Hobart Council at Crossroads: Three Decisions That Will Shape the City's Next Decade
As the council enters a critical budget cycle, major votes on waterfront development, public transport investment, and heritage protections will define Tasmania's capital for years to come.
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Hobart's city council faces a defining moment. With three major decisions looming before the end of the financial year, the decisions made in the coming weeks will determine whether Tasmania's capital continues its transformation or stumbles on key infrastructure and development challenges.
The most immediate flashpoint concerns the proposed $180 million redevelopment of Sullivans Cove. The council must decide by mid-July whether to endorse the master plan that would replace ageing waterfront warehouses with mixed-use precincts, residential towers, and expanded public spaces. Supporters argue the investment will attract talent and boost tourism; opponents worry about displacement of creative industries and the loss of working maritime heritage along what remains one of Australia's most characterful waterfronts.
Equally contentious is the transport strategy vote scheduled for early August. Council will determine funding priorities for the next five years, with two competing visions on the table: one prioritising bus rapid transit along the Elizabeth Street corridor to connect the CBD with North Hobart and Glenorchy, the other favouring incremental improvements across existing routes. At roughly $45 million for the rapid transit option against $22 million for distributed upgrades, the choice signals whether Hobart is betting on transformative infrastructure or steady-state management.
The third pillar concerns heritage overlays in the Fitzroy and South Hobart precincts. A heritage review recommends expanding protected status to 127 additional properties—a move conservationists welcome but developers and homeowners fear will constrain renovations and future value. The council must balance preservation of the city's Victorian character against property rights and economic vitality.
What makes this convergence particularly significant is timing. Hobart's population has grown 12 per cent over the past decade, pushing housing costs up 34 per cent since 2020. The council's decisions on development, transport, and heritage will either facilitate that growth sustainably or exacerbate affordability and congestion. The waterfront vote, in particular, will signal whether the city embraces density or preserves low-rise character.
Council meetings are open to the public, with major votes scheduled for 15 July and 5 August at the Town Hall on Davey Street. Residents keen to influence outcomes are encouraged to make written submissions before 10 July.
The choices ahead are not technical exercises. They are philosophical: what kind of city does Hobart want to become?
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