Brighton and Bayside heritage homes: extending a Federation for modern living

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Answering: How do you extend a Brighton or Bayside Federation heritage home for modern family living?

Estimated reading time: 9 min read

You extend a Bayside Federation home by keeping the street-facing character, red brick, terracotta, gables, leadlight and verandah, almost untouched, and placing the contemporary living you actually want at the rear, where a Heritage Overlay leaves the most scope. Because more than 1,500 Bayside properties sit in a Heritage Overlay under the Schedule to Clause 43.01, a planning permit is generally required to demolish, construct, alter or extend, and the council assesses how your changes read in the streetscape and against the building’s heritage grading. Brighton, Hampton, Sandringham and Black Rock add a second layer most inland suburbs do not: the bay, which means salt exposure, light and orientation become structural decisions, not finishes chosen at the end. Designing the heritage response and the coastal response together is how a family home this side of the bay gets built for living, not just photos.

You bought into Bayside for the things that make it Bayside, the deep verandahs, the leadlight catching afternoon light, the broad streets of Federation and Edwardian homes a short walk from the foreshore. Now you want a kitchen, a family room and a connection to the garden that suit how you live today, without the home losing what drew you to it.

The reality is that the answer depends on your specific property: whether it sits in a heritage precinct or is individually significant, how close you are to the bay, and how visible the changes will be from the street. Each of those shifts what is possible and how the council will read it.

This is the work we do with you before the first line is drawn, so the heritage path and the coastal realities are clear from the start. Here is how a Bayside Federation extension actually comes together.

Key Insights

  • More than 1,500 Bayside properties are protected by a Heritage Overlay, and a planning permit is generally required to demolish, construct, alter or extend.
  • Within a precinct, your home is graded significant, contributory or non-contributory, and that grading shapes what you can change at the front versus the rear.
  • Bayside’s bay setting adds salt exposure, light and orientation as design drivers, so material durability and the connection to the bay are decided early, not late.
  • Resolving the heritage and coastal questions together, rather than as separate problems, typically gives the council a cleaner application to assess.
Federation feature Bayside consideration The approach
Red brick & terracotta facade The most visible heritage fabric; central to the streetscape the overlay protects Retain and conserve; match brick and tile profiles where any repair is needed
Leadlight & verandah Defining decorative elements; salt-laden air weathers original glazing and timber Restore in situ; specify durable, sympathetic detailing for any like-for-like repair
Rear extension scope Where a Heritage Overlay usually leaves the most room, away from the street Place the new contemporary living to the rear, recessive from the principal elevation
Coastal durability & materials Salt spray and marine air accelerate corrosion and surface weathering near the bay Select corrosion-resistant fixings, glazing and cladding rated for coastal exposure
Light & bay orientation Northern light and the outlook toward the bay drive comfort and amenity Orient living and glazing for solar access and outlook without overshadowing neighbours
Heritage approval Planning permit generally required; grading and street presentation assessed Design to the grading; resolve heritage and coastal in one integrated application

Keep reading for full details below.

Table of Contents

The Character of Bayside’s Federation Homes

Before you plan an extension, it helps to be clear about what gives a Bayside Federation home its value, because that is precisely what the heritage controls are there to protect.

The City of Bayside, Brighton, Hampton, Sandringham and Black Rock, holds some of Melbourne’s most intact streets of Federation and Edwardian housing. The vocabulary is consistent: warm red face brick, terracotta-tiled roofs with prominent gables, decorative leadlight to windows and front doors, and generous verandahs that turn the home to the street and, in the right pockets, to the bay. These are not incidental details. They are the elements that, repeated down a street, create the heritage precincts the council has identified through successive heritage studies.

That distinction between an individual home and a precinct matters for what you can do:

  • A significant place is individually important, so its original fabric and principal elevations are protected most tightly.
  • A contributory place supports the character of a precinct, so assessment leans on how your changes read in the streetscape, and there is often real scope at the rear.
  • A non-contributory place sits within a precinct without identified significance of its own, so the focus shifts to its effect on neighbouring significant and contributory homes.

Reading that grading correctly at the outset is half the work. Across more than 35 years and 59 heritage approvals over ten-plus Victorian councils, including Bayside, our practice designs to the grading rather than against it, so the facade your street knows stays intact while the home behind it changes.

What Bayside’s Heritage Overlay Actually Controls

A Heritage Overlay does not freeze your home; it sets the terms on which it can change. Knowing those terms before you design saves months.

More than 1,500 properties in Bayside are covered by a Heritage Overlay, applied through the Schedule to Clause 43.01 of the Bayside Planning Scheme. Under that overlay a planning permit is generally required to demolish, construct, alter or extend a building or structure. The Clause 43.01 permit triggers are specific: you need a permit to demolish or remove a building, to externally alter a building by structural work or in any other way, and to construct a building or carry out works. Notably, a permit is not required for most internal alterations, unless your property carries a specific internal control identified in the planning scheme.

In practice, that shapes a Federation extension in a clear direction:

  • The street presentation is where assessment is most demanding, so the red-brick facade, gable, leadlight and verandah are conserved.
  • The rear is where a contributory home usually has the most scope, so the contemporary kitchen, family living and garden connection go there, set back and recessive from the principal elevation.
  • Demolition is tightly controlled, it is Bayside policy to retain significant and contributory buildings, so a sympathetic extension almost always reads better than removal.

This is where full-cycle architectural oversight earns its place. A standard heritage planning application runs on a 60-day statutory clock and is usually advertised to neighbours, with review rights at the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal if a permit is refused. Much of our role is anticipating what a heritage advisor or an adjoining owner will raise and resolving it on the drawing board, so the application is decided cleanly rather than dragged to the Tribunal.

