Former Wilson’s Boathouse to Open as Manly Boathouse This Summer

A new food and lifestyle precinct at the former Wilson’s Boathouse site will open at the Manly Harbour this summer. New tenants Nikki and Greg Kay, who run the popular Reef Seafood and Sushi in Newstead, have moved in to establish Manly Boathouse. 

Wilson’s Boathouse lost its bid to remain in the waterfront after the Supreme Court stepped in and ordered the owners to vacate the premises. The restaurant closed permanently after 18 years of operation.



The award-winning seafood restaurant, which was once visited by Hollywood star Angeline Jolie, lost its tenancy effective 15 Oct 2020. Despite fighting to stay open, Wilson’s Boathouse owners Neil Jedid and Diane Mansfield said it was an unequal match against the government. 

The Department of Transport and Main Roads owns the land where the restaurant stood. 

“This is a heartfelt thank you to everyone who supported us for the past 18yrs,” the owners posted on Facebook. “We appreciated your loyalty immensely, we love our community. Everyone knows what happened to us, and we thank everyone who helped us with our cause. We’re looking forward for another venture, you’ll see Wilson’s Boathouse somewhere soon.”

Photo Credit: Facebook

Meanwhile, refurbishments and renovations are on-going for the new restaurant. The Kays are adding picnic tables by the waterfront of the Manly Boathouse, which will have a gelateria, a French patisserie and a fish and chippery.  

Photo Credit: Reef Seafood and Sushi

Two private dining rooms will be added to the main building where intimate parties like weddings and other functions can take place. 



Chef Braden White will head Manly Boathouse’s kitchen, which will open from breakfast to dinner for the whole week. The Kays also plans to add a drive-through service for boaties.

Manly Boathouse‘s redevelopment is expected to be completed by the end of the year and will open in time for the summer. For store updates, follow their Facebook page

Have Your Say About the Manly Harbour Village Precinct Project

The city council is urging the local community around Manly to have their say on the Manly Harbour Village Precinct Project which aims to revitalise the neighbourhood shopping precinct on Cambridge Parade as well as a section of the Esplanade. 

The project, which will cost $890,000, will improve the amenity, connection, and safety for residents and visitors to the centre whilst instilling a stronger community sense of place and pride. At the same time, the project aims to contribute to economic growth in the area. 

Among the improvements included in the neighbourhood project are: 

  • Footpath upgrades to improve accessibility, areas of underutilised space and visual amenity
  • Improving pedestrian safety and accessibility by upgrading existing crossing points
  • Tree planting to improve visual and physical amenity while providing shade
  • Groundcover plantings to new and existing garden beds
  • Standard and unique street furniture
  • Creating placemaking opportunities and delivering creative outcomes
Photo credit: Brisbane City Council

Read: Big Changes Planned For Manly Boat Harbour; New Ideas Sought


Consultation via information kiosks on site has just been completed, but the local community can still provide feedback about the project through the online survey until midnight on Sunday, 20 September 2020

The survey aims to know and understand what the local community think is important in their neighbourhood. The result of the consultation will influence the design concept which will be presented back to the community in the middle of November 2020. 

Construction is planned to start in early 2021 and should be completed in mid-2021, depending on weather and site conditions. 

For more information about the Manly Harbour Village Precinct Project, contact Council on 07 3403 8888. 



Lota House: COVID-19 Delays New Retirement Village Construction

The COVID-19 pandemic will delay the redevelopment of the heritage-listed Lota House. Detailed designs of the $67 million retirement village facility, located some two kilometres off the Manly Boat Harbour, are still in the process of finalisation.

A spokesperson for the Village Retirement Group confirmed that the pandemic has impacted plans for Lota House. It comes after the Manly retirement village project received heavy opposition from Bayside residents. 

Brisbane City Council previously rejected the development application but the Planning and Environment Court overturned the ruling in late 2019. Locals said that the planned retirement village will ruin the view, character area and habitat surrounding the Edwin Marsden Tooth Memorial Building (Lota House).

