0945 [pavilion scale] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0946 [pavilion scale] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0947 [pavilion scale] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0948 [pavilion scale] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0949 [pavilion scale] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0950 [pavilion scale] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0951 [pavilion scale] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0952 [pavilion scale] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0953 [pavilion scale] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0954 [pavilion scale] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0955 [pavilion scale] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0956 [pavilion scale] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0957 [pavilion scale] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0958 [pavilion scale] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0959 [pavilion scale] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0960 [pavilion scale] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0961 [pavilion scale] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0962 [pavilion scale] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0963 [pavilion scale] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0964 [pavilion scale] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0965 [pavilion scale] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0966 [pavilion scale] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0967 [pavilion scale] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0968 [pavilion scale] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0969 [pavilion scale] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L0970 [pavilion scale] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0971 [pavilion scale] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0972 [pavilion scale] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0973 [pavilion scale] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0974 [pavilion scale] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0975 [pavilion scale] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0976 [pavilion scale] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0977 [pavilion scale] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0978 [pavilion scale] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0979 [pavilion scale] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0980 [pavilion scale] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0981 [pavilion scale] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0982 [pavilion scale] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0983 [pavilion scale] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0984 [pavilion scale] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0985 [pavilion scale] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0986 [pavilion scale] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0987 [pavilion scale] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0988 [pavilion scale] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0989 [pavilion scale] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0990 [pavilion scale] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0991 [pavilion scale] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0992 [pavilion scale] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0993 [pavilion scale] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0994 [pavilion scale] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0995 [pavilion scale] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0996 [pavilion scale] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0997 [pavilion scale] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0998 [pavilion scale] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L0999 [pavilion scale] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1000 [pavilion scale] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1001 [pavilion scale] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: population trigger
- L1002 [population trigger] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1003 [population trigger] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1004 [population trigger] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1005 [population trigger] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1006 [population trigger] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1007 [population trigger] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1008 [population trigger] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1009 [population trigger] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1010 [population trigger] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1011 [population trigger] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1012 [population trigger] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1013 [population trigger] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1014 [population trigger] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1015 [population trigger] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1016 [population trigger] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1017 [population trigger] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1018 [population trigger] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1019 [population trigger] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1020 [population trigger] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1021 [population trigger] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1022 [population trigger] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1023 [population trigger] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1024 [population trigger] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1025 [population trigger] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1026 [population trigger] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1027 [population trigger] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1028 [population trigger] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1029 [population trigger] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1030 [population trigger] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1031 [population trigger] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1032 [population trigger] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1033 [population trigger] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1034 [population trigger] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1035 [population trigger] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1036 [population trigger] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1037 [population trigger] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1038 [population trigger] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1039 [population trigger] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1040 [population trigger] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1041 [population trigger] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1042 [population trigger] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1043 [population trigger] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1044 [population trigger] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1045 [population trigger] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1046 [population trigger] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1047 [population trigger] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1048 [population trigger] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1049 [population trigger] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1050 [population trigger] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1051 [population trigger] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1052 [population trigger] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1053 [population trigger] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1054 [population trigger] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1055 [population trigger] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1056 [population trigger] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1057 [population trigger] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1058 [population trigger] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1059 [population trigger] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1060 [population trigger] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1061 [population trigger] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1062 [population trigger] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1063 [population trigger] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1064 [population trigger] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1065 [population trigger] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1066 [population trigger] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1067 [population trigger] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1068 [population trigger] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1069 [population trigger] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1070 [population trigger] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1071 [population trigger] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1072 [population trigger] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1073 [population trigger] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1074 [population trigger] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1075 [population trigger] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1076 [population trigger] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1077 [population trigger] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1078 [population trigger] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: Wallan-Beveridge interface
- L1079 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1080 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1081 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1082 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1083 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1084 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1085 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1086 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1087 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1088 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1089 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1090 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1091 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1092 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1093 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1094 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1095 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1096 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1097 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1098 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1099 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1100 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1101 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1102 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1103 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1104 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1105 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1106 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1107 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1108 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1109 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1110 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1111 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1112 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1113 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1114 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1115 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1116 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1117 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1118 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1119 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1120 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1121 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1122 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1123 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1124 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1125 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1126 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1127 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1128 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1129 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1130 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1131 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1132 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1133 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1134 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1135 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1136 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1137 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1138 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1139 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1140 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1141 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1142 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1143 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1144 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1145 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1146 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1147 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1148 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1149 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1150 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1151 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1152 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1153 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1154 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1155 [Wallan-Beveridge interface] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: regional park interface
