98-apartment Jenkin House approved on Fitzroy North's Queens Parade
CBE Asia Pacific has secured planning approval for its Jenkin House development on Queens Parade in Fitzroy North, paving the way for a 12-storey mixed-use project that integrates new housing with the adaptive reuse of a heritage-listed Art Deco building.
The Minister for Planning granted permit for the consolidated 2,024 sqm site at 201–215 Queens Parade and 6–12 Dummett Crescent, enabling the delivery of a 98-apartment development with ground-floor retail and a dedicated affordable housing component.
Designed by LiFE Architecture and Urban Design, the scheme brings together a 12-storey tower addressing Dummett Crescent and a five-storey podium fronting Queens Parade, carefully positioned behind the retained Former Clifton Motor Hill Garage. The heritage building, originally constructed in 1938–39, will undergo partial demolition and reconstruction, with key elements such as its distinctive façade and vertical fin retained as part of the new podium.
The development will deliver a mix of one, two and three-bedroom apartments, alongside more than 850 sqm of resident amenity and approximately 780 sqm of retail space at street level. Basement parking for 142 cars and over 130 bicycle spaces will be provided across four levels, accessed via Dummett Crescent.
Approval was granted under Victoria’s Significant Residential Development with Affordable Housing pathway, with 10 per cent of the apartments to be allocated as affordable housing. This requirement formed a key part of the proposal’s planning assessment, which emphasised the need to increase housing supply in well-serviced inner-urban locations.
Planning documents note the project’s alignment with broader state policy encouraging higher-density housing in activity centres with strong public transport access. The site sits within the Queens Parade neighbourhood activity centre, around 200 metres from Clifton Hill Station and adjacent to the Route 86 tram corridor, positioning it within a highly connected inner-north precinct.
The approved design adopts a tiered built form intended to balance increased density with heritage sensitivity. The podium aligns with the parapet heights of the adjacent heritage buildings, while the taller tower is set back significantly from Queens Parade to reduce its visual impact and read as a secondary element in the streetscape.
In its assessment, the Department of Transport and Planning found the proposal struck “a considered and balanced outcome” in responding to both heritage controls and the need for additional housing supply, noting its consistency with planning policy and strategic objectives.
Jenkin House forms part of a broader shift along the Queens Parade corridor, where a number of higher-density proposals have emerged in response to Melbourne’s housing targets and increased focus on delivering affordable housing in established inner suburbs.
Construction is expected to commence before the end of 2027, with completion targeted for 2029.
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