Photo Credit: PD Online/Brisbane City Council
Photo Credit: PD Online/Brisbane City Council


Brief History of the Lota House

Located at 162 Oceana Terrace, this house was built in 1865 for William Duckett White and his family. It remained in the Duckett White family until a grandson, also named William,  subdivided the estate in 1911. 

In 1913, a cousin, Graham Ernest Mylne, bought the property and moved in with his wife and children. Following his death in 1958, his wife Kathleen sold Lota House to the Anglican Church. The church used the money gifted by Mr Marsden Tooth, a businessman and philanthropist, to establish a home care facility. 

Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

The Lota House was listed as a heritage site in 1992 as significant to the establishment of the upper-class estates in Brisbane’s eastern bayside area. It is one of the oldest surviving residential homes in Manly-Lota, showing a glimpse of the 1860s Georgian influence. 

The property is still owned by the Anglican Church. 

Why Residents Opposed Redevelopment

About 100 Bayside residents protested after the original ruling saying no to development was overturned. Locals don’t want a high-rise in the area. 

“Multi-storey developments would significantly change the area and ruin it in our eyes,” one resident said. “Lota is a quiet leafy suburb with beautiful green space and picnic/playground areas on the waterfront. Increasing density opens up the area to significant commercial development. Friends, family, neighbours and locals alike that I have spoken to, invested in this area for the quiet retreat that it is.”



The Bayside Action Group also opposes the development because the planned retirement village will cost between $755,000 and $849,000 per unit. 

“This means that many local residents who currently live in the area will not be able to afford these units and will need to look at options outside the area. The Anglican Church  says that the local community wants this development so families can remain close, but it appears that most will not be able to afford to live in this development if built.”

Manly Pool Reopens After COVID-19 Shutdown

Manly Pool is reopening its doors to the public after its COVID-19 safety plans were approved by the Queensland Government. 

On Monday 13 July, the Manly Pool will open again after months of closure as it implements improvements in sanitation and crowd management measures. 

All of the 22 pools run by the city council closed on 23 March following directives from the State Government due to the coronavirus health scare. 

Since June 3, 10 pools have reopened after complying with the Aquatic Industry COVID Safe Plan. 

Manly Pool, which is located on the foreshore next to the Marina, is among the six council pools that are reopening this week. Other facilities reopening are the Acacia Ridge, Emily Seebohm, Jindalee, Newmarket, and Sandgate pools. 



On its reopening day, Manly Pool is scheduling Aqua and Forever Young programs. Manly Pool is also laying down guidelines for visitors coming to the facility.  

Pool REOPENING Monday 13 July 2020. Information regarding COVID 19 restrictions/regulations to be advised closer to…

Posted by Manly Pool on Monday, June 29, 2020

The facility offers an outdoor pool, disabled access, kiosk, wading pool, water play, squad swimming, and swimming lessons. 

For more information on operating schedules and conditions, contact Manly Pool at 07 3396 2578 or visit the Manly Pool website

Big Changes Planned For Manly Boat Harbour; New Ideas Sought

Australia’s largest boat harbour is up for some big changes and the Department of Transport and Main Roads (TMR), which owns and operates the facility, opened an online forum where Brisbane residents may share their ideas for improvements before the redevelopment begins. 

Locals may post their thoughts on what they want to see improved at the Manly Boat Harbor via the Ideas Wall. TMR is also taking a survey to hear the inputs from residents.  

“We want to better understand what the community values about the Manly Boat Harbour, how the community currently uses the Manly Boat Harbour, and ideas about how the community could use it in the future,” TMR stated on the survey’s website. 



Photo Credit: Julianne Davies/Manly Boat Harbour/Facebook

Some of the ideas, so far, include upgrading and modernising the Wynnum wading pool, the rock wall area, and Wilson’s Boathouse. Residents also want a bigger green space for dining and entertaining, as well as better lighting along the esplanade, more bins for rubbish collection, and police patrol. 