- L1156 [regional park interface] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1157 [regional park interface] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1158 [regional park interface] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1159 [regional park interface] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1160 [regional park interface] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1161 [regional park interface] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1162 [regional park interface] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1163 [regional park interface] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1164 [regional park interface] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1165 [regional park interface] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1166 [regional park interface] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1167 [regional park interface] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1168 [regional park interface] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1169 [regional park interface] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1170 [regional park interface] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1171 [regional park interface] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1172 [regional park interface] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1173 [regional park interface] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1174 [regional park interface] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1175 [regional park interface] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1176 [regional park interface] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1177 [regional park interface] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1178 [regional park interface] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1179 [regional park interface] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1180 [regional park interface] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1181 [regional park interface] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1182 [regional park interface] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1183 [regional park interface] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1184 [regional park interface] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1185 [regional park interface] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1186 [regional park interface] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1187 [regional park interface] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1188 [regional park interface] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1189 [regional park interface] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1190 [regional park interface] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1191 [regional park interface] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1192 [regional park interface] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1193 [regional park interface] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1194 [regional park interface] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1195 [regional park interface] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1196 [regional park interface] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1197 [regional park interface] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1198 [regional park interface] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1199 [regional park interface] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1200 [regional park interface] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1201 [regional park interface] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1202 [regional park interface] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1203 [regional park interface] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1204 [regional park interface] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1205 [regional park interface] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1206 [regional park interface] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1207 [regional park interface] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1208 [regional park interface] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1209 [regional park interface] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1210 [regional park interface] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1211 [regional park interface] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1212 [regional park interface] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1213 [regional park interface] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1214 [regional park interface] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1215 [regional park interface] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1216 [regional park interface] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1217 [regional park interface] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1218 [regional park interface] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1219 [regional park interface] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1220 [regional park interface] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1221 [regional park interface] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1222 [regional park interface] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1223 [regional park interface] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1224 [regional park interface] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1225 [regional park interface] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1226 [regional park interface] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1227 [regional park interface] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1228 [regional park interface] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1229 [regional park interface] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1230 [regional park interface] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1231 [regional park interface] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1232 [regional park interface] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: interurban break
- L1233 [interurban break] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1234 [interurban break] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1235 [interurban break] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1236 [interurban break] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1237 [interurban break] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1238 [interurban break] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1239 [interurban break] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1240 [interurban break] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1241 [interurban break] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1242 [interurban break] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1243 [interurban break] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1244 [interurban break] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1245 [interurban break] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1246 [interurban break] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1247 [interurban break] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1248 [interurban break] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1249 [interurban break] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1250 [interurban break] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1251 [interurban break] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1252 [interurban break] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1253 [interurban break] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1254 [interurban break] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1255 [interurban break] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1256 [interurban break] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1257 [interurban break] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1258 [interurban break] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1259 [interurban break] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1260 [interurban break] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1261 [interurban break] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1262 [interurban break] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1263 [interurban break] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1264 [interurban break] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1265 [interurban break] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1266 [interurban break] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1267 [interurban break] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1268 [interurban break] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1269 [interurban break] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1270 [interurban break] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1271 [interurban break] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1272 [interurban break] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1273 [interurban break] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1274 [interurban break] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1275 [interurban break] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1276 [interurban break] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1277 [interurban break] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1278 [interurban break] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1279 [interurban break] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1280 [interurban break] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1281 [interurban break] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1282 [interurban break] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1283 [interurban break] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1284 [interurban break] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1285 [interurban break] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1286 [interurban break] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1287 [interurban break] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1288 [interurban break] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1289 [interurban break] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1290 [interurban break] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1291 [interurban break] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1292 [interurban break] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1293 [interurban break] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1294 [interurban break] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1295 [interurban break] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1296 [interurban break] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1297 [interurban break] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1298 [interurban break] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1299 [interurban break] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1300 [interurban break] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1301 [interurban break] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1302 [interurban break] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1303 [interurban break] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1304 [interurban break] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1305 [interurban break] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1306 [interurban break] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1307 [interurban break] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1308 [interurban break] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1309 [interurban break] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: cultural heritage
