








EAGLE POINT FORESHORE REDEVELOPMENT_
Project Information
TEAM Common & Enlocus
- CLIENT East Gippsland Shire Council
- BUDGET $2,500,000
- STATUS Constructed
- TYPE Foreshore Redevelopment
- LOCATION Eagle Point, Victoria
- PHOTOGRAPHY Thurston Empson
Credits Design Team
COMMON
- John Doyle, Ben Milbourne & Evie Blackman
- ENLOCUS
- Michael Ford, Sylvia Zhang & Stine Bertelsen
Consultants
onemilegrid
- Plancost Australia
- Surfcoast Survey and Drafting Services
- Crossco
- Matrix Engineering Group
The Eagle Point Foreshore Redevelopment is a multi-faceted public renewal project in East Gippsland Shire. Eagle Point is a small holiday town located between Bairnsdale and Paynesville, and serves ...
The Eagle Point Foreshore Redevelopment is a multi-faceted public renewal project in East Gippsland Shire. Eagle Point is a small holiday town located between Bairnsdale and Paynesville, and serves as a major tourist destination for boating enthusiasts.
The project includes the relocation of a public road, the provision of new landscaping and amenities to the foreshore reserve, along with a new public building that houses the reception and offices for the Eagle Point Caravan Park, a public hall, a commercial café, and events deck. The redevelopment also includes erosion control and beach stabilisation measures. Throughout the project, a meaningful and sustained collaboration with the Gunaikurnai Land and Waters Corporation (GLaWAC) has been maintained, in order to develop a cultural asset which integrates into the traditional understanding of the land.
The project includes the relocation of a public road, the provision of new landscaping and amenities to the foreshore reserve, along with a new public building that houses the reception and offices for the Eagle Point Caravan Park, a public hall, a commercial café, and events deck. The redevelopment also includes erosion control and beach stabilisation measures. Throughout the project, a meaningful and sustained collaboration with the Gunaikurnai Land and Waters Corporation (GLaWAC) has been maintained, in order to develop a cultural asset which integrates into the traditional understanding of the land.