8 October 2025

704 student beds planned for Dickson

| By Ian Bushnell
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An artist’s impression of the proposal. Image: Cox Architecture.

A gateway corner in Dickson will be home to two towers and 630 units for student accommodation if a development application for the $119 million project is approved.

Proposed by SMEC for 496 Dickson Pty Ltd, whose director is Canberra developer Wayne Gregory, the project will deliver 704 student beds across nine and 10-storey buildings on the corner of Northbourne Avenue and Antill Street (Block 15, Section 33), not far from Dickson shops and close to public transport.

The DA states that the site is also situated near several educational institutions, including Dickson College (1.6 km away), Academy of Interactive Entertainment (1.6 km), Australian Catholic University (1.8 km), Australian National University (3.9 km), Canberra Institute of Technology (4.5 km), and University of Canberra (4.8 km).

“The vision for the site is to create a vibrant, inclusive and sustainable student accommodation precinct that serves as a dynamic gateway connecting Northbourne Avenue and Antill Streets with Dickson,” it says.

“The precinct will be a model of student living, where students can live, learn, and thrive in a harmonious and supportive environment.”

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The DA states that the development has been designed to be adaptable to other uses if market and community expectations change.

A four-storey office building and surface carpark on the site will make way for the student accommodation.

Plans for the corner site first emerged in 2022, when a 435-unit build-to-rent project across four buildings was proposed, and a buyer/investor was sought for a turn-key development.

The new proposal features buildings arranged around a central plaza, including ground-floor shops to activate the Northbourne Avenue, Antill Street, and Challis Street frontages.

The nine-storey Building A will front Northbourne Avenue, rise to a height of 32 metres and contain 98 units and 172 beds, comprising 32 studio, 24 one-bedroom, 10 two-bedroom and 32 three-bedroom units.

On the ground floor, the building will have a communal dining area, common room, reception and lobby, as well as a 123 sqm commercial tenancy, waste rooms and housekeeping facilities.

A view of the development from Antill Street.

The larger, U-shaped, 10-storey Building B, fronting Antill and Challis Streets, will also rise 32 metres and contain 532 one-bedroom units.

It will feature two ground-floor commercial tenancies, measuring 70 sqm and 91 sqm in size.

The DA says the inclusion of high-quality study rooms, specialty rooms (music, prayer, yoga), laundry, gymnasium and recreational spaces, as well as rooftop gardens, will provide a high level of liveability and wellbeing.

The rooftop spaces will include a communal barbecue area, yoga areas and communal gardens.

An area of 880 sqm, or 14.4 per cent, is proposed for deep soil planting of trees and will include a range of locally occurring and other plant species to assist with urban cooling and shading of both private and public domains.

Several existing trees will need to be removed.

The precinct aims to be a model of student living.

Three basement levels will provide 314 parking spaces, although only 161 of these will be for students, with a 153-space commercial carpark planned.

The DA argues that the ACT Government’s rates for student housing are too high, at 0.5 spaces per bedroom unit, particularly in a highly accessible area such as Dickson, with light rail and cycle paths nearby. It adopts the NSW rate for boarding houses of 0.2 spaces per bedroom unit, stating that the lower rate better reflects the actual parking demand anticipated, aligns with the reduced car dependency, the highly accessible location, and the green travel aspirations of the development.

“This ensures that there continues to be sufficient availability of public car parking within Dickson, and provides additional flexibility for the use of the site in the future,” the DA says.

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Every resident will have a bicycle parking space, with 778 bicycle parking spaces located on basement level 1 and the ground floor. Additionally, 307 storage cages will be provided across all three basement levels.

Ten accessible/disabled parking spaces are included, and six visitor spaces are planned for the ground floor. For motorcyclists, 10 spaces are provided.

A new public laneway is proposed along the southern boundary of the site, with access from Northbourne Avenue and Challis Street, leading to the car and bike entry to the basement carpark in Building B.

The DA is open for comment until 30 October.

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Whats it all about3:17 pm 14 Oct 25

Combined with the Tradies proposed redevelopment this is going to double the last census count for Dickson. Absolute overkill. This development is intended for overseas students (And their families) Australian students are struggling just with education fees. Wrong simply Wrong

Sounds great! And with the the tram stop and bus interchange right there works well. Dickson will get a student vibe. Looking forward to it.

Andrew Cooke12:33 pm 09 Oct 25

Is there a difference between student housing regulations and normal apartments? I can’t help but notice that all the one bedroom / studios have internal bedrooms with no natural light and internal bathrooms with insufficient ventilation.

so 161 car spaces allocated for 704 people, good luck with that! trying to force bicycle use won’t work, do they really think they are all going to want to get around by bike.

Danger Mouse8:40 pm 09 Oct 25

Plenty of students don’t own cars

They could easily get around the City and to ANU by bicycle but yeah….eventually they’re going to want to go further than that and a bicycle ride would be an epic and straineous journey. Buses and the light rail are good but nothing beats the comfort and convenience of having your own car.

Never work. Nobody can visit them either!
Unless they ride a bike

that is pretty normal for students. Most don’t drive

This sounds great but… considering the iconic ‘starving student ‘, how can they afford this accommodation? Predictably, this place is bound to be expensive. 😱

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