- L1310 [cultural heritage] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1311 [cultural heritage] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1312 [cultural heritage] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1313 [cultural heritage] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1314 [cultural heritage] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1315 [cultural heritage] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1316 [cultural heritage] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1317 [cultural heritage] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1318 [cultural heritage] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1319 [cultural heritage] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1320 [cultural heritage] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1321 [cultural heritage] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1322 [cultural heritage] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1323 [cultural heritage] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1324 [cultural heritage] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1325 [cultural heritage] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1326 [cultural heritage] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1327 [cultural heritage] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1328 [cultural heritage] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1329 [cultural heritage] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1330 [cultural heritage] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1331 [cultural heritage] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1332 [cultural heritage] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1333 [cultural heritage] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1334 [cultural heritage] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1335 [cultural heritage] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1336 [cultural heritage] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1337 [cultural heritage] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1338 [cultural heritage] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1339 [cultural heritage] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1340 [cultural heritage] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1341 [cultural heritage] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1342 [cultural heritage] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1343 [cultural heritage] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1344 [cultural heritage] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1345 [cultural heritage] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1346 [cultural heritage] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1347 [cultural heritage] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1348 [cultural heritage] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1349 [cultural heritage] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1350 [cultural heritage] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1351 [cultural heritage] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1352 [cultural heritage] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1353 [cultural heritage] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1354 [cultural heritage] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1355 [cultural heritage] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1356 [cultural heritage] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1357 [cultural heritage] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1358 [cultural heritage] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1359 [cultural heritage] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1360 [cultural heritage] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1361 [cultural heritage] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1362 [cultural heritage] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1363 [cultural heritage] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1364 [cultural heritage] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1365 [cultural heritage] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1366 [cultural heritage] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1367 [cultural heritage] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1368 [cultural heritage] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1369 [cultural heritage] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1370 [cultural heritage] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1371 [cultural heritage] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1372 [cultural heritage] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1373 [cultural heritage] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1374 [cultural heritage] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1375 [cultural heritage] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1376 [cultural heritage] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1377 [cultural heritage] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1378 [cultural heritage] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1379 [cultural heritage] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1380 [cultural heritage] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1381 [cultural heritage] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1382 [cultural heritage] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1383 [cultural heritage] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1384 [cultural heritage] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1385 [cultural heritage] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1386 [cultural heritage] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: floodplain constraint
- L1387 [floodplain constraint] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1388 [floodplain constraint] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1389 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1390 [floodplain constraint] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1391 [floodplain constraint] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1392 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1393 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1394 [floodplain constraint] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1395 [floodplain constraint] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1396 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1397 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1398 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1399 [floodplain constraint] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1400 [floodplain constraint] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1401 [floodplain constraint] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1402 [floodplain constraint] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1403 [floodplain constraint] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1404 [floodplain constraint] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1405 [floodplain constraint] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1406 [floodplain constraint] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1407 [floodplain constraint] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1408 [floodplain constraint] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1409 [floodplain constraint] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1410 [floodplain constraint] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1411 [floodplain constraint] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1412 [floodplain constraint] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1413 [floodplain constraint] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1414 [floodplain constraint] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1415 [floodplain constraint] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1416 [floodplain constraint] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1417 [floodplain constraint] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1418 [floodplain constraint] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1419 [floodplain constraint] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1420 [floodplain constraint] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1421 [floodplain constraint] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1422 [floodplain constraint] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1423 [floodplain constraint] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1424 [floodplain constraint] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1425 [floodplain constraint] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1426 [floodplain constraint] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1427 [floodplain constraint] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1428 [floodplain constraint] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1429 [floodplain constraint] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1430 [floodplain constraint] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1431 [floodplain constraint] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1432 [floodplain constraint] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1433 [floodplain constraint] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1434 [floodplain constraint] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1435 [floodplain constraint] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1436 [floodplain constraint] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1437 [floodplain constraint] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1438 [floodplain constraint] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1439 [floodplain constraint] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1440 [floodplain constraint] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1441 [floodplain constraint] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1442 [floodplain constraint] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1443 [floodplain constraint] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1444 [floodplain constraint] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1445 [floodplain constraint] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1446 [floodplain constraint] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1447 [floodplain constraint] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1448 [floodplain constraint] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1449 [floodplain constraint] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1450 [floodplain constraint] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1451 [floodplain constraint] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1452 [floodplain constraint] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1453 [floodplain constraint] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1454 [floodplain constraint] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1455 [floodplain constraint] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1456 [floodplain constraint] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1457 [floodplain constraint] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1458 [floodplain constraint] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1459 [floodplain constraint] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1460 [floodplain constraint] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1461 [floodplain constraint] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1462 [floodplain constraint] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1463 [floodplain constraint] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: Merri Creek habitat
- L1464 [Merri Creek habitat] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1465 [Merri Creek habitat] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1466 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1467 [Merri Creek habitat] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1468 [Merri Creek habitat] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1469 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1470 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1471 [Merri Creek habitat] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1472 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1473 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1474 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1475 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1476 [Merri Creek habitat] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1477 [Merri Creek habitat] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1478 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1479 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1480 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1481 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1482 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1483 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1484 [Merri Creek habitat] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1485 [Merri Creek habitat] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1486 [Merri Creek habitat] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1487 [Merri Creek habitat] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1488 [Merri Creek habitat] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1489 [Merri Creek habitat] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1490 [Merri Creek habitat] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1491 [Merri Creek habitat] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1492 [Merri Creek habitat] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1493 [Merri Creek habitat] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1494 [Merri Creek habitat] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1495 [Merri Creek habitat] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1496 [Merri Creek habitat] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1497 [Merri Creek habitat] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1498 [Merri Creek habitat] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1499 [Merri Creek habitat] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1500 [Merri Creek habitat] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1501 [Merri Creek habitat] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1502 [Merri Creek habitat] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1503 [Merri Creek habitat] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1504 [Merri Creek habitat] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1505 [Merri Creek habitat] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1506 [Merri Creek habitat] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1507 [Merri Creek habitat] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1508 [Merri Creek habitat] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1509 [Merri Creek habitat] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1510 [Merri Creek habitat] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1511 [Merri Creek habitat] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1512 [Merri Creek habitat] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1513 [Merri Creek habitat] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1514 [Merri Creek habitat] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1515 [Merri Creek habitat] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1516 [Merri Creek habitat] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1517 [Merri Creek habitat] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1518 [Merri Creek habitat] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1519 [Merri Creek habitat] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1520 [Merri Creek habitat] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1521 [Merri Creek habitat] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1522 [Merri Creek habitat] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1523 [Merri Creek habitat] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1524 [Merri Creek habitat] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1525 [Merri Creek habitat] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1526 [Merri Creek habitat] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1527 [Merri Creek habitat] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1528 [Merri Creek habitat] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1529 [Merri Creek habitat] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1530 [Merri Creek habitat] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1531 [Merri Creek habitat] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1532 [Merri Creek habitat] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1533 [Merri Creek habitat] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1534 [Merri Creek habitat] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1535 [Merri Creek habitat] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1536 [Merri Creek habitat] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1537 [Merri Creek habitat] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1538 [Merri Creek habitat] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1539 [Merri Creek habitat] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1540 [Merri Creek habitat] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: Kalkallo Creek corridor