“Create an outrigger, kayak, canoe, kite surfing, windsurfing, SUP area to the right side of RQYS. Right now it’s just a road with minimal parking and no facilities. It could be turned into a beautiful day-use area for picnics with showers, cafes,” a resident shared. 

“With international travel drying up and with domestic travel playing such a critical role in the economic recovery, there has never been a better time to invest in the entire Wynnum manly esplanade. State govt/ BCC has never truly appreciated the tourism opportunity Wynnum manly presents. It’s both a destination in itself and a gateway to the islands and our bay,” another local said.



State Member Joan Pease said the inputs from the locals and stakeholders will be “used to inform and guide future planning.” 

The online forum will be open until Friday, 14 August 2020.

1905 Mortgage Saves Manly House from Demolition

A home on the Esplanade in Manly was saved from demolition by a £300 mortgage taken out in 1905, after a couple who had owned the property for more than 20 years sought Council approval to tear it down for development purposes, stating that its pre-1911 status could not be definitiely proven.

Two years ago, a development application was submitted to Brisbane City Council by Warren and Paula Hurst, seeking to demolish the 503-sqm bayside home for development purposes.

The development application was rejected by Council, in keeping with planning legislation prohibiting the demolition of houses built before 1911. In 2017, an extensive heritage mapping had identified these structures as protective from demolition on heritage and character grounds.

An appeal from the couple was lodged before the Planning and Development Court, asking that demolition be permitted to proceed on grounds that there did not exist unequivocal proof that the house was built before 1911.

Judge Richard Jones of the Planning and Development Court handed down his decision in May 2020, affirming the house’s heritage status and protecting it from being demolished.

Judge Jones laid down several points in support of his decision.

1905 Mortgage and Heritage Features

Records indicate that Frances Howard had purchased the property in 1905 and taken out a mortgage in the amount of £300.

Mrs Howard was a prominent businesswoman and housewife known to have purchased several properties in the Esplanade area during the turn of the 20th century, among them the property in question.

Expert witnesses from the Council countered the owner’s argument that the age of the structure could not be proved, citing other characteristics of the structure, such as the 150-mm VJ boards, the type of timber boards used to build the house, and the construction of a separate verandah roof, a typically pre-1911 construction feature.

The Council relied on two expert witnesses, historian Dr Thom Blake and conservation and heritage architect Michael Kennedy. In their expert testimony as summarised in the judgment, Dr Blake pointed to the mortgage as the best evidence in support of a pre-1911 construction. Mr Kennedy, on other hand, said the “most probative evidence in support of that conclusion were the physical characteristics of the building but, nonetheless, the mortgage provided support for that conclusion.”

“Indeed, during cross examination, Mr Kennedy went so far as to say that this was not a circumstantial case at all and that he was 99 percent certain that the dwelling was a pre-1911 building “by the width of the boarding alone,” Judge Jones said in his decision.


Read : Have You Seen the Hidden Animal Figures on the Great Wall of Manly?


For his part, Dr Blake said that : “The documentary evidence reveals that Frances Howard purchased 425 The Esplanade, Manly in April 1905 and in May 1905 obtained a mortgage.”

“The mortgage was sufficient to construct a house, indicating a circa-1905 date of construction. This dating is supported by the building fabric of separated verandah roof form and internal walls comprising six-inch VJ boards.”

Dr Blake went on to conclude in his professional opinion that the evidence strongly supports that the house was built in or around 1905, well before the 1911 cut-off for heritage status.

Structurally Sound

The house was also determined to be structurally sound, a significant finding because the current Planning Scheme also provides that pre-1911 houses must be preserved unless they are deemed structurally unsound, with no hope of repair.

Such is not the case with this home, which actually has had extensive refurbishment such that very little had been left of its original construction.

A Case of “Preservation for its Own Sake”

Judge Jones, in handing down his decision, also sympathised with the position that the owners have now found themselves, saying that their inability to develop the land they way they would like to have been “…thwarted or no apparent reason other than the building was more likely than not constructed prior to 1911.”

