Planning a connected and sustainable future for North Appin.

Planning Proposal Update

The 345 Appin Road planning proposal was on public exhibition from 8 September 2025 to 6 October 2025. During this period, the community and Government agencies had the opportunity to submit their feedback through the NSW Planning Portal.

What happens next

We have reviewed all feedback received during the exhibition period and submitted our responses and clarifications to the Department of Planning, Housing and Infrastructure (DPHI) for assessment.

We will continue working with DPHI to progress the planning proposal to finalisation.

Stay involved

We encourage you to continue engaging directly with us about our proposal.

Thank you for your continued interest and participation. Your feedback is central to shaping a plan that reflects community needs and aspirations.

About the project

Ingham Property Group is planning a new neighbourhood for North Appin.  The new community will reflect the area’s character and protect what matters most - the natural environment, our cultural history and strong local identity.

The 345 Appin Road Planning Proposal includes new homes, parks, retail, a medical centre, a school, community spaces and new road infrastructure, designed to support future residents and the wider community.

This website explains what is being proposed, what it means for the area and how you can stay involved or ask questions.  We are interested in what you have to say.

A new chapter for North Appin

Since the 1960s, this land was home to one of Inghams Enterprises’ poultry farms, one of the largest of this kind in the Southern Hemisphere. Operations ceased in 2018, and all structures were demolished. Since then, the land has been used for breeding and grazing beef cattle

As the urban growth boundary approaches, its time for our landholding to evolve from livestock grazing to residential development. In doing so, we can play our part in addressing the NSW housing crisis. We see this as an opportunity to create a welcoming community that honours Appin’s rural character, protects its natural environment, and strengthens connections to the existing township. Our plan is shaped by a commitment to preserve what locals love most - open landscapes, native habitats and the peaceful charm of the area, while also providing much-needed homes at a variety of price points so more people can stay close to family, work, and the unique lifestyle that makes Appin special.

What’s proposed

  • Around 3,000 new homes across a range of price points

  • A local centre with shops, a medical centre and community spaces

  • A new primary school

  • Two sporting fields

  • Parks, green spaces and walking and cycling links

  • Nearly 60 hectares of protected bushland (20 per cent of our total landholding), including enshrining in law the protection of a dedicated koala corridor, and

  • Safety and capacity upgrades to Appin Road, with new connections for vehicles, cyclists and pedestrians.

Ingham Family Legacy

The Ingham family have been southwest Sydney residents since 1918 when Walter Ingham Sr purchased 42 acres of bushland near Liverpool in what is now known as Casula for his son, Walter Ingham Jr to farm.  A great Australian success story, the Inghams built Inghams Enterprises into the largest vertically integrated poultry organisation in Australia and New Zealand. 

The Ingham family are not just long-term southwest Sydney neighbours, they were also one of Australia’s largest employers. The fourth generation of Inghams are keen to see their family’s Appin landholding underpin the growth of the community that supported the success of their business interests. 

We will use the right ingredients to create a community that new residents will be proud to call home.

1922 Walter Sr and Walter Jr (holding horse) with greenfeed cut from Casula farm

Part of the Greater Macarthur vision

Our research indicates the land was cleared for agricultural uses sometime in the late 1800s. The first aerial photographs of the area, taken in 1947 just after World War II, show vast mature grazing pastures.

In 1968 the NSW Government produced the first plan for growth in the Greater Macarthur area known as the Sydney Region Outline Plan which was followed by the The New Cities of Campbelltown, Camden and Appin Structure Plan in 1973. Since these initial urban growth plans for our area were published, there have been many more revisions resulting in the current Greater Macarthur 2040 plan which sets out the strategic planning framework for our area. 

The Appin Precinct is part of the Greater Macarthur Growth Area. The area has been identified by the NSW Government in the Greater Macarthur 2040 plan to help deliver up to 19,000 new homes, supported by local centres, transport connections, expanded road infrastructure and open spaces, while also protecting existing wildlife corridors and natural spaces.

Ingham Property’s landholding forms the majority of the Precinct known as the “North Appin Precinct”.

Protecting what matters

345 Appin Road sits on Dharawal Country and has cultural and environmental significance, from the prominent north–south ridgeline and Ousedale Creek to its deep ties to the Appin community.

During our Connecting with Country engagement with First Nations representatives, we learned a lot about being good custodians of the land.  These learnings helped us solve a key design challenge: how to anchor the sky to the land using the natural environment.  Our design uses the existing topography to create a series of intimate villages that sit within the land, not on the land.  

We are also returning 18.4 hectares of land (a further six per cent of our total landholding) to the Cumberland Plain Conservation areas for regeneration in order to create wider and more contiguous koala corridors.  Our custodianship of our side of the Ousedale Creek koala corridor results in corridor widths that are between two and three times the minimum width suggested by the NSW Chief Scientist. 

We led a design initiative with Transport for NSW to use our land and the existing Brian Road corridor to enable the new Appin Village bypass.  This means that the existing section of Appin Road that goes through the village can be retired to local use at a safe lowered speed limit.  We are fulfilling our responsibilities under our social license to operate in this area. We’ve been looking after that responsibility for 65 years.

Approval process

The 345 Appin Road Planning Proposal is progressing through the NSW Government’s formal planning process. All required technical studies and reports were completed and the proposal was publicly exhibited from 8 September 2025 to 6 October 2025.

Next steps:

We will continue working with DPHI to progress the planning proposal toward finalisation.

Following this, we will lodge Development Applications to enable the construction of new residential lots, the primary school and the retail centre.  Construction cannot commence until all planning approvals are in place.

We will keep the community updated as the project progresses, and there will be more opportunities to provide us with your feedback.

FAQs

Your questions, answered.

 If you have any other questions, submit them using the form in the contact us section.

Contact us

We welcome your questions and feedback.

info@northappincommunity.com.au
1800 519 515

We respect your privacy.