Group home plans at Summerland Point

Location of the development proposal for a group home

Eleanor Duncan Aboriginal Services has lodged a development application with Central Coast Council to establish a group home at Summerland Point.

The service provider for medical, health and wellbeing programs for Central Coast Indigenous people is planning to invest nearly $1.7M into the urgently needed group home project at 30 Summerland Rd, opposite Naroo Ave.

Previously the 2.63ha site was an educational establishment and at present it contains various dwellings, classroom-type structures, sheds, hardstand surfaces, a basketball court and dam.

The development proposal includes the retention and repurpose of the existing seven-bedroom dwelling to provide a permanent residence.

An additional eight bedrooms for a permanent and or transitional group home will be provided by way of the installation of moveable dwellings.

The existing four-bedroom dwelling will be retained and used as ancillary offices and consulting rooms which will provide support services and allied health programs to the residents of the group home.

Offices and consulting rooms will be used for the physical, social, cultural and intellectual development and welfare of residents only and will not be offered to the broader community.

Six structures will be demolished including two existing sheds, four structures historically used as classrooms, and the basketball court.

Two other sheds will be relocated and two unhabitable buildings will be used for storage.

Other work on-site to bring the project up to standard will include a new on-site sewer management system, extension and connection of services, site earthworks, pathways, carparks, driveways, a new internal bushfire access trail and landscaping.

11 Comments on "Group home plans at Summerland Point"

  1. This town already boasts enough troubled children whose parents show little or no remorse for the havoc they cause within the town. We do not need to build a well being centre here to invite more. There is no police presence here with a two way road in and out. This idea is absolutely ridiculous

  2. We do not need this in our quiet out if the way area. We only have enough services for our community. To have drug and alcohol rehabilitation so near a sporties club and we have many young families living in the area. There is only a sparse bus service, one doctor surgery and a few small shops. These places need to be located in areas that are set up to cope with what is required. I am totally against this. The property values will decline just as they are starting to move again, not that we are looking at selling.

  3. Trevor Dawson | May 18, 2025 at 10:55 am | Reply

    No thank you. I do not wish to live across the road from this facility. It will bring nothing but trouble to our quiet community as these centres ALWAYS attract. There are plenty of out of the way places for this type of business to be housed that won’t impact like this will in this location.

  4. This will prove to be exceptionally detrimental to the small community that resides in Summerland Point. There are no police, ambulance, medical or transportation services in this location which will place extreme strain and disruption to this community if the project is given approval. This location is not suitable for this purpose and it should be relocated to an area in close proximity to the above listed services for the benefit of the group home and the community. The isolation of this location will prove to be a hindrance to the small young family based community and will drastically negatively impact all who reside in this location and will not provide an adequate location for the group home residents.

  5. I have not seen any living in Summerland Point. I object to this happening to our quiet suburb.
    The club is not far away and it will make this town not a safe place to live.
    This place should be put where the aboriginal population is. What about all the other homeless people living around Summerland Point. There is one living in the park that has been living there for about 15 years.

  6. Would love for you to report on the communities misunderstanding of this application and concerns for what it brings to our quiet, small family, low resourced community

  7. Margaret Down | May 18, 2025 at 7:46 pm | Reply

    I do not want a drug rehabilitation group homes in my home area of Summerland point. They were given land closer to the highway let them build there. I do not the crime and violence rate to grow here. If it so great put them in Terrigal or Gosford not in my back yard.

  8. Our very small community does not have the infrastructure in place to cope with such a development.
    #not in our backyard

  9. Worst idea ever, what knuckle head thought this was a good idea.
    There are no positives in housing these kind of people in this area.
    Try somewhere with public transport, a decent shopping complex and a police station nearby. You literally need a car to get everywhere, the occupants no doubt won’t have a license and or car.

  10. The acreages in this suburb are not allowed to build a second dwelling on their property, so how are these people allowed to build multiple dwellings. Why is there one rule for residents and outsiders allowed to come in and do as they like.

  11. Christine Edmonds | May 21, 2025 at 8:04 am | Reply

    The location is too isolated and far from essential services, hindering the group home residents and the community.
    There is potential for the group home to disrupt the quiet and family-oriented atmosphere of Summerland Point.
    There’s a fear that the group home will attract unwanted attention and potentially lead to an increase in crime and violence in the area.
    Our community is seen as lacking the infrastructure (e.g., medical services, schools) to adequately support a group home and its residents.
    The group home be placed in a location with more resources, such as a more developed area or a location closer to the highway.
    I worry the group home will displace existing residents and that the existing homeless population should be addressed first. There is huge amount of crime involving indigeous youths now. There will be dozens of children/teenagers up to the age of 18 wandering our streets. I feel threatened.

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