Six-building cluster in Western Sydney to be formed of acute angles and curved expressions

Fender Katsalidis has designed six apartment buildings of between seven and eleven storeys for Pennant Hills Road in Carlingford, north east of Parramatta.

Lined up along a steep incline, the buildings will be arranged around a central village forecourt, with public pedestrian paths running between buildings and leading to a future light rail connection. The development will deliver 629 residential apartments, a child care centre for 110 children and 17 retail tenancies. There will also be two key residential amenity areas, both including a pool and gym.

The development site had been identified by The Hills Shire Council as a key site suitable for the development of “a substantial number of units,” and a previous development application for a five-building development was approved in 2012 but never built. On buying the site, developer Meriton held a design competition, selecting Fender Katsalidis from a pool of three design teams.

Apartment development on Pennant Hills Road in Carlingford by Fender Katsalidis.

Apartment development on Pennant Hills Road in Carlingford by Fender Katsalidis.

Image: Fender Katsalidis

In planning documents, Fender Katsalidis notes that the aesthetic of the proposed development is derived largely from its form.

“Each buildings form is individual, taking into consideration setbacks, contours, neighbours and solar amenity,” the firm states. “The proposal opens spaces between the buildings to create better public amenity … Forms have been developed accentuating the more acute angles with curved expressions. The design intent of this is to provide a group of buildings which differ in form and layout while sharing similar identities.”

The built form results in a variety of apartment sizes of differing orientation.

The firm also notes the importance of the pedestrian pathways and public realm in defining the built forms. “A network of pedestrian connections link Pennant Hills Road, Shirley Street and the light rail stop through the site,” the design statement reads. “The nexus of this connection forms a natural heart to the precinct and becomes a village forecourt. This forecourt is surrounded by active space including a number of small specialty neighborhood shops, a cafe, childcare centre and a village green.”

Fender Katsalidis has developed the landscape design in collaboration with Urbis.

Related topics

More industry news

See all
The built environment sector produces 40 percent of Australia's solid waste. Built environment sector ‘primed to take on circularity,’ report finds

The federal government has released an interim report from the Circular Economy Ministerial Advisory Group, which identified the built environment as a key sector in …

Draft masterplan for the upgrade and expansion of Wagga Wagga Civic Theatre by ARM Architecture. Concept masterplan unveiled for NSW regional theatre

The City of Wagga Wagga has released a draft masterplan for the upgrade and expansion of Wagga Wagga Civic Theatre.

Most read

Latest on site

LATEST PRODUCTS