East Coast Marina Seeks Approval for New Clubhouse, Restaurants and Retail at Manly Boat Harbour

A development application lodged in January 2026 proposes demolishing the existing buildings at the East Coast Marina at 576 Royal Esplanade, Manly, and replacing them with a new two-storey clubhouse, restaurant, café, retail shops and marine industry workshops overlooking Moreton Bay.



Architect Reid Campbell designed the proposal, with planning consultants Willowtree Planning lodging the application on behalf of MA Marina Fund. The development covers the south-eastern portion of the site and delivers 1,239 square metres of new floor space across two purpose-built buildings. The development application reference is A006949411.

East Coast Marina is the only privately owned facility within the 1,800-berth Manly Boat Harbour, located 20 kilometres from Brisbane’s CBD. MA Marina Fund, part of alternative asset manager MA Financial, acquired the site in February 2024 for $33 million, cementing its position as the largest marina group in the southern hemisphere. The site, which occupies more than 5.6 hectares of state leases along Moreton Bay, had been in the same hands for more than four decades before that sale. The marina controls 330 berths and dry storage for 240 vessels, alongside a full-service boatyard and a range of commercial tenancies.

What the Proposal Involves

The application proposes demolishing two existing brick marina buildings and the current 148-space car park, replacing them with two new structures. The first is a two-storey club, café and retail building rising to 8.5 metres. A club lounge and café occupy the ground floor, with an ancillary restaurant on the upper level. Large windows along the north and east elevations face the harbour, and an external walkway separates the ground floor tenancies to provide pedestrian connectivity throughout the development. The upper-floor restaurant is accessible via lower-level staircase entries.

East Coast Marina
Photo Credit: DA A006949411

The second building houses five marine industry workshop tenancies, with glass shopfronts on the western elevation and large roller doors on the eastern side for vessel access. Precast concrete panels and vertical metal sheeting form the exterior, consistent with an industrial character while remaining in keeping with the broader site.

The proposed uses across the 1,239 square metre total floor area include 404 square metres of club space, 214 square metres of food and drink outlet, 243 square metres across five retail tenancies, and 378 square metres across five marine industry workshop tenancies. Finished floor levels sit at 3.1 metres AHD, addressing flood planning levels to 2100. Existing boat stacks are not affected by the proposal.

The 148-space car park reduces to 118 spaces under the proposal, including two accessible bays, with vehicle access continuing via the existing service road and T-intersection at Royal Esplanade. A traffic report by Bitzios Consulting noted that a survey conducted in July 2025 found the existing car park was underused during typical weekday and standard operating periods.

Community Feedback: Parking Emerges as the Central Issue

The development application attracted public submissions during its consultation period, with parking emerging as the dominant concern shared by both supporters and opponents of the proposal.

One marina user submitted support for the development in principle but raised concerns about the existing parking situation on weekends and during holiday periods. That submission described the current car park as already overwhelmed on its busiest days, with overflow vehicles spilling onto local streets and the adjacent public boat ramp facility. The submitter argued that on-site parking needed to increase rather than decrease to protect both the local streetscape and nearby public facilities from additional pressure.

Photo Credit: DA A006949411

A separate submission opposed the development solely on parking grounds, noting that weekends and holidays already fill the existing spaces and that expanding the marina’s dining, retail and club activity would only intensify that demand. That submitter indicated they would oppose the development unless the parking supply increased.

Both submissions draw from the same concern: the marina’s busiest periods already push beyond the capacity of the current 148 spaces, and reducing that figure to 118 while increasing the scale of activity on the site creates a genuine risk of worsening conditions for residents, road users and users of the nearby public boat ramp.

A Site With a Long History in Manly Harbour

East Coast Marina has served Brisbane boaties since 1980, becoming the first marina in Queensland to gain Clean Marina Status in 2006. The site sits between the Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron and Wynnum Manly Yacht Club within a harbour that also hosts Manly Harbour Boat Club, and operates under state leases across its 5.6-hectare waterfront holding.

Since the 2024 acquisition, the marina has operated under the d’Albora brand as part of the MA Marina Fund network. Current on-site services include boat maintenance and detailing, marine engineering and electrical trades, a café, a yacht training centre and boat sales through the d’Albora Yacht Brokers network. That mix of active commercial tenancies gives the redevelopment proposal a clear operational context, replacing ageing buildings with purpose-designed facilities suited to a working marina serving Moreton Bay.

How to View or Comment on the Application

The development application A006949411 is publicly accessible through the development application portal. It contains the full plans, traffic report, consultant documentation and all submitted public submissions. Enquiries about the application can be directed to planning consultants Willowtree Planning at willowtreeplanning.com.au or architect Reid Campbell at reidcampbell.com.



Published 2-March-2026.

Manly’s Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron Hosts the 56th Finn World Masters

Sailors from 18 nations have gathered at the Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron in Manly for the 56th Finn World Masters, one of the most prestigious titles in single-handed dinghy racing, with eight races scheduled across five days on the waters of Waterloo Bay.



Just over 100 competitors registered for the Porsche Centre Brisbane 2026 event, which opened at the RQYS on Sunday evening with a ceremony on the club’s lawn. The Masters follows immediately after the 70th Finn Gold Cup, also held at RQYS, making this the third back-to-back Finn event hosted by the Manly club across a remarkable fortnight of international sailing. For residents of Manly and the surrounding Moreton Bay foreshore, the precinct has been alive with the sound and spectacle of world-class dinghy racing since mid-February.