- L1541 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1542 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1543 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1544 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1545 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1546 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1547 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1548 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1549 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1550 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1551 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1552 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1553 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1554 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1555 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1556 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1557 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1558 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1559 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1560 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1561 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1562 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1563 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1564 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1565 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1566 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1567 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1568 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1569 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1570 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1571 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1572 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1573 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1574 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1575 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1576 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1577 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1578 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1579 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1580 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1581 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1582 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1583 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1584 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1585 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1586 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1587 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1588 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1589 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1590 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1591 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1592 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1593 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1594 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1595 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1596 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1597 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1598 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1599 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1600 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1601 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1602 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1603 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1604 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1605 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1606 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1607 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1608 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1609 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1610 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1611 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1612 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1613 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1614 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1615 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1616 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1617 [Kalkallo Creek corridor] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: biodiversity records
- L1618 [biodiversity records] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1619 [biodiversity records] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1620 [biodiversity records] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1621 [biodiversity records] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1622 [biodiversity records] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1623 [biodiversity records] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1624 [biodiversity records] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1625 [biodiversity records] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1626 [biodiversity records] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1627 [biodiversity records] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1628 [biodiversity records] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1629 [biodiversity records] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1630 [biodiversity records] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1631 [biodiversity records] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1632 [biodiversity records] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1633 [biodiversity records] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1634 [biodiversity records] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1635 [biodiversity records] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1636 [biodiversity records] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1637 [biodiversity records] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1638 [biodiversity records] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1639 [biodiversity records] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1640 [biodiversity records] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1641 [biodiversity records] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1642 [biodiversity records] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1643 [biodiversity records] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1644 [biodiversity records] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1645 [biodiversity records] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1646 [biodiversity records] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1647 [biodiversity records] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1648 [biodiversity records] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1649 [biodiversity records] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1650 [biodiversity records] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1651 [biodiversity records] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1652 [biodiversity records] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1653 [biodiversity records] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1654 [biodiversity records] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1655 [biodiversity records] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1656 [biodiversity records] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1657 [biodiversity records] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1658 [biodiversity records] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1659 [biodiversity records] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1660 [biodiversity records] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1661 [biodiversity records] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1662 [biodiversity records] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1663 [biodiversity records] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1664 [biodiversity records] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1665 [biodiversity records] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1666 [biodiversity records] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1667 [biodiversity records] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1668 [biodiversity records] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1669 [biodiversity records] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1670 [biodiversity records] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1671 [biodiversity records] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1672 [biodiversity records] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1673 [biodiversity records] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1674 [biodiversity records] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1675 [biodiversity records] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1676 [biodiversity records] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1677 [biodiversity records] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1678 [biodiversity records] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1679 [biodiversity records] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1680 [biodiversity records] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1681 [biodiversity records] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1682 [biodiversity records] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1683 [biodiversity records] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1684 [biodiversity records] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1685 [biodiversity records] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1686 [biodiversity records] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1687 [biodiversity records] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1688 [biodiversity records] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1689 [biodiversity records] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1690 [biodiversity records] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1691 [biodiversity records] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1692 [biodiversity records] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1693 [biodiversity records] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1694 [biodiversity records] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: open-space deficit
