Justin Brown on Abadeen’s 2026–2027 pipeline: National acquisition drive adds $1 billion to apartment development pipeline
As Sydney continues to face strong population growth and constrained housing supply, Abadeen is entering one of the most active delivery phases in the company’s history.
Sydney’s housing undersupply has intensified competition for well-located development sites, particularly across established harbour-side suburbs where planning constraints limit the delivery of new housing.
Across 2025, 2026 and into 2027, the developer is progressing a significant pipeline of premium residential projects across New South Wales, Victoria and Queensland, while also expanding its future development pipeline through a series of strategic acquisitions. These acquisitions represent a new development pipeline in excess of $1 billion in end value, reinforcing Abadeen’s continued growth across key lifestyle markets.
The company’s approach remains consistent: carefully selected locations, design-led architecture and projects that enhance the surrounding neighbourhood.
Led by Executive Chairman and Founder Justin Brown, Abadeen continues to strengthen its development capability as it delivers one of the most active project pipelines in the company’s history.
Brown says the coming years will see Abadeen deliver a diverse mix of projects across established urban precincts and emerging residential markets.
“We’ve always focused on creating homes that people genuinely want to live in, not just buildings,” Brown says.
“What we’re seeing across Sydney is a real shift in the buyer profile. More people are choosing to rightsize into well-designed apartments in established neighbourhoods rather than move further away from the communities they already know.”
“That demand is particularly strong in places like the Lower North Shore and Eastern Suburbs, where people value walkable villages, proximity to the harbour and homes that feel more like houses in the way they live.”
Several projects are approaching completion through 2025 and 2026, including a number of boutique residential developments across Sydney’s Lower North Shore and Inner North.
Among them are Park Residences in Cremorne, Northcote Collective in Naremburn, The Villas in Neutral Bay, Villea on the Gold Coast, and Mosman Residences in Mosman, continuing Abadeen’s long-standing presence and leading position in Sydney’s Lower North Shore residential market, one of the most tightly held lifestyle precincts in the country.
Alongside these projects, Abadeen continues to expand its long-term pipeline through a series of strategic site acquisitions across Sydney’s most tightly held lifestyle markets.
Recent acquisitions include 101–115 Edgecliff Road in Woollahra, as well as 19–21 Barry Street in Neutral Bay, both positioned close to key transport connections, village retail and lifestyle amenities, where plans have been lodged for boutique residential developments.
Read more: First Look: Woollahra development wave continues as Abadeen plots six-storey apartment block
Read more: First Look: Abadeen plots fourth Neutral Bay apartment development
The Barry St, Neutral Bay plans. Image supplied
On the Northern Beaches, the company has secured 26 The Strand in Dee Why, a rare beachfront site, along with a substantial 4,178 sqm holding at Pittwater Road and Albert Street in Narrabeen, creating opportunities for future residential development in tightly held coastal locations.
Abadeen has also strengthened its presence in Mosman through the acquisition of the Midas and Honeysuckle nursery sites on Military Road, further expanding the company’s footprint across the Lower North Shore.
In Victoria, Abadeen has also continued to expand its development pipeline, building on the success of Malea in Malvern East and securing additional residential development opportunities across Melbourne’s inner eastern suburbs.
Brown says the acquisitions reflect Abadeen’s disciplined long-term investment strategy and its focus on securing well-located sites in established neighbourhoods.
“In established suburbs like Mosman, Woollahra or the Northern Beaches, opportunities to create new housing are incredibly rare. When a site does come up, you have to consider how it will evolve over the long term, not just through a development cycle.”
“Most of the sites we’re acquiring today were never intended to become residential developments. They’re nurseries, older commercial buildings, or underutilised sites that have been part of the neighbourhood for decades.
“The challenge is finding a way to introduce new housing while still respecting the character and scale of the surrounding area.”
A strong pipeline of apartment developments across Sydney continues to underpin Abadeen’s growth strategy.
Head of Development – NSW Apartments, Michael Clark, oversees the company’s current portfolio and growing apartment pipeline.
Clark says the breadth of projects across the portfolio reflects continued demand for well-designed homes in established lifestyle locations.
“The majority of buyers in these projects aren’t first-home buyers or investors. They’re people moving out of family homes who want a different lifestyle without leaving the neighbourhood they’ve lived in for years.”
“That means the apartments have to work very differently — larger kitchens, more storage, proper laundry rooms, and spaces that feel more like a house than a typical apartment,” Clark says.
“In established areas such as Woollahra, the challenge is always finding the right balance between respecting the existing character of the neighbourhood and delivering new housing that supports Sydney’s long-term growth. Our approach is to work closely with leading architects and heritage specialists to ensure new development responds carefully to its context while still providing much-needed additional housing.
“Ultimately our focus is on delivering projects that contribute positively to the streetscape and the broader neighbourhood while maintaining the level of design quality and long-term value that Abadeen is known for.”
The Edgecliff Rd, Woollahra plans. Image supplied
Abadeen is also introducing a new platform focused on larger-scale greenfield residential house and land opportunities as the company continues to expand its national pipeline.
Brown says the new platform will allow the company to pursue additional opportunities while maintaining the same development philosophy that has guided Abadeen’s growth.
“As our pipeline continues to expand, we’re also looking at how we grow the business in a way that stays true to our core principles,” Brown says.
“This new platform will allow us to explore larger-scale opportunities while maintaining the same focus on design quality, liveability and long-term value that defines our projects.”
Looking ahead to 2027 and beyond, Abadeen continues to actively assess new opportunities across Sydney and key interstate markets as it builds on the momentum of its expanding development pipeline.
For Brown, the company’s focus remains on quality rather than scale.
“The most valuable projects are the ones that still feel relevant twenty years later.”
“If a building ages well, integrates into its neighbourhood and continues to attract people who want to live there, that’s the real measure of success,” he says.
Joel Robinson
Joel Robinson is the Editor in Chief at Apartments.com.au, where he leads the editorial team and oversees the country’s most comprehensive news coverage dedicated to the off the plan property market. With more than a decade of experience in residential real estate journalism, Joel brings deep insight into Australia’s evolving development landscape.
He holds a degree in Business Management with a major in Journalism from Leeds Beckett University in the UK, and has developed a particular expertise in off the plan apartment space. Joel’s editorial lens spans the full lifecycle of a project, from site acquisition and planning approvals through to new launches, construction completions, and final sell-out, delivering trusted, buyer-focused content that supports informed decision-making across the property journey
