A massive victory in the war against upper-level setbacks
The Mid-Rise Code offers greater housing certainty for Melburnians. It also winds back one of the most damaging and poorly evidenced planning controls: upper-level setbacks.
The Mid-Rise Code respects the evidence: upper-level setbacks have been a disaster
As per YIMBY Melbourne’s 2024 research note, Upper-level setbacks delenda est, upper-level setbacks:
- increase embodied carbon,
- increase operational carbon emissions,
- increase construction costs, and
- reduce housing supply.
The common-sense removal of upper-level setback requirements represents a planning ethos that respects evidence over established legacy planning norms, and represents the profession’s willingness to evolve to meet the challenges of today.
More homes closer to jobs ever-more important in uncertain times
As we face long-term fuel cost uncertainty, it is critical that we enable more homes to be built near jobs and public transport. In a high-cost era, we cannot afford the long delays of arbitrary processes—and that is exactly what the Mid-Rise Code, like its predecessor the Townhouse Code, seeks to overcome.
The mid-rise code only affects 0.58% of land within 30km of the CBD, and should be expanded
The mid-rise code only applies to a very small amount of Melbourne’s land. But we know that the broader the upzoning, the more effective it is.
Should the code prove effective, the government should expand its applicability by expanding the Residential Growth Zone and establishing Activity Centres around more of Melbourne’s train stations.
Previous YIMBY Melbourne analysis indicates that an additional 50 train stations would be strong candidates for more Activity Centres, bringing the total to 100.
Attributable to Jonathan O'Brien, Lead Organiser
“YIMBY Melbourne welcomes the Mid-Rise Code, and congratulates the Department of Transport and Planning for listening to the evidence on upper-level setbacks.”
“Rules that respect the evidence are the key to a more accessible, sustainable, and affordable city.”
Attributable to Andrew Maynard, Austin Maynard Architects
"This welcome change undoes decades of counterproductive arbitrary restrictions that drove up costs, reduced housing supply, and stripped our streets of life.”
“This change goes a long way to enabling affordable, thermally efficient, and beautiful mid‑rise housing that reconnects people to the street and brings back the vibrant, walkable neighbourhoods cities like Paris and Barcelona have long shown us.”
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