Queensland's South Coast (now known as the Gold Coast) had enjoyed rapid growth as a playground for
Brisbane holidaymakers. When wartime restrictions on construction were relaxed in 1952, there was considerable demand for housing in the region. Australian
real estate agent Alfred Grant is credited with importing the canal estate concept from Florida and Hawaii in the United States. The Gold Coast provided the ideal conditions: expensive coastal sites bordered by cheap floodplain and
mangrove swamp. Working with celebrated Austrian town planner
Karl Langer, Grant created Australia’s first “man-made waterway estates”, Miami Keys and Rio Vista, at
Broadbeach in 1957. On the opposite side of the
Nerang River,
Bruce Small started to build Paradise City, with the
Isle of Capri as its glitzy centrepiece. When his calls for a comprehensive city plan fell on deaf ears, Small entered politics and represented the area as mayor or MP from 1967 to 1978. Legislation governing these neighbourhoods followed the initial developments in the form of the
Canals Act 1958 (Qld). Recognising the risk of flood, the city council mandated that one
pound from the sale of every lot should go to a
University of Queensland project studying mitigation strategies. The result of this work was the Benowa Flood By-Pass Canal, completed in 1980. Canal development emerged as the defining characteristic of the Gold Coast’s urban form: today the city is home to more than 890 kilometres of canals. Isolated examples emerged elsewhere in Australia, however. Grant himself championed
Kawana Waters on the
Sunshine Coast in 1961, though the project was plagued by construction delays and slow sales. Further developments on the Sunshine Coast followed, as well as projects in
Bunbury,
Cairns,
the Central Coast,
Forster,
Geographe,
Hervey Bay,
Lakes Entrance,
Port Macquarie,
Sussex Inlet,
Tweed Heads,
Yamba and each of the other mainland State capitals. == References ==