First look: Holdmark upsizes Macquarie Park plans to over 700 apartments

First look: Holdmark upsizes Macquarie Park plans to over 700 apartments
Urban EditorialDecember 3, 2025PLANNING ALERT

Developer Holdmark is upscaling its plans for its Macquarie Park Transport Oriented Development (TOD) project, 400 metres from the new Macquarie Park metro station.

The developer has submitted a State Significant Development Application (SSDA) to the NSW Government's Housing Delivery Authority (HDA) that will see the number of apartments on their Giffnock Avenue site increase from 400 to 741. They are now utilizing the majority of the 12,720 sqm site.

According to the Design Report by Studio.sc, formerly Scott Carver, the proposal “integrates podium and tower forms to optimise solar access, views, and permeability,” while also delivering “a porous and active ground plane...with new public domain linkages, landscaped edges, and a strong interface with the future parklands”.

The scheme includes non-residential uses such as retail premises and a supermarket at ground level, alongside more than 7,000 sqm of communal open space. The site will also dedicate 1,000 sqm to road infrastructure and provide 3,025 sqm of publicly accessible open space as required under the precinct planning controls.

The towers are designed to step in scale, with maximum building heights responding to the precinct’s incentive controls of up to 130 metres and 4.75:1 FSR. Material choices, such as natural stone, textured concrete, and brickwork, seek to echo the Lane Cove catchment’s geology and the human scale of Sydney’s historic streetscapes.

Studio.sc’s Design Statement positions the development as “a benchmark and a catalyst” for the transformation of Macquarie Park, aligning with the Gari Nawi neighbourhood vision. “The proposal is informed by direct alignment with the Macquarie Park Stage 1 Structure Plan...ensuring that built form, landscape, and public domain design contribute to a connected, walkable, and culturally expressive precinct,” the report noted.

The likes of TOGA, Urban Property Group, and Meriton are part of the development boom in Macquarie Park.