First look: Sherlock Construction joins Caboolture townhouse boom
Sherlock Construction Homes is advancing plans for another townhouse development in CABOOLTURE’s emerging Goshawk Court precinct, lodging a proposal to deliver 50 dwellings over a 12,370 sqm site at 18 Goshawk Court.
Located on the northern side of Goshawk Court and fronting Cottrill Road and Sims Street, the site is currently improved by a single dwelling and intersected by an existing drainage easement. Under the application, the land will be reconfigured into three lots to accommodate two residential parcels.
According to the Planning Report by Zone Planning QLD, the project comprises 50 two-storey townhouses designed by MODE Design Corp.
Each townhouse will include a private open space of 15 sqm, a single lock-up garage, and additional driveway parking for 24 of the units. An internal driveway network will provide circulation across the bifurcated site, with access taken independently from both Goshawk Court and Sims Street.
“The proposal provides a well-considered and functional design outcome that responds to constraints and will complement and enhance the existing and emerging urban forms in the general locality,” Zone Planning QLD noted in their report.
Communal open space areas totalling 500 sqm will be split across the two lots, with landscaping designed to integrate larger canopy trees and native species reflective of the site’s riparian corridor.
The 50-townhouse application follows Sherlock Construction Homes' broader push into the precinct. Just to the south and east, the builder is also pursuing approval for a significantly larger development across five parcels spanning 65–74 Goshawk Court and 102–114 Pumicestone Road. That application proposes 165 three-bedroom townhouses delivered over four distinct parcels, connected via a new road extension, Kestrel Road.
As noted in the larger application’s assessment report, the surrounding area is “in a state of transition, with the historic rural residential settlement pattern transitioning to a more urban environment.” The adjoining proposal includes communal open space, stormwater infrastructure designed as regional trunk infrastructure, and a density of 51.6 dwellings per hectare, consistent with the Next Generation Neighbourhood Precinct zoning objectives.
