Stockland Aura, Environmental Services & Compliance
Since 2012, SMEC’s Environment Team has supported Stockland at Aura with federal and state compliance, approvals strategy, ecological monitoring and site-wide constraints mapping across the project. A key focus has been developing a regenerative approach to protecting the vulnerable Wallum Sedge Frog habitat, integrating ecology with infrastructure, and keeping delivery on track through consistent, data-led governance.

Located on the southern end of the Sunshine CoastAura is a long-term development with sensitive habitats. SMEC’s role began with compliance and monitoring and has expanded to front-end assessments and new state approvals on key packages, adding early design input to de-risk delivery as the project interfaces with environmentally significant areas. 

 

Aura_ENV_mapped-habitat

Overview of services

SMEC has provided environmental services at the 2320+ hectare development since 2012, drawing on specialist ecologists and approvals experts. The relationship with Stockland is long-standing and proactive, with SMEC acting as an independent but collaborative adviser alongside designers and superintendents.

 

Core routines include annual compliance reporting and targeted monitoring programs, with advice and audits aligned to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and state conditions. As new works arise, SMEC assesses design intent and secures additional state approvals where required, including consolidating multiple high-risk Species Management Programs into a single site-wide approval to simplify implementation.

 

frog on a branch

Prioritising ecology and governance

Environmental inputs shape civil works. WSUD assets and outlets are checked for separation from Wallum Sedge Frog habitat, with minimum buffers and hydrological independence applied to avoid impacts to the sensitive habitat. These criteria, developed through specialist input and long-term monitoring, guide alignments and crossing solutions for roads and drainage. 

 

To simplify delivery, we have consolidated multiple high-risk Species Management Programs into a single, site-wide instrument, reducing ambiguity for superintendents and contractors. Contractor onboarding and regular briefings align everyone on site-specific constraints, approval conditions and why they matter. Regular sessions with Stockland plan upcoming stages and reduce risk. These routines build shared ownership of outcomes and continuity as teams change over time. 

 

Ongoing monitoring practices feed adaptive management and improvements to habitat design and maintenance over time.  

 

 

2320
+
hectares
142
purpose built ponds
700
hectares of conservation land
152
hectares of Wallum Sedge Frog habitat being secured

Aura_ENV_GIS_Constraints-Mapping

Managing data and reporting 

A web-based GIS portal maps the site constraints and underpins day-to-day decisions as a single source of truth. It overlays referral boundaries, protected plants mapping, the register of frog ponds and other constraints with updated aerial imagery and design layers. No work proceeds until the relevant layers are checked, constraints are understood, and pre-start sign-offs are complete. For stakeholders without GIS access, layered PDFs and geo-referenced files support field use. The same data feeds registers and annual reporting. 

Outcomes 

Aura now benefits from an extensive network of purpose-built frog ponds and protected habitat, supported by annual monitoring and compliance reporting. Year-on-year, adaptive management is growing habitat area and function, a practical model for regenerative urban development. Environmental considerations continue to inform civil delivery without slowing momentum, and site-wide approvals are being made simpler to implement for contractors and superintendents. 

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