- L1695 [open-space deficit] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1696 [open-space deficit] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1697 [open-space deficit] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1698 [open-space deficit] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1699 [open-space deficit] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1700 [open-space deficit] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1701 [open-space deficit] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1702 [open-space deficit] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1703 [open-space deficit] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1704 [open-space deficit] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1705 [open-space deficit] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1706 [open-space deficit] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1707 [open-space deficit] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1708 [open-space deficit] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1709 [open-space deficit] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1710 [open-space deficit] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1711 [open-space deficit] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1712 [open-space deficit] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1713 [open-space deficit] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1714 [open-space deficit] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1715 [open-space deficit] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1716 [open-space deficit] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1717 [open-space deficit] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1718 [open-space deficit] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1719 [open-space deficit] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1720 [open-space deficit] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1721 [open-space deficit] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1722 [open-space deficit] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1723 [open-space deficit] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1724 [open-space deficit] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1725 [open-space deficit] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1726 [open-space deficit] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1727 [open-space deficit] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1728 [open-space deficit] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1729 [open-space deficit] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1730 [open-space deficit] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1731 [open-space deficit] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1732 [open-space deficit] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1733 [open-space deficit] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1734 [open-space deficit] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1735 [open-space deficit] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1736 [open-space deficit] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1737 [open-space deficit] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1738 [open-space deficit] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1739 [open-space deficit] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1740 [open-space deficit] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1741 [open-space deficit] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1742 [open-space deficit] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1743 [open-space deficit] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1744 [open-space deficit] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1745 [open-space deficit] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1746 [open-space deficit] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1747 [open-space deficit] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1748 [open-space deficit] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1749 [open-space deficit] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1750 [open-space deficit] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1751 [open-space deficit] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1752 [open-space deficit] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1753 [open-space deficit] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1754 [open-space deficit] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1755 [open-space deficit] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1756 [open-space deficit] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1757 [open-space deficit] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1758 [open-space deficit] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1759 [open-space deficit] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1760 [open-space deficit] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1761 [open-space deficit] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1762 [open-space deficit] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1763 [open-space deficit] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1764 [open-space deficit] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1765 [open-space deficit] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1766 [open-space deficit] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1767 [open-space deficit] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1768 [open-space deficit] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1769 [open-space deficit] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1770 [open-space deficit] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1771 [open-space deficit] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: public acquisition
- L1772 [public acquisition] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1773 [public acquisition] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1774 [public acquisition] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1775 [public acquisition] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1776 [public acquisition] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1777 [public acquisition] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1778 [public acquisition] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1779 [public acquisition] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1780 [public acquisition] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1781 [public acquisition] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1782 [public acquisition] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1783 [public acquisition] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1784 [public acquisition] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1785 [public acquisition] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1786 [public acquisition] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1787 [public acquisition] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1788 [public acquisition] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1789 [public acquisition] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1790 [public acquisition] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1791 [public acquisition] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1792 [public acquisition] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1793 [public acquisition] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1794 [public acquisition] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1795 [public acquisition] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1796 [public acquisition] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1797 [public acquisition] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1798 [public acquisition] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1799 [public acquisition] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1800 [public acquisition] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1801 [public acquisition] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1802 [public acquisition] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1803 [public acquisition] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1804 [public acquisition] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1805 [public acquisition] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1806 [public acquisition] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1807 [public acquisition] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1808 [public acquisition] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1809 [public acquisition] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1810 [public acquisition] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1811 [public acquisition] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1812 [public acquisition] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1813 [public acquisition] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1814 [public acquisition] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1815 [public acquisition] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1816 [public acquisition] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1817 [public acquisition] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1818 [public acquisition] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1819 [public acquisition] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1820 [public acquisition] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1821 [public acquisition] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1822 [public acquisition] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1823 [public acquisition] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1824 [public acquisition] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1825 [public acquisition] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1826 [public acquisition] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1827 [public acquisition] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1828 [public acquisition] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1829 [public acquisition] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1830 [public acquisition] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1831 [public acquisition] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1832 [public acquisition] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1833 [public acquisition] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1834 [public acquisition] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1835 [public acquisition] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1836 [public acquisition] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1837 [public acquisition] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1838 [public acquisition] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1839 [public acquisition] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1840 [public acquisition] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1841 [public acquisition] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1842 [public acquisition] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1843 [public acquisition] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1844 [public acquisition] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1845 [public acquisition] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1846 [public acquisition] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1847 [public acquisition] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1848 [public acquisition] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: GAIC works-in-kind
- L1849 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1850 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1851 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1852 [GAIC works-in-kind] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1853 [GAIC works-in-kind] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1854 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1855 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1856 [GAIC works-in-kind] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1857 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1858 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1859 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1860 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1861 [GAIC works-in-kind] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1862 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1863 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1864 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1865 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1866 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1867 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1868 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1869 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1870 [GAIC works-in-kind] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1871 [GAIC works-in-kind] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1872 [GAIC works-in-kind] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1873 [GAIC works-in-kind] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1874 [GAIC works-in-kind] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1875 [GAIC works-in-kind] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1876 [GAIC works-in-kind] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1877 [GAIC works-in-kind] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1878 [GAIC works-in-kind] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1879 [GAIC works-in-kind] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1880 [GAIC works-in-kind] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1881 [GAIC works-in-kind] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1882 [GAIC works-in-kind] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1883 [GAIC works-in-kind] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1884 [GAIC works-in-kind] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1885 [GAIC works-in-kind] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1886 [GAIC works-in-kind] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1887 [GAIC works-in-kind] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1888 [GAIC works-in-kind] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1889 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1890 [GAIC works-in-kind] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1891 [GAIC works-in-kind] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1892 [GAIC works-in-kind] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1893 [GAIC works-in-kind] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1894 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1895 [GAIC works-in-kind] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1896 [GAIC works-in-kind] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1897 [GAIC works-in-kind] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1898 [GAIC works-in-kind] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1899 [GAIC works-in-kind] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1900 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1901 [GAIC works-in-kind] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1902 [GAIC works-in-kind] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1903 [GAIC works-in-kind] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1904 [GAIC works-in-kind] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1905 [GAIC works-in-kind] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1906 [GAIC works-in-kind] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1907 [GAIC works-in-kind] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1908 [GAIC works-in-kind] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1909 [GAIC works-in-kind] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1910 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1911 [GAIC works-in-kind] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1912 [GAIC works-in-kind] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1913 [GAIC works-in-kind] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1914 [GAIC works-in-kind] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1915 [GAIC works-in-kind] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1916 [GAIC works-in-kind] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1917 [GAIC works-in-kind] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1918 [GAIC works-in-kind] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1919 [GAIC works-in-kind] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1920 [GAIC works-in-kind] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1921 [GAIC works-in-kind] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1922 [GAIC works-in-kind] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1923 [GAIC works-in-kind] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1924 [GAIC works-in-kind] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1925 [GAIC works-in-kind] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: quarry rehabilitation