“Overall, it is difficult to discern the planning purpose or public interest that will be achieved by retaining this dwelling in its current location and physical appearance other than preservation for its own sake,” he said.

However, on balance, all indications point to a pre-1911 construction and so the existing legislation granting heritage and character status to the home and protecting it from demolition, must be upheld.

Read the full decision here.

Disney Film ‘UP’ To Screen for Free at Little Bayside Park

Get cosy and cuddle up with your loved one as you enjoy free movies at the Little Bayside Park in Manly. On Saturday, the 7th of March 2020, the beloved Disney film “Up” will be showcased on the big screen for a night of fun family entertainment.

The free movie presentation will begin at 7:00 p.m. but you can be at the Little Bayside Park while the afternoon sun is still up to enjoy the view and the crisp air around Cambridge Parade. 

Nearby, takeaway food options are available to purchase at the Manly Harbour Village, such as fish & chips, pizza and gelato so you can have some snacks before or during the movie screening. However, you may also pack your own picnic basket to enjoy with your family.



Photo Credit: Disney

Disney’s “Up” is a story about a 78-year-old widower, Carl Fredricksen, who travels to his ultimate bucket list destination, South America, by tying thousands of balloons to his house. Carl hopes to fulfill a promise he made to his late wife, Ellie. 

But he unexpectedly brings along Russel, an eager Boy Scout, and his dog for an unforgettable adventure together. The film was nominated for Best Picture at the Academy Awards in 2009. 



The free movie screening at the Little Bayside Park is a regular event. For the upcoming films, check the Manly Harbour Village events page for the updates. 

For further enquiries, phone the Wynnum Manly Tourist & Visitor Information Centre at 3348 3524.

How To Be A Stallholder At The Manly Creative Market 2020

In the last 29 years, Sunday has been known as the Manly Creative Market day at the Manly Harbour. With over 100 stalls set up every weekend, this is where shoppers can find unique handmade items for themselves or as gifts and giveaways. 

The Manly Creative Market is also a practical and helpful venue for artisans needing exposure to launch their business. Do you have an original, creative product or idea? Here’s how you can get started and become a stallholder at this popular Sunday shopping site.

1. You’ve got to have a creative product or activity to offer.

This venue is not a Sunday flea market to unload second-hand goods. New stallholders will be guaranteed a site if they have a product or an activity that no one at the market has offered before.

At the moment, Manly Creative Market does not accept food, plants and pre-loved stallholders, unless these are vintage or collectible items. The items for sale will be checked before you take your spot.

TIP: It will help to check the market a week before you plan to join to see if someone else is selling what you have. This Sunday market is all about diversity, not a duplication. 

Photo Credit: Manly Creative Market/Facebook


2. You do not need to pre-book or apply for a stall. 

Booking a stall or filling out an application form isn’t practised at the Manly Creative Market. Any artisan or entrepreneur willing to rent a space for $40 must simply come on a Sunday at 6:30 a.m. and be ready to set up. 

TIP: Be at the Market office and wait for the manager for the instructions. Be mindful of where you park so you will not get in the way of the stallholders who will be setting up their goods.

Photo Credit: Manly Creative Market/Facebook

3. You’ve got to bring your own provisions.

Manly Creative Market will provide the spot but you’ll need to set up your own table, covering, shelter, tent pegs and other provisions. There is no power at the venue as it’s an open space. If you need a power outlet, inform the market manager for the access. 

TIP: The best thing to do is to prepare for every contingency and ensure that you comply with all the safety, workplace and environmental requirements of the Council. 



4. You’re expected to clean up after the market day is done.

Anything you bring to the park to use or sell, you’ll need to take home with you. This means there should be no traces of rubbish in your spot once you leave the venue. 

TIP: If you’ve successfully complied with all the guidelines on your first day at the Manly Creative Market, you can return the following Sundays and become a regular seller. 