A Dinghy With Olympic Roots and a Global Following

The Finn is one of the most storied classes in sailing history. Designed by Swedish canoe builder Rickard Sarby in 1949, the Finn made its Olympic debut at the 1952 Helsinki Games and featured in every summer Olympics until Tokyo 2020, making it the longest-serving dinghy in the Olympic regatta. Despite its removal from the Paris 2024 programme, the class has not merely survived its post-Olympic era, it has flourished. The Finn Masters circuit is now one of the largest sailing organisations in the world, with hundreds of boats competing in world championships, proving the boat’s appeal stretches well beyond the Olympic rings.

Finn World Sailing Championships
Photo Credit: Robert Deaves

What draws sailors to the Finn, and keeps them there, is the sheer physical and tactical demand the boat places on its crew. With a hull weight of 107 kilograms, the Finn requires sailors to work harder than perhaps any other dinghy class, with downwind legs in stronger winds becoming an anaerobic sprint where heart rates spike to near-maximum levels for extended periods. It is, in short, the kind of boat that earns deep loyalty from the people who sail it.

A Brisbane Coup Years in the Making

The decision to bring both the Finn Gold Cup and the Finn World Masters to Brisbane in the same fortnight was deliberate. Conversations between the International Finn Association, the International Finn Association Australia and RQYS began as far back as 2016, with considerable effort required to convince the global Finn community that sending both major championships to one city was a sound idea. It came together, and the club’s response has validated that confidence: roughly half of the Masters fleet has travelled from outside the region, representing 18 nations across Europe, the Americas and Asia-Pacific.

The opening ceremony saw Finn Masters President Andy Denison formally welcome the fleet and receive the Masters Gold Cup from German sailor Thomas Schmid, representing last year’s champion Pieter-Jan Postma, who is absent to defend his title. Denison then presented the Finn Masters flag to RQYS Commodore Curtis Skinner before officially declaring the championship open.

Who to Watch on Waterloo Bay

The Masters fleet includes several standout names from the Finn Gold Cup held at the same venue the week prior. Australian Brendan Casey, who claimed bronze at the Gold Cup and was nearly unbeatable when conditions turned light, returns for the Masters alongside compatriots Anthony Nossiter and Rob McMillan. Spain’s Rafael Trujillo, a Finn Class Hall of Fame inductee and the only previous Masters winner in this week’s fleet (having won in 2016), is another to watch, as is New Zealand’s Karl Purdie.

World ranked number one Laurent Hay of France, whose Gold Cup campaign was hampered by equipment problems, will be looking to reset, while Britain’s Nick Craig is expected to benefit from the flatter conditions inside Waterloo Bay. Swedish sailor Peter Overup, ranked tenth in the world, rounds out a formidable top-of-fleet group.

Racing conditions inside Waterloo Bay differ meaningfully from the open Moreton Bay waters used for the Gold Cup, with flatter water, changeable currents and more pronounced wind shifts all expected to play a role across the eight scheduled races.

Racing Schedule and How to Follow Along

Racing runs from Monday 23 February through to Friday 27 February, with the first start each day at 1:00pm. The Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron is located at 578 Royal Esplanade, Manly. Spectators are welcome at the club, and live results and coverage are available through the International Finn Association website at finnclass.org.



Published 23-February-2026.

Manly West in Top 11 of the Tightest Rental Vacancy Market

Vacancies in the rental market have tightened considerably in the first quarter of 2021, ushering in a crisis for the market despite this being good news for landlords and investors. Manly West, in particular, has a 0.5% vacancy and it’s one of the top 11 tightest rental markets among Brisbane and its outer ring suburbs.



According to Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ) CEO Antonia Mercorella, the vacancy rate squeeze across the state, the lowest since 2012, has been affected by the rush of migrants to the state due to the pandemic. The situation has been static for the last four quarters with Brisbane LGA generally averaging a rental vacancy rate of 1.1% over a 12-month period. 

Here are the rental markets with the lowest vacancy rates in the Queensland capital:

SUBURBRENTAL VACANCY RATE
Anstead0.5 %
Birkdale0.3 %
Capalaba0.2 %
Ferny Hill0.3 %
Gumdale 0.4 %
Manly West 0.5 %
Rothwell0.2 %
Sandgate 0.5 %
Shailer Park 0.4 %
Thornside0.3 %
Wakerley 0.4 %

Whilst low vacancy rates would be positive for landlords and investors, demand for housing from tenants could spur a crisis, leading to homelessness, that the Queensland housing system should address, according to Ms Mercorella.

Photo Credit: Jens Neuman/Pixabay

“The rental sector plays a critical role in Queensland’s housing system and the role and size of our investor market has never been so important,” she said.

“The State Government say they want to help households transition from community housing to housing in the private rental market. Given that, more needs to be done to better support both increased and ongoing property investor activity in the Queensland property market and the contributions they make to the State economy.”



The REIQ is also supporting the amendments to the First Home Owner Grant, allowing the public to afford their own house instead of becoming tenants. Ms Mercorella believes that this will “help reduce pressure on the rental market” and stimulate the economy.