- L1926 [quarry rehabilitation] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1927 [quarry rehabilitation] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1928 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1929 [quarry rehabilitation] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1930 [quarry rehabilitation] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1931 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1932 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1933 [quarry rehabilitation] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1934 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1935 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1936 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1937 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1938 [quarry rehabilitation] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L1939 [quarry rehabilitation] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1940 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1941 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1942 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1943 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1944 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1945 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1946 [quarry rehabilitation] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1947 [quarry rehabilitation] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1948 [quarry rehabilitation] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1949 [quarry rehabilitation] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1950 [quarry rehabilitation] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1951 [quarry rehabilitation] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1952 [quarry rehabilitation] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1953 [quarry rehabilitation] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1954 [quarry rehabilitation] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1955 [quarry rehabilitation] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1956 [quarry rehabilitation] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1957 [quarry rehabilitation] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1958 [quarry rehabilitation] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1959 [quarry rehabilitation] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1960 [quarry rehabilitation] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1961 [quarry rehabilitation] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1962 [quarry rehabilitation] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1963 [quarry rehabilitation] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1964 [quarry rehabilitation] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1965 [quarry rehabilitation] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1966 [quarry rehabilitation] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1967 [quarry rehabilitation] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1968 [quarry rehabilitation] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1969 [quarry rehabilitation] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1970 [quarry rehabilitation] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L1971 [quarry rehabilitation] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1972 [quarry rehabilitation] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1973 [quarry rehabilitation] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1974 [quarry rehabilitation] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1975 [quarry rehabilitation] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1976 [quarry rehabilitation] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1977 [quarry rehabilitation] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1978 [quarry rehabilitation] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1979 [quarry rehabilitation] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1980 [quarry rehabilitation] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1981 [quarry rehabilitation] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1982 [quarry rehabilitation] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1983 [quarry rehabilitation] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1984 [quarry rehabilitation] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1985 [quarry rehabilitation] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1986 [quarry rehabilitation] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1987 [quarry rehabilitation] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1988 [quarry rehabilitation] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1989 [quarry rehabilitation] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1990 [quarry rehabilitation] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1991 [quarry rehabilitation] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1992 [quarry rehabilitation] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1993 [quarry rehabilitation] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1994 [quarry rehabilitation] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1995 [quarry rehabilitation] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1996 [quarry rehabilitation] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1997 [quarry rehabilitation] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1998 [quarry rehabilitation] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L1999 [quarry rehabilitation] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2000 [quarry rehabilitation] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2001 [quarry rehabilitation] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2002 [quarry rehabilitation] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: transport corridors
- L2003 [transport corridors] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2004 [transport corridors] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2005 [transport corridors] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2006 [transport corridors] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2007 [transport corridors] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2008 [transport corridors] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2009 [transport corridors] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2010 [transport corridors] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2011 [transport corridors] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2012 [transport corridors] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2013 [transport corridors] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2014 [transport corridors] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2015 [transport corridors] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2016 [transport corridors] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2017 [transport corridors] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2018 [transport corridors] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2019 [transport corridors] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2020 [transport corridors] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2021 [transport corridors] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2022 [transport corridors] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2023 [transport corridors] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2024 [transport corridors] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2025 [transport corridors] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2026 [transport corridors] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2027 [transport corridors] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2028 [transport corridors] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2029 [transport corridors] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2030 [transport corridors] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2031 [transport corridors] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2032 [transport corridors] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2033 [transport corridors] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2034 [transport corridors] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2035 [transport corridors] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2036 [transport corridors] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2037 [transport corridors] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2038 [transport corridors] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2039 [transport corridors] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2040 [transport corridors] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2041 [transport corridors] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2042 [transport corridors] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2043 [transport corridors] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2044 [transport corridors] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2045 [transport corridors] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2046 [transport corridors] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2047 [transport corridors] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2048 [transport corridors] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2049 [transport corridors] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2050 [transport corridors] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2051 [transport corridors] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2052 [transport corridors] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2053 [transport corridors] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2054 [transport corridors] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2055 [transport corridors] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2056 [transport corridors] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2057 [transport corridors] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2058 [transport corridors] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2059 [transport corridors] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2060 [transport corridors] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2061 [transport corridors] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2062 [transport corridors] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2063 [transport corridors] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2064 [transport corridors] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2065 [transport corridors] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2066 [transport corridors] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2067 [transport corridors] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2068 [transport corridors] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2069 [transport corridors] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2070 [transport corridors] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2071 [transport corridors] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2072 [transport corridors] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2073 [transport corridors] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2074 [transport corridors] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2075 [transport corridors] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2076 [transport corridors] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2077 [transport corridors] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2078 [transport corridors] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2079 [transport corridors] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: developer feasibility
