Parks, pastries, and proximity to Melbourne: The prime location of 33 Queens Parade apartments in Clifton Hill

Queens Parade Village is a well-known hub among locals, home to retail shops, hospitality venues, and health and wellbeing services
Parks, pastries, and proximity to Melbourne: The prime location of 33 Queens Parade apartments in Clifton Hill
Darling Gardens is a short walk from 33 Queens Parade.
Joel RobinsonMarch 3, 2025LOCATION

When boutique developer Prime Edition was researching where to create their next apartment project, it was important to focus on some key fundamentals that would allow future residents to live an elevated lifestyle.

Prime Edition, known for its boutique developments in areas like Toorak and South Yarra, aimed to bring that level of quality and craftsmanship to a larger scale. For that, they needed a larger site befitting of their vision.

That led them to Clifton Hill, the small suburb tucked away between Fitzroy and Collingwood.

Very little new development has occurred in recent years in the area, which benefits from being close to the Melbourne CBD.

Prime Edition snapped up a 1,540 sqm site on Queens Parade, near the intersection of Queens Parade and Smith Street, regarded as a prime location.

They recently launched the development, dubbed 33 Queens Parade, a collection of 40 apartments, penthouses, and townhouses that will allow future residents to benefit from a myriad of local amenities while also being well-connected to wider Melbourne.

The development is strategically located across the road from the Smith Street and Queens Parade tram stop, which will benefit city workers as well as families with children in higher education. The tram on Route 86 takes just 20 minutes to get into the city, passing through Fitzroy and Collingwood, and also heads north through Northcote and Preston to the RMIT Bundoora campus. Clifton Hill Station is also just 700 metres away.

There are educational opportunities aplenty on the doorstep. Just 500 metres up the road is the recently opened Wurun Senior Campus, an innovative new facility for Collingwood College and Fitzroy High School’s Year 11 and 12 students. For a younger family, the address is a short walk to Clifton Hill Primary School.

33 Queens Parade residents will also be spoilt for choice when it comes to parks. 500 metres north is Edinburgh Gardens, one of Yarra's largest parks. The 24-hectare park is home to the W.T Peterson Community Oval, a kids' playground, skatepark, basketball court, barbecue facilities, and large expanses of open lawn and landscaped gardens. Around half of the park is dog off-leash.

The same distance from 33 Queens Parade to the east is Darling Gardens, a smaller park with a kids' playground, barbecue, and walking paths.

Just past Darling Gardens is Quarries Park, a network of parks and sports grounds. It's linked by paths across Clifton Hill and connects to the Main Yarra and Merri Creek trails (Capital City Trail).

Queens Parade Village is also a well-known hub among locals. The shopping village runs from Smith Street up to Heidelberg Road and is home to retail shops, hospitality venues, and health and wellbeing services. At the village's heart is Clifton Hill Station, just 700 metres away.

33 Queens Parade fills a gap in the suburb, where the median house price is over $1.7 million, and less than a quarter of dwellings are apartments.

Architecture firm Cera Stribley designed the building so the apartments connect to the outdoors at every opportunity, with balconies, garden courtyards, and private rooftop terraces.

Extensive stamp duty savings apply to residences at 33 Queens Parade until October 2025. Apartment buyers could save up to $124,000, while townhouse buyers could save up to $127,000. Those looking to secure a penthouse could save around $195,000 on stamp duty.

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

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