Skip to content
Indigenous, Seniors Interest

Inner-city grant for Redfern affordable housing project

City of Sydney 3 mins read

The City of Sydney has approved a $3 million grant to build affordable housing for Aboriginal elders in Redfern.

 

Under the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council’s proposal, an existing commercial building on George Street will be demolished and replaced with new residences. Early estimates suggest between 6 to 10 new homes will be built.

 

The project will prioritise housing for Aboriginal elders aged 55 and over able to live independently.

 

CEO of the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council Nathan Moran welcomed the decision.

 

“We believe the project would provide many benefits. It’s a long-standing dream to provide elders accommodation in Redfern,” Mr Moran said.

There is strong demand from Aboriginal community members for affordable housing for elders in the inner city, provided by an Aboriginal-controlled organisation.

A lack of affordable housing can lead to negative impacts including elders needing to leave their community, housing stress or living in sub-standard or overcrowded housing.

“We need this kind of accommodation for our mob,” said Aunty Ann Weldon, respected Wiradjuri Elder, founding member & CEO of Metropolitan LALC whom was part of establishing Redfern & Inner-city Aboriginal community.

“It means we can now stay close to family, country, and community as we grow older.”

Lord Mayor of Sydney, Clover Moore AO said while housing is the responsibility of the NSW Government, the City of Sydney is providing whatever assistance it can to help those who need it most.

 

“Providing affordable and diverse housing is a key focus for us. It is vital we increase the supply of affordable housing to ensure we continue to have an adaptable, diverse and inclusive city,” the Lord Mayor said.

 

“Too often, elders are forced to leave their communities in search of affordable housing. We are proud to back an Aboriginal-led housing solution that will allow Aboriginal people to age with dignity and independence in the heart of Redfern, keeps families and communities together.”

The City of Sydney is committed to tackling the housing crisis and pulls every lever it can to address the broader issue in the local area.

These levers include requiring development contributions towards affordable housing, revising planning rules to encourage the development of affordable housing, grants to boost the number of affordable dwellings, and the sale of land and properties to community housing providers and other similar services below cost.

The City of Sydney’s affordable and diverse housing fund supports all forms of subsidised housing that cater for the specialised housing needs of groups of people which may not be supported by mainstream housing options.

Previous funding has supported Hammondcare to build low-cost residential aged care for people experiencing homelessness and Wesley Mission to improve crisis accommodation in Surry Hills.

The City of Sydney is also providing support for a new Aboriginal run aged care facility on Cope Street in Waterloo.

The $3 million grant will be staggered across three stages, with the first step being for the Metropolitan Local Aboriginal Land Council to prepare a development application for the building.

For media enquiries contact Nicky Breen. Phone 0436 599 861 or email [email protected]

 

For interviews with Clover Moore AO, Lord Mayor of Sydney contact Paul Mackay. Phone 0436 816 604 or email [email protected] 

 

For more stories from your local area, visit news.cityofsydney.nsw.gov.au

 

Restrictions: The City of Sydney provides access to this publicly distributed image for editorial purposes only and remains the copyright owner. No archiving, commercial use or third party distribution is permitted without prior written consent. When using content for editorial purposes, you must include the following image credit adjacent to the content: "Photographer’s Name / City of Sydney”

Media

More from this category

  • Building Construction, Seniors Interest
  • 11/11/2025
  • 09:00
New Romans

Keyton pioneers housing efficiency and health in ACT

Key Facts: Keyton is developing Australia's first Passive House retirement villa in Canberra's The Grove, Ngunnawal, designed to maintain stable temperatures of 18-25°C year-roundThe Passive House standard ensures superior air quality and consistent indoor temperatures, promoting better health outcomes for senior residents whilst reducing energy costsThe project is part of a larger expansion at The Grove, increasing from 161 to 206 villas, alongside a 124-bed aged care facilityThe development includes restoration of the historic Gold Creek Homestead into a multi-purpose space with arts and craft facilitiesThe initiative forms part of Keyton's broader sustainability commitment, which includes 5-star Green Star Community…

  • Contains:
  • Government NT, Indigenous
  • 07/11/2025
  • 09:17
Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT)

AMSANT welcomes NT Police anti-racism strategy

The Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT) has welcomed the Northern Territory Police Force’s anti-racism strategy as an important step towards addressing systemic racism and rebuilding trust with Aboriginal communities. The strategy contains several promising commitments, including trauma-informed policing, improved racism complaint handling, co-designed cultural training, and stronger recruitment, retention and leadership pathways for Aboriginal staff. AMSANT Chair Rob McPhee says the success of the strategy will depend on strong accountability, clear consequences for racism, and genuine partnership with communities. “This strategy is an important step, recognising that racism does exist and that it must be confronted directly. That…

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 31/10/2025
  • 13:05
Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory (AMSANT)

Facing the health gap: New report shows urgent need for investment in remote NT health clinics and infrastructure

Key Facts: A survey of all 14 member ACCHSs, which provide primary healthcare to around 90% of the NT’s Aboriginal population, found: 93% lack adequate funding to maintain healthcare facilities and staff accommodation to a safe and acceptable standard. Half of all facilities, including staff housing, require complete replacement. 79% are unable to meet demand due to poor infrastructure and believe they are not adequately equipped to meet growing demand over the next 12 months. 11 in 14 were forced to reduce services in the past year and more than 60% missed critical specialist visits due to a lack of…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.