The Coastal Dimension: Salt, Light and the Bay

What sets Bayside apart from Boroondara or Stonnington is the bay itself, and it changes the design brief in ways an inland heritage extension never has to consider.

Proximity to Port Phillip Bay means salt-laden air. Near the foreshore at Brighton, Hampton, Sandringham and Black Rock, materials have to withstand coastal conditions, including salt-spray corrosion that weathers metals, glazing and surfaces faster than further inland. For a heritage home that already carries century-old terracotta, brick and timber, this is a durability question on two fronts at once: conserving the original fabric, and specifying any new work, fixings, glazing, cladding and flashings, to a coastal-rated standard so the extension ages as gracefully as the home it joins.

The bay also reshapes the amenity brief:

  • Light: the quality of southern coastal light, and where northern sun falls, drives how the new living spaces feel through the day.
  • Orientation: the outlook toward the bay is part of why people buy here, so glazing and living areas are placed to capture it without overshadowing neighbours.
  • Comfort: larger areas of glass for that outlook have to be balanced against thermal performance, so the home stays comfortable rather than hot in summer and cold in winter.

Resolving that comfort-and-durability question is where building science underpins the aesthetics. Barbara Yerondais lectured Building Science at RMIT and the University of Melbourne for around ten years, and that grounding informs how thermal performance, glazing and material durability are decided on a coastal heritage home, so the outlook you wanted does not cost you comfort or longevity.

Designing Heritage and Coast as One Extension

The mistake on a Bayside extension is treating heritage and coast as two separate problems solved one after the other. They are most efficiently solved together.

A heritage response sets where and how you can build, conserve the street, recede at the rear, respect the grading. A coastal response sets what you build with and how it performs, durable materials, considered glazing, orientation to the bay. When those are designed as one brief, the contemporary living at the rear is shaped from the start by both, rather than a heritage-approved form being retrofitted for the coast afterward. In our experience with dual-overlay work around Brighton and Hampton, an integrated approach typically gives the council a more coherent application to assess, because the heritage and the technical answers are already reconciled on the page.

What that looks like for a family:

  • The verandahed, red-brick face of the home your street recognises is conserved, and the leadlight restored in situ.
  • Behind it, an open kitchen and family room open to the garden, oriented for light and, where the site allows, the bay.
  • The new fabric is specified for coastal exposure, so the extension is built to last in salt air, not just to photograph well on completion.

That is what we mean by a home built for living, not just photos: the heritage your suburb values kept intact, and the contemporary, coastal family home you want behind it, resolved in a single, considered design with fixed-fee certainty so the budget is real before the work begins.

Closing

Extending a Bayside Federation home is rarely about choosing between character and contemporary living. It is about reading the Heritage Overlay and your home’s grading correctly, conserving the street, and placing modern family living at the rear, with the bay’s salt, light and orientation designed in from the first sketch. For a deeper look, visit our process page to see how we work through heritage and site realities before design begins.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I extend a heritage-listed home in Brighton or Bayside?

A: In most cases, yes. A Heritage Overlay does not prevent extension; it generally requires a planning permit to demolish, construct, alter or extend, and the council assesses how the change reads in the streetscape and against your home’s grading. The usual approach is to conserve the street-facing facade and place contemporary living at the rear, where a contributory home tends to have the most scope.

Q: What does Bayside’s Heritage Overlay actually control?

A: It protects places of architectural, historical or cultural significance, more than 1,500 properties in Bayside, under the Schedule to Clause 43.01. A planning permit is generally required to demolish, externally alter, construct or extend a building. Within a precinct your home is graded significant, contributory or non-contributory, and that grading shapes what you can change. Most internal alterations do not need a permit unless a specific internal control applies.

Q: How does being near the bay change a heritage extension?

A: Proximity to Port Phillip Bay means salt-laden air, so new materials, fixings, glazing and cladding should be specified to withstand coastal corrosion. The bay also shapes the brief through light and orientation, with living spaces and glazing placed to capture the outlook while keeping the home thermally comfortable. On a coastal heritage home these durability and comfort questions are best resolved at the design stage, not chosen late.

Q: Should the heritage and coastal design be handled together?

A: It is usually more efficient to. The heritage response sets where and how you can build; the coastal response sets what you build with and how it performs. Designing them as one brief means the rear extension is shaped by both from the start, and in our dual-overlay work around Brighton and Hampton an integrated application typically reads more coherently to the council than a heritage form adapted for the coast afterward.

Want to Learn More?

With more than 35 years designing within Melbourne’s heritage suburbs, including Bayside, BY Projects Architecture treats the heritage and coastal realities as part of the design, not hurdles bolted on at the end. The clearer the constraints at the start, the better the home at the finish.

Citations

These are the official Victorian sources that govern a Bayside heritage extension: the Bayside Planning Scheme and the Schedule to Clause 43.01 for the Heritage Overlay, and Bayside City Council’s coastal management for the foreshore context.

With 35-plus years and 59 heritage approvals across Melbourne’s councils, including Bayside, our work is to turn the heritage and coastal realities of a Brighton Federation home into one clear, sequenced plan, so your extension keeps the street you love and gives you the home you actually want to live in.

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About the Author

Barbara Yerondais, FRAIA, is the founder of BY Projects Architecture. With 35+ years of experience, she specializes in sustainable, community-focused design and heritage restoration. A dedicated mentor and rower, Barbara balances her high-impact Melbourne practice with a passion for social inclusion and passive, energy-saving design.

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