- L2080 [developer feasibility] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2081 [developer feasibility] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2082 [developer feasibility] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2083 [developer feasibility] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2084 [developer feasibility] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2085 [developer feasibility] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2086 [developer feasibility] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2087 [developer feasibility] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2088 [developer feasibility] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2089 [developer feasibility] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2090 [developer feasibility] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2091 [developer feasibility] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2092 [developer feasibility] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2093 [developer feasibility] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2094 [developer feasibility] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2095 [developer feasibility] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2096 [developer feasibility] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2097 [developer feasibility] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2098 [developer feasibility] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2099 [developer feasibility] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2100 [developer feasibility] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2101 [developer feasibility] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2102 [developer feasibility] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2103 [developer feasibility] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2104 [developer feasibility] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2105 [developer feasibility] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2106 [developer feasibility] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2107 [developer feasibility] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2108 [developer feasibility] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2109 [developer feasibility] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2110 [developer feasibility] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2111 [developer feasibility] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2112 [developer feasibility] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2113 [developer feasibility] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2114 [developer feasibility] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2115 [developer feasibility] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2116 [developer feasibility] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2117 [developer feasibility] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2118 [developer feasibility] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2119 [developer feasibility] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2120 [developer feasibility] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2121 [developer feasibility] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2122 [developer feasibility] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2123 [developer feasibility] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2124 [developer feasibility] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2125 [developer feasibility] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2126 [developer feasibility] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2127 [developer feasibility] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2128 [developer feasibility] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2129 [developer feasibility] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2130 [developer feasibility] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2131 [developer feasibility] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2132 [developer feasibility] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2133 [developer feasibility] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2134 [developer feasibility] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2135 [developer feasibility] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2136 [developer feasibility] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2137 [developer feasibility] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2138 [developer feasibility] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2139 [developer feasibility] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2140 [developer feasibility] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2141 [developer feasibility] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2142 [developer feasibility] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2143 [developer feasibility] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2144 [developer feasibility] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2145 [developer feasibility] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2146 [developer feasibility] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2147 [developer feasibility] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2148 [developer feasibility] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2149 [developer feasibility] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2150 [developer feasibility] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2151 [developer feasibility] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2152 [developer feasibility] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2153 [developer feasibility] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2154 [developer feasibility] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2155 [developer feasibility] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2156 [developer feasibility] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: contested submissions
- L2157 [contested submissions] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2158 [contested submissions] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2159 [contested submissions] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2160 [contested submissions] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2161 [contested submissions] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2162 [contested submissions] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2163 [contested submissions] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2164 [contested submissions] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2165 [contested submissions] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2166 [contested submissions] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2167 [contested submissions] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2168 [contested submissions] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2169 [contested submissions] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2170 [contested submissions] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2171 [contested submissions] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2172 [contested submissions] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2173 [contested submissions] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2174 [contested submissions] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2175 [contested submissions] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2176 [contested submissions] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2177 [contested submissions] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2178 [contested submissions] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2179 [contested submissions] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2180 [contested submissions] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2181 [contested submissions] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2182 [contested submissions] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2183 [contested submissions] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2184 [contested submissions] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2185 [contested submissions] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2186 [contested submissions] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2187 [contested submissions] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2188 [contested submissions] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2189 [contested submissions] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2190 [contested submissions] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2191 [contested submissions] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2192 [contested submissions] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2193 [contested submissions] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2194 [contested submissions] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2195 [contested submissions] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2196 [contested submissions] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2197 [contested submissions] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2198 [contested submissions] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2199 [contested submissions] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2200 [contested submissions] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2201 [contested submissions] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2202 [contested submissions] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2203 [contested submissions] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2204 [contested submissions] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2205 [contested submissions] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2206 [contested submissions] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2207 [contested submissions] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2208 [contested submissions] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2209 [contested submissions] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2210 [contested submissions] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2211 [contested submissions] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2212 [contested submissions] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2213 [contested submissions] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2214 [contested submissions] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2215 [contested submissions] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2216 [contested submissions] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2217 [contested submissions] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2218 [contested submissions] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2219 [contested submissions] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2220 [contested submissions] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2221 [contested submissions] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2222 [contested submissions] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2223 [contested submissions] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2224 [contested submissions] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2225 [contested submissions] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2226 [contested submissions] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2227 [contested submissions] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2228 [contested submissions] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2229 [contested submissions] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2230 [contested submissions] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2231 [contested submissions] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2232 [contested submissions] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2233 [contested submissions] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Lens: evidence gap
- L2234 [evidence gap] The Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP is approved and Amendment GC28 was gazetted in November 2017 under the Mitchell and Whittlesea Planning Schemes. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2235 [evidence gap] The Minister for Planning approved the PSP. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2236 [evidence gap] The VPA page says the associated Infrastructure Contributions Plan was the last stage of the planning process and would allow development to begin. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2237 [evidence gap] The final PSP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock Precinct Structure Plan - November 2017. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2238 [evidence gap] The interim ICP is listed as Donnybrook-Woodstock PSP - Interim Infrastructure Contributions Plan - July 2018. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2239 [evidence gap] The VPA page was published on 5 July 2018 and modified on 8 January 2026. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2240 [evidence gap] The VPA page lists spatial data via Open Data but says precinct spatial data is reference-only and has no official status. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2241 [evidence gap] The corpus contains the project page but not the PSP PDF, ICP PDF, panel report, unresolved submissions appendix, or expert statements. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2242 [evidence gap] The VPA supporting-document list includes arboriculture, community infrastructure, IWM, geotechnical, transport, land acquisition, visual character, utilities, employment, fauna, heritage, infrastructure, economics, traffic, panel, expert evidence, and closing-submission documents. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2243 [evidence gap] The VPA page lists a September 2016 Amendment GC28 Panel Report. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2244 [evidence gap] The VPA page lists Part B Appendix 2 as Unresolved Submissions. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2245 [evidence gap] The VPA page lists Hearing Document 41 as MPA revised PSP table 3 and 4. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2246 [evidence gap] The VPA page lists Nick Hooper of Taylors and Nicholas Brisbane of Essential Economics as expert witnesses. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- L2247 [evidence gap] The Sports Field Feasibility Study was commissioned by Mitchell Shire Council to guide active sporting reserves and infrastructure. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2248 [evidence gap] The sports study focuses on greenfield sites in Mitchell South expected to grow significantly in the next 5 to 10 years. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2249 [evidence gap] The sports study expected Mitchell Shire population to more than double in 20 years, with most growth in Wallan and Beveridge. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2250 [evidence gap] The sports study identifies Australian Rules Football, netball, and cricket as established sports challenged by soccer in new communities. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2251 [evidence gap] The sports study uses local, district, and regional sports-facility hierarchy. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2252 [evidence gap] The sports study says new sports fields should be zoned PPRZ, SUZ, or school PUZ. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2253 [evidence gap] The sports study says sports facilities should be on unencumbered land in a central location where possible. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2254 [evidence gap] The sports study says all new active sporting reserves should be master planned by Council. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2255 [evidence gap] District reserves should be at least 8 to 10 hectares in growth areas. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2256 [evidence gap] Active open-space areas of 10 to 12 hectares allow more sport diversity and better passive-active integration. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2257 [evidence gap] Reserve locations near river corridors, schools, and town centres are most favourable. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2258 [evidence gap] Encumbered land can be used for active open space only where community benefit and maintenance are not compromised. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2259 [evidence gap] Synthetic surfaces can maximise use and reduce the number of fields required. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2260 [evidence gap] Wallan concepts respond to projected population growth of 35,000 people by 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2261 [evidence gap] Three new active sporting reserves were recommended for Wallan when population reaches 35,000, expected in 2036. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2262 [evidence gap] Wallan Reserve A includes two senior irrigated ovals with synthetic cricket wickets and four acrylic netball courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2263 [evidence gap] Wallan Reserve B includes two senior irrigated ovals and eight acrylic courts, including four floodlit and four hot-shots courts. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2264 [evidence gap] Wallan Reserve C is a staged soccer facility with four pitches, with Stage 1 including two full-size pitches and a pavilion. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2265 [evidence gap] Beveridge sports planning responds to more than 30,000 people by 2036 and 80,000 by 2054. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2266 [evidence gap] Beveridge was recommended for six Council reserves and four school ovals for football, cricket, and netball. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2267 [evidence gap] Beveridge was recommended for five Council and two school soccer facilities with up to four pitches each. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2268 [evidence gap] Beveridge was recommended for one eight-court tennis facility. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2269 [evidence gap] Community use of school facilities is crucial for sporting competition and training needs. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2270 [evidence gap] Local sporting reserves are approximately 8 hectares for 3,000 to 5,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2271 [evidence gap] District sporting reserves are approximately 10 hectares for 10,000 to 15,000 people. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2272 [evidence gap] Regional sporting reserves are at least 20 hectares for 100,000 people within a 60-minute drive. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2273 [evidence gap] District pavilions are up to 600 square metres and regional pavilions are approximately or up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2274 [evidence gap] The sport table provides one local playing field, at least two district fields, and up to four regional fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2275 [evidence gap] The sport table provides two to four district change rooms and four to six regional change rooms. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2276 [evidence gap] Cricket fields can vary between 137 metres and 150 metres in diameter. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2277 [evidence gap] Soccer guidelines list 100 by 60 metres for A/B fields and 96 by 60 metres for C/D fields. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2278 [evidence gap] Local pavilions are up to 350 square metres, district pavilions 500 to 600 square metres, and regional pavilions up to 1,000 square metres. (Source: mitchell-sports-field-feasibility-study-finalsmall.txt)
- L2279 [evidence gap] The Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung name for the Wallan region is wallan wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2280 [evidence gap] The 2018 Victorian Government commitment led to the wallan wallan Regional Park feasibility study. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2281 [evidence gap] Mitchell Shire growth was described as the fastest in Victoria at 4.5 percent per annum. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2282 [evidence gap] Mitchell Shire had an estimated resident population of 47,837 in 2020 and was expected to add 53,400 people by 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2283 [evidence gap] Wallan was forecast from 12,924 people in 2019 to 43,712 in 2041, an increase of 238 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2284 [evidence gap] Beveridge was forecast from 4,006 people in 2019 to 46,092 in 2041, an increase of 1,050 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2285 [evidence gap] The Northern Growth Corridor Plan recommends an interurban break between Beveridge and Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2286 [evidence gap] Regional park planning uses at least 40 hectares of passive open space per 150,000 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2287 [evidence gap] New regional parks generally take 10 to 15 years to establish. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2288 [evidence gap] The study area is on Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung land and the entire area is culturally significant. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2289 [evidence gap] The study area includes Mt Fraser, Spring Hill, Green Hill, Herne Swamp, Meade Swamp, burrung buluk, Merri Creek, the Wallan Sewage Treatment facility buffer, upper Merri flood-mitigation land, and wooded slopes west of Wallan. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2290 [evidence gap] The future wallan wallan Regional Park was anticipated to be as large as 1,000 hectares. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2291 [evidence gap] Metropolitan Open Space greater than 50 hectares can have a catchment up to 15 kilometres. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2292 [evidence gap] The regional park catchment population was 159,330 in 2016, 231,030 in 2021, and projected at 429,680 in 2036. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2293 [evidence gap] The 2021 to 2036 catchment increase was projected at 198,650 people. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2294 [evidence gap] Mitchell Shire public open space share was 0.7 percent compared with the metropolitan average of 9.3 percent. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2295 [evidence gap] The Growling Grass Frog corridor along Merri Creek is a fixed MSA commitment requiring consistency with EPBC Act approvals. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2296 [evidence gap] Old Sydney Road, Station Street, and Rowes Lane have strong potential as recreation corridors. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2297 [evidence gap] The Cultural Heritage Sensitivity Overlay does not accurately represent Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung cultural values, so a detailed Cultural Values Study is required. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2298 [evidence gap] Park-boundary criteria include environmental character, conservation, cultural landscape, 100 ARI flood levels, feature linkage, open-space connection, urban-growth response, transport access, utility corridors, and accessibility. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2299 [evidence gap] Land transfer should use ICP mechanisms or encumbered open space where possible to minimise purchase costs. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2300 [evidence gap] Land not transferable through PSP/ICP should be protected by Public Acquisition Overlay. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2301 [evidence gap] GAIC works-in-kind applies to eligible growth-area land but will not fund works outside the Urban Growth Boundary. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2302 [evidence gap] Quarry sites require rehabilitation before incorporation into the regional park. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2303 [evidence gap] The future park is expected to be managed mainly by Parks Victoria and WWCHAC, with Melbourne Water likely managing waterways with Growling Grass Frog habitat. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2304 [evidence gap] The current 2005 ecological vegetation extent was severely diminished across the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2305 [evidence gap] Victorian Biodiversity Atlas review found 12 EPBC-listed and 10 FFG-listed species records in the study area. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2306 [evidence gap] Most of the study area is zoned Urban Growth Zone, with Rural Conservation Zones along Merri Creek and Old Sydney Road, on Bald Hill, around northern Mount Fraser, and south of Hadfield Road. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2307 [evidence gap] Flood-prone land may be appropriate in open-space networks to keep flood-affected areas free from development. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2308 [evidence gap] Friends of Merri Creek argued Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements were insufficient and supported an east-west corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2309 [evidence gap] Nature Glenelg Trust viewed restored Herne Swamp as a natural centrepiece delivering flood buffering, erosion prevention, groundwater protection, and recharge. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- L2310 [evidence gap] A 2014 Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung inspection found land within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek is culturally sensitive and needs archaeological investigation before works. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
Contested Issues
- GC28 had unresolved submissions because the VPA document list includes Part B Appendix 2 - Unresolved Submissions, but the actual unresolved-submissions appendix is absent from the corpus. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- Friends of Merri Creek contested the adequacy of Beveridge North West PSP biodiversity requirements and supported an east-west landscape corridor linking Kalkallo and Merri Creeks. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Nature Glenelg Trust framed Herne Swamp restoration as a regional-park centrepiece with flood, erosion, groundwater, and ecological benefits. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
- Wurundjeri Woi-Wurrung cultural sensitivity within 200 metres of Kalkallo Creek creates a pre-works archaeological investigation requirement. (Source: feasibility-for-wallan-wallan-regional-park-report-2022-compressed.txt)
What Cannot Be Responsibly Claimed
- The corpus does not provide final PSP area, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide net developable area, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide dwelling yield, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide population yield, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide final activity-centre hierarchy, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide final school-site count, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide final open-space hectares, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide final ICP contribution rates, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide final ICP works schedule, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide panel recommendations, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide unresolved-submission outcomes, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide parcel-level acquisition liabilities, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide Donnybrook Station concept details, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide traffic modelling outputs, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide road and bridge trigger projects, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide utility augmentation triggers, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide current subdivision delivery status, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
- The corpus does not provide current works-in-kind agreements, so it is listed in the gaps file rather than asserted here. (Source: VPA-Donnybrook-Woodstock-project-page-accessed-2026-04-28.txt)
Cross-References
- Mitchell Shire
- City of Whittlesea
- Donnybrook
- Woodstock
- Beveridge
- Wallan
- Donnybrook Station
- Merri Creek
- Kalkallo Creek
- wallan wallan Regional Park
- Growth Areas Infrastructure Contribution
- Infrastructure Contributions Plan
- Urban Growth Zone
- Rural Conservation Zone
- Public Acquisition Overlay
- Growling Grass Frog
- Victorian Planning Authority
- Northern Growth Corridor