Birkdale Community Precinct

Birkdale Community Precinct is one of Queensland’s largest and most exciting park projects.

Rich with heritage, culture and ecological beauty, it will showcase the best our city has to offer.

Bordered in part by Tingalpa Creek, more than two thirds of the 62 hectare site is a conservation area. The land contains iconic species and extensive remnant habitat.

The precinct also has key connections to Redlands Coast history. 

First Nations people lived on the land, early European pioneers established farms and, during World War II, the US Army Corps built a Radio Receiving Station.

Birkdale Community Precinct sits within an ecological corridor along the lower Tingalpa and Coolnwynpin Creek catchments that Traditional Owners have visited for tens of thousands of years.

It provided canoe access to Moreton Bay and Minjerribah (North Stradbroke Island) and inland to wetlands that existed long before the Leslie Harrison Dam.

Redland City Council recognises and acknowledges the Goenpul, Ngugi and Noonuccal First Nations Peoples of the Quandamooka region as the Traditional Owners of the lands, winds and waters we call Redlands Coast.

Council continues to work alongside Traditional Owners in the evolution of the Birkdale (Cullen Cullen) precinct into community space.