Explore what’s on offer at Jindabyne Lakeside


Jindabyne Lakeside is a staged residential community currently under design, comprising 34 architecturally considered, environmentally conscious homes overlooking the lake. The first 12 are expected for completion in late 2026, with two further stages to follow.

We’re now welcoming Expressions of Interest to live or invest at Lakeside — including for those ready to secure priority access with a deposit.

Read on to learn more about what’s on offer at Jindabyne Lakeside: a new standard of alpine living, on the lake, in town.

All information is indicative only.

This project has Council approval in concept and for civil works only. Architectural design and civil works are underway.

Location & Future Site Plan


  • 10-minute walk to the Town Centre

  • 15-minute walk to Nuggets Crossing

  • Direct links to existing trail network

  • Entry is off of Cobbon Crescent

  • Homes are arranged around a community park, and the lake

  • Vegetation corridor maintained along Kosciuszko Road

  • Ample parking available for residents and guests

  • Pedestrian and bike access to lake foreshore remains public

Future Home Typologies


There’s something for everyone at Jindabyne Lakeside, with 8 typologies across the community:

House Type 1:

  • 3+bed

  • 3 bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 204.7m2 GFA

House Type 2:

  • 3 bed

  • 2 bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 195.5m2 GFA

House Type 3:

  • 3 bed

  • 3 bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 216.9m2 GFA

House Type 4:

  • 2+bed

  • 2+ bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 173.1m2 GFA

House Type 5:

  • 1+bed

  • 1+ bath

  • 1 car spaces

  • 65.5m2 GFA

House Type 6:

  • 3 bed

  • 2+ bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 189.6m2 GFA

Duplex Type 7:

  • 3+bed

  • 3 bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 219.2m2 GFA

House Type 8:

  • 3 bed

  • 3 bath

  • 2 car spaces

  • 226.6m2 GFA

*Note these lot numbers are temporary.

Community Features


  • Enjoy the serenity of being on the lake, plus the convenience of being in town.

  • Direct lake access and connection to existing and future trail network

  • Planned community park and BBQ area

  • Pedestrian-prioritised streets and green spaces

  • All-electric, water-wise, and low-carbon homes

  • High performance homes, optimised for Jindabyne’s climate

  • Ownership suited to both full-time living and holiday letting

  • Short term rental management and/or fully serviced options available

Design Principles


Respect the site

  • Minimise earthworks: the road layout has been positioned to work with site contours where the houses access their parking from steeply graded road section use similarly graded parts of the existing site

  • Roads have been positioned in Asset Protection Zone to 1), ensure fire vehicle access is on maintained roads, 2) to free up land for houses and open space, and 3) to provide a perimeter road along the Southern Boundary.

  • Home sites will be designed so the natural landform of the site flows in between the homes

  • Reestablished indigenous plantings will enhance the effect of the homes being part of the site, not being above it

  • Maximising the views through a tiered approach at the upper/west side of the site and the park position in the lower portion to create a view corridor

  • Well-oriented lots: Every lot designed to allow solar passive designed homes

Create a community “Heart”

  • Creation of a central communal open space to allow for recreation and relaxation

  • Hemmed by homes that integrate the park to ensure it is a safe, passively surveyed space.

  • Creates a view corridor so park-front homes look through the park to the lake

  • Terraced areas provide seperate spaces for multiple activities or groups

  • Communal BBQ shelter for residents and holiday makers to meet and socialise

  • And to facilitate public access between Cobbon Cr. & the lake + community foreshore trail

Graduation and control of the housing built form

  • The housing starts as detached houses with carports that sit lightly above the ground on the upper entry road, graduating to detached houses with solid ground floor levels (garaged) on the west and south side of the park, to fully attached 3 level townhouses that sit with the steep north boundary land behind

  • Detaching the houses on the upper areas allows the natural landscape to flow through between the houses to the road edges

  • Create a built form that is light, sits above the ground. Visually permeable to landscape areas beyond, so less visually dominant

‘Nest’ the 3 level built form

  • Where the land is the steepest on the west and north flanks, the homes have been: set in and step-up, or; cascade down the site, depending on their situation. These 3 levels houses will not come above the viewshed when viewed from the various vantage point around the lake shore. Ensure zero impact on existing neighbours' views will occur

  • As the site is very steep, retaining walls are necessary, but where possible, they have been hidden behind homes

  • Ensuring houses interface with the streets and park, with front doors and habitable rooms windows rather than blank perimeter, underfloor walls or voids

  • Gradient differentials will use sensitive landscape elements such as terraced areas with natural stone walls, overflowing with plants to soften their appearance

Landscape Design Principles


A network of green space

  • Protect the centre of the site for communal open space unencumbered by vehicle movements

  • Bring “green” to people’s front doors, passive recreation spaces for children’s play, veggie gardens, picnics, gathering spaces, etc.

  • Create recreation connections to adjacent walking trails, Lake Jindabyne Shared Trail, potential for green core / spine to be an extension of this network

  • Explore the opportunity to incorporate the existing (or realigned) drainage gully into future green space network

  • Facilitate public access through the site

Green over grey infrastructure

  • Explore opportunities for the site’s water strategy to reflect existing natural drainage

  • Provide kerb free roads, lanes & pavements that drain to softscape areas

  • Maximising WSUD elements over pits and pipes, ensuring rainwater drains into the soil first

  • Provide permeable pavements instead of impervious surfaces

Mimic natural tree canopy

  • Retain existing indigenous trees and ground cover where possible

  • Maximise soil volume for medium tree growth in the long term

  • Provide suitable situations for Snow Gums to thrive

  • Layout is undertaken with considerations of the APZ requirements

  • Cluster Snow & other Gum Tree variants, as well as Indigenous Vegetation into copses that terminate vistas as per Snowy Monaro standards

Road network to suit typography

  • Minimise the impact of vehicles into the communal open spaces

  • Design roads and lanes as green, calm, shared spaces that incorporate traffic calming measures to prioritise comfort and safety for walking and cycling

  • This provides perimeter roads to mitigate bushfire risks

  • Provide access for resident and service vehicles at the edges of the site

What’s next?


Whether you're a local looking for something new, an investor seeking resilient architecture in a growth market, or looking for a flexible second home that can earn its keep — Lakeside is designed to support all three.