Designated development (NSW)
Designated development is the NSW high-impact DA category under EP&A Act s4.18: 28-day public notice + newspaper + third-party appeal rights to LEC.
Ask Chalkline about this →Designated development in NSW is the DA category under section 4.18 of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (NSW) for high-impact development, requiring a mandatory 28-day public notification period, newspaper advertising, and granting third-party appeal rights to the Land and Environment Court (LEC). It is the most procedurally heavyweight DA category short of state-significant development (SSD). The list of designated development types is set in the EP&A Regulation 2021 Schedule 3 and covers mines, quarries, intensive agriculture, certain industrial uses, and other significant-impact activities. Designated development rarely triggers on residential work but defines the high-impact end of the NSW DA notification spectrum. Verified per EP&A Act s4.18 and Reg 2021 Sch 3 (2026-05-23).
The NSW DA notification spectrum:
| Category | Exhibition | Newspaper | Appeal rights |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard local DA | 14 days | No (unless CPP requires) | Applicant only |
| Advertised development | 28 days | Yes (where CPP requires) | Applicant only |
| Designated development (this) | 28 days | Yes (mandatory) | Third-party objector appeal rights to LEC |
| State-significant development (SSD) | 28 days min | Yes | Applicant + sometimes third-party |
The defining feature of designated development is third-party appeal rights. Anyone who lodged a submission during the public exhibition period can appeal the decision to the Land and Environment Court within 28 days of council’s determination, regardless of whether they have any property interest near the site.
Types of designated development (EP&A Reg 2021 Schedule 3):
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Mineral and aggregate extraction | Mines, quarries, sand mining, dredging |
| Intensive livestock | Feedlots over certain capacity, pig farms, poultry over thresholds |
| Industrial uses | Chemical plants, abattoirs, tanneries, certain manufacturing |
| Waste management | Landfills, transfer stations over capacity, waste-to-energy |
| Energy generation | Power stations, certain large solar / wind |
| Transport infrastructure | Major roads, freight terminals |
| Aviation | Airports, helipads in residential areas |
| Certain commercial activities | Brothels, sex services premises (some councils) |
Residential triggers (rare):
| Trigger | Designated reason |
|---|---|
| Boarding house / hostel over 60 beds | Sometimes; depends on zoning and site |
| Major retirement village | Designated in some councils |
| Subdivision creating > 25 lots | Some councils designate |
| Caravan park or holiday camp over capacity | Often designated |
Most standard residential development (single dwelling, dual occupancy, secondary dwelling, multi-unit up to ~10 dwellings) is not designated. The exceptions sit above typical residential builder scope.
What designated development requires:
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) | Full EIS prepared by qualified consultant; addresses environmental, social, and economic impacts |
| Detailed engineering | Structural, hydrological, transport, acoustic, ecological |
| Public notification | 28 days minimum, newspaper ad, site sign, letters to broader area |
| Submission analysis | Council must review and respond to every submission |
| Hearing if requested | Public hearing where 25+ objections received |
| Ministerial referral | Some designated types referred to Minister |
| Court appeal rights | Third parties can appeal council decision |
Cost and timeline:
| Phase | Duration | Indicative cost |
|---|---|---|
| EIS preparation | 3-12 months | $50,000-$500,000+ |
| Lodgement to public exhibition | 1-2 months | $5,000-$50,000 (council fees) |
| Public exhibition | 28 days | (Included in fees) |
| Submissions analysis + assessment | 3-6 months | (Included) |
| Decision | Variable | (Included) |
| Appeal window | 28 days after decision | (Court costs separate) |
| Total to decision | 8-18 months typical | $60,000-$600,000+ |
For comparison, a standard residential DA runs $1,500-$5,000 in fees and 2-4 months.
The third-party appeal rights (the defining feature):
For a designated development DA:
| Party | Appeal rights |
|---|---|
| Applicant | Standard appeal to LEC if refused or conditioned |
| Council | Standard appeal if dissatisfied with own decision (rare) |
| Objector | Third-party appeal rights to LEC within 28 days of council determination |
| Person aggrieved | Some statutory standing for those affected even without submission |
The third-party appeal rights are unique. For a non-designated DA, neighbouring property owners or community groups have no standing to appeal a council approval (only the applicant can). For designated development, they can appeal an approval AND a refusal.
Cross-state equivalents:
| State | Equivalent category |
|---|---|
| NSW | Designated development (this) under EP&A Act s4.18 |
| VIC | EES (Environmental Effects Statement) under Environment Effects Act 1978 |
| QLD | Impact-assessable development under Planning Act 2016 |
| WA | EPA assessment under EP Act 1986 (significant impact) |
| SA | State-significant development under PDI Act |
Common builder defects:
- Misclassification at lodgement: builder lodges as standard DA, council reclassifies as designated, fresh EIS required.
- No EIS prepared: lodgement refused as incomplete.
- Public notification insufficient: re-notification + delay.
- Missing the third-party appeal exposure: client surprised when neighbour group appeals an approval.
Builder takeaway:
- For most residential, designated development is irrelevant. The category exists; residential builders rarely encounter it.
- For larger projects (subdivisions, retirement villages, large boarding houses), check Schedule 3 of the EP&A Regulation 2021 early to confirm classification.
- If designated: budget 8-18 months and $60k+ in DA costs.
- Don’t underestimate the third-party appeal exposure: an objector can derail a project even after council approval.
Also known as: Schedule 3 development; EIS development; s4.18 development; high-impact development; major project (informal).
Category: Approvals & DA.
Related
See also
Last updated: 2026-05-23. Verified: 2026-05-23. Quarterly review for currency.