For further enquiries, phone David Raetz Mob at 0412 051 128 from 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. Monday to Thursday and from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 

Stand Up Paddleboarding Sessions Happening in Manly

Here’s a standout activity that your kids will surely enjoy! There will be a series of stand up paddleboarding (SUP) sessions taking place at the Bayside Park in Manly until mid-February. Perfect for water babies between ages 10 to 17 years old, these full-hour sessions are part of Brisbane City Council’s Active and Healthy program. Massive fun guaranteed, whilst having a full-body workout.

Stand up paddleboarding might seem like a challenging water sport to learn but anyone can actually be an exceptional paddleboarder in a short span of time, regardless of age and body size. This activity, which sprung from surfing, brings heaps of benefits. As a low-impact exercise, SUP helps with balance, boost cardiovascular health, and reduces the stress levels as participants enjoy the water and nature around them.

Much like a combination of surfing and canoeing or kayaking, paddle boarders stand on a long, flat board to ride or race each other as they propel their craft. Participants usually play in flat, calm water without any waves. 

Photo Credit: Sunshine Coast Surf Schools/Facebook


The Manly sessions, taught by professionals at the Sunshine Coast Surf Schools, normally cost between $50 to $70 but since this is a Council initiative, students joining classes in will only need to pay $5.  

Stand up paddleboarding classes will take place during these dates and times so you have plenty of options for enlisting your children.

DATETIME
Thu 9 Jan 20208:00 a.m.
Fri 10 Jan 20209:00 a.m.
Sat 11 Jan 202010:00 a.m.
Sun 12 Jan 202010:00 a.m.
Fri 17 Jan 20202:00 p.m.
Sun 19 Jan 20204:00 p.m.
Sun 2 Feb 20203:00 p.m.
Sat 15 Feb 20202:00 p.m.
Sat 16 Feb 20203:00 p.m.

To secure a slot, phone Leighton of the SC Surf Schools via 0412 563 191 or register online. Sessions are limited to 16 surfers.

There’s not a lot needed to join the lessons but participants are expected to be in their swimwear. For their benefit, they must also wear sunscreen or bring other sun protection like a hat. Students will be given paddle boards, paddle, wetsuit and a rash shirt once they arrive for the sessions.  



Manly’s Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron Invites You to a New Year Family Feast

Another transition is about to happen as one year ends and another begins. With everyone down for celebrating the New Year to symbolically welcome new beginnings, the Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron in Manly is hosting a fun-filled family event on the 31st of Dec 2019. What better way to start a brand new year than by enjoying the last night of 2019 with your loved ones!

The New Year’s Eve celebration at the Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron will kick off at 5:30 p.m. until the first hour of 2020 rolls. Dubbed the “Seafood Smorgasbord and Movie Night Under the Stars,” this party will include a generous table spread filled with healthy and delicious food, a feast for the children and two fun movies at the lawn!

Adult guests may indulge in salt and pepper calamari, spicy gumbo, grilled prawns, mussels, sand crab, oysters, as well as rolled pork, sumac grilled chicken, and a generous helping of fruits and salad greens at the smorgasbord. With a choice as generous as this, it’s fitting to relish and reflect on how good you’ve got it in 2019 whilst you sit, dine and look forward to 2020 overlooking the gorgeous view of the Manly Harbour.

Photo Credit: Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron – Social/Facebook


The kids, on the other hand, may enjoy a special menu consisting of wood-fired pizza, hotdogs and slushies. These treats are perfect for enjoying the movies on the big screen set up at the lawn.

The film screening will promptly start at 5:30 p.m. followed by the next movie at 7:30 p.m.

In lieu of the planned fireworks, the Manly Chamber of Commerce has made a charitable donation this year.

Photo Credit: Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron – Social/Facebook

Reservations are at $85 per person (adults) and $25 (children). For bookings and inquiries to the  Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron New Year’s Eve party, email reservations@rqys.com.au or phone 07 3396 8666. 

The Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron at the Royal Esplanade is one of the oldest and most prestigious sailing clubs in Queensland. For generations, this bayside venue has also been a popular choice for events